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Anti-Saakashvili Candidate Claims Victory in Georgia Vote

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  • Anti-Saakashvili Candidate Claims Victory in Georgia Vote

    Anti-Saakashvili Candidate Claims Victory in Georgia Vote

    Giorgi Margvelashvili with his daughter in Tbilisi, Oct. 27, 2013

    © RIA Novosti. Alexey Kudenko

    http://en.ria.ru/world/20131027/184381244/Anti-Saakashvili-Candidate-Claims-Victory-in-Georgia-Vote.html
    23:36 27/10/2013

    Originally Published at 22:22

    Tags: elections, United National Movement (UNM), Georgian Dream, Davit
    Bakradze, Giorgi Margvelashvili, Bidzina Ivanishvili, Mikheil
    Saakashvili, Tbilisi, Georgia

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    TBILISI/MOSCOW, October 27 (RIA Novosti) - An opponent of outgoing
    president Mikheil Saakashvili claimed victory in Georgian presidential
    elections Sunday just hours after voting stations closed in the former
    Soviet nation on Russia's southern border.

    Initial exit polls gave Giorgi Margvelashvili, from the
    anti-Saakashvili Georgian Dream party, about 65 percent of the vote in
    an election that marks the end of a decade in power for Saakashvili.

    `I want to thank everyone who supported me,' Margvelashvili said
    outside his party headquarters in Tbilisi on Sunday evening where his
    supporters had already taken to the streets to celebrate his win.
    `Thanks to the Prime Minister who facilitated today's victory.'

    Margvelashvili is a close ally of Georgian Prime Minister and
    billionaire Bidzina Ivanishvili, who led Georgian Dream to a crushing
    victory over Saakashvili's United National Movement in parliamentary
    polls in 2012.

    Twenty three candidates took part in Sunday's elections in the South
    Caucasus nation, but the presidential position is less powerful than
    it was under Saakashvili after laws passed earlier this year diluted
    presidential powers.

    Margvelashvili's main rival, Davit Bakradze of United National
    Movement, was given about 20 percent of the vote by exit polls. He
    said shortly after polling stations closed that the exit polls
    provided a `clear picture' and that he was prepared to work with the
    country's new president.

    Both front-runners in the election pledged to continue policies of
    integration with the European Union and NATO, and have indicated a
    willingness to improve ties with Russia, which soured badly under
    Saakashvili.

    Turnout among the country's 3.5 million registered voters was 46.6
    percent, according to the country's election commission.

    Outgoing President Saakashvili said on Sunday evening that Georgian
    voters had `spoken' and called on his supporters to respect the
    election result.

    A Columbia Law School graduate, Saakashvili enjoyed broad public
    support early in his presidency after he swept to power following
    Georgia's 2003 "Rose Revolution" and carried through successful
    institutional reforms. But a disastruous defeat in a brief war with
    Russia in 2008 contributed to a later precipitous drop in his approval
    ratings.

    Saakashvili's bitter political rival, Ivanishvili, is a secretive
    tycoon whose fortune Forbes magazine puts at $.5.5 billion, making him
    Georgia's richest man. Ivanishvili, who became prime minister last
    October, has pledged to quit politics after the presidential vote, but
    has yet to name a successor.

    Recast throughout, with latest updates and quote from Saakashvili

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