Ahead of the parliamentary elections to be held on June 7, the political field of Armenia has turned into a platform for the clash of plans. While the ruling party promises to lay the foundations of an eternal state, abandoning short-term planning, the opposition proposes radical steps to rescue the debt-ridden population and renew dilapidated infrastructure.
The pre-election race, which started on May 8 and brought together 19 political forces (17 parties and 2 blocs), will continue until June 5. The ruling Civil Pact party, which runs under number 16 under the slogan “Stand Up for Peace,” submitted an extensive list of 283 main and 10-minority candidates to the CEC. Nikol Pashinyan, the party’s prime ministerial candidate, called the active participation of children in the campaign a “children’s revolution” at a meeting with citizens in the Davtashen administrative district.
According to him, the people and the Government are on the same pulse, and the country has finally overcome the logic of planning life only “after the New Year, after the holidays”. Pashinyan emphasized that the main task of the elections is to take Armenia on a hundred-year and thousand-year highway, providing the state with the status of a safe, developed and eternally existing republic.
The opposition proposes a completely different agenda, focusing on acute socio-economic problems. On May 17, representatives of the “Strong Armenia” bloc conducted a campaign in the city of Metsamor. Narek Karapetyan, a member of the Political Council, noted with regret that the energy heart of the country remained in the Soviet past. during twenty years, only small kiosks have been renovated here. The alliance claims that most of the taxes paid by the NPP should be returned to Metsamor for the active development of the city.
The issue of agriculture in the Ararat Valley is no less acute. we have 95 percent water loss due to old irrigation systems. Karapetyan sees the solution to the problem in the modernization of the Sevan-Hrazdan cascade. In addition, the alliance promises radical credit reforms.
Citing Georgia as an example, where the loan interest rate is 8%, compared to 15-24% in Armenia, the oppositionists proposed a new mechanism for the protection of debtors. if a person is unable to pay the loan for 18 months, the Enforcement Service will not freeze his accounts, and the principal amount of the loan will be repaid by the state at the expense of the citizen’s tax payments after he enters official employment.
The theme of social justice and financial amnesty was continued by the “Prosperous Armenia” party. Party leader during the large-scale march held in Erebuni administrative region Gagik Tsarukyan emphasized that their pre-election program was not written while sitting in the cabinets, but on the basis of the real issues raised during the meetings with the residents of the marzes.
Reminding that he comes from an ordinary worker’s family and was founded from scratch, Tsarukyan promised to make education and health care completely free. And for the population affected by co-epidemic, economic crisis and war, the main lifeline should be the complete forgiveness of problematic loans up to 3 million drams. The leader of the party assured the voters that he neither wants a position, nor recognition, nor does he have a personal issue to resolve. its sole purpose is to put a smile on people’s faces.
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