Pro-Western parties are demanding a new poll, promising mass street protests and a boycott of parliament
Georgian election officials intend to recount ballots at five randomly selected polling stations in each voting district on Tuesday. Pro-Western opposition forces in the post-Soviet country have denounced the outcome of last weekend’s parliamentary election as “fraudulent” after the ruling party secured a fresh majority in parliament.
In the capital Tbilisi, the repeat tally will begin in the evening, with similar procedures in Georgian regions, according to an announcement made by the central election commission on Monday. Authorized observers will be present, it added.
Georgian Dream, the conservative populist party currently in government, received just under 54% of the votes, with over 99.9% ballots counted. The four opposition parties that crossed the 5% threshold to enter parliament are threatening to reject the mandates won by their candidates.
The pro-Western opposition has accused the government of rigging the poll. During a protest in Tbilisi on Monday, they declared they would accept nothing short of a new internationally-supervised election.
The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) has reported that Georgian voters were offered a wide choice of candidates, who could “generally campaign freely.” Its monitors noted that the election “unfolded amid entrenched polarization” in society and was widely framed by campaigning parties as a referendum on the geopolitical orientation of the country.
US State Department spokesman Matthew Miller accused the Georgian government of vote buying and voter intimidation. Speaking at a regular briefing on Monday, he urged the country to “recommit to its democratic Euro-Atlantic trajectory” by addressing Western criticisms of its policies.
”We do not rule out further consequences if the Georgian government’s direction does not change,” the official warned, saying future US financial assistance to Tbilisi will be reviewed.
The leaders of EU nations will consider alleged election irregularities in Georgia during an informal meeting next month, European Council President Charles Michel has said.
This year, the Georgian government adopted several laws that the US and its allies have described as undermining democracy and rule of law in the country. Among them was a requirement for media outlets and NGOs to publicly declare received foreign grants.
: Kremlin slams ‘unprecedented’ Western election interference in Georgia
Georgia’s French-born president, Salome Zourabichvili, has claimed that the election was a “Russian special operation,” an allegation that the US State Department has declined to endorse. Moscow has said that unlike the West, it is not trying to improperly influence the situation in the country.
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