Georgia’s opposition rejects parliamentary election results as pro-Russian ruling party claims victory with 54%

Opposition parties refuse to recognize results, plan protests, citing systematic violations and unprecedented pressure on voters.

Oct 27, 2024 - 15:00
Georgia’s opposition rejects parliamentary election results as pro-Russian ruling party claims victory with 54%

georgia's opposition rejects parliamentary election results pro-russian ruling party claims victory 54% elections georgia polling station 26 october 2024

Georgia’s pro-Russian ruling Georgian Dream party has claimed victory in the 26 October parliamentary elections, securing more than 54% of votes, according to Georgia’s Central Election Commission. The official results show a significant deviation from pre-election polls and opposition exit polls.

The ruling Georgian Dream party is working to entrench the country’s pro-Russian course, pursued since it came to power. The EU has suspended contacts with Georgia following the government’s adoption of Russian-style “foreign agents” and “family values” laws, halting the country’s path to EU membership.

According to pre-election polling, Georgian Dream was expected to receive 35% of votes, while the combined pro-European opposition parties were projected to secure a parliamentary majority. The polls showed the following distribution:

  • Coalition for Change (Gvaramia, Melia, Girchi, Droa): 19%
  • Unity (National Movement, Strategy Agmashenebeli, European Georgia): 16%
  • Strong Georgia (Lelo, For the People, Freedom Square, Citizens): 9%
  • Gakharia – For Georgia: 8%
  • Girchi (Iago Khvichia): 3%
  • Other parties: 10%

However, Georgia’s Central Election Commission reported vastly different results, with 99.3% of polling stations counted as of 27 October morning. The commission claims Georgian Dream received 54.086% of votes, with Coalition for Change securing 10.9% and Unity-National Movement getting only 10.1%. The total pro-European opposition vote allegedly amounted to 37.3%. Voter turnout reached 58.94%.

Before the official results emerged, exit polls from opposition channels Mtavari and Formula indicated Georgian Dream was receiving less than 50% of votes, with opposition forces projected to secure a parliamentary majority.

Election fraud and “coup” allegations

The stark contrast between polls and official results has fueled opposition claims of electoral fraud. RFE/RL’s Echo of the Caucasus reports that the United National Movement, led by former President Mikheil Saakashvili, has refused to recognize the results of the parliamentary elections, according to party leader Tina Bokuchava.

Nika Gvaramia, leader of the Coalition for Change, declared that the elections were stolen and accused Georgian Dream of staging a constitutional coup.

“[Georgian] Dream is the author of the constitutional coup and will be held accountable according to Georgian law,” she said at a briefing

Transparency International Georgia’s Executive Director Eka Gigauri stated that civic organizations reject the preliminary results, citing “unprecedented influence on voters’ will and acts of violence.”

The election day was marked by numerous irregularities. Hromadske reports that in Marneuli, security footage captured a Georgian Dream official stuffing multiple ballots into a voting box. Fighting erupted at several locations across Georgia, including Tbilisi.