For the second consecutive day, large crowds formed in cities across Georgia in response to disputed local elections, which saw the ruling party, Georgian Dream, declare a sweeping victory for all local elections in each municipality in the 3.7 million-strong nation. The protests highlighted the pattern of political discontent as opposition parties claimed this was a case of election fraud and reverse democracy.
11 hours Ago By Oskar Malec
Ruling Party Claims Victory While Opposition Boycotts
On Sunday, thousands took to the streets of Tbilisi in engagements after the local elections in Georgia, while the ruling party Georgian Dream claimed to have won all local elections in each municipality in the 3.7 winning nation. The two biggest opposition blocks claimed on social media that their members were ineligible to run citywide, prompting them to boycott the local elections.
The ruling party responded, stating a goal by protestors to "overthrow the constitutional order" while pointing towards Brussels, naming the EU ambassador to Georgia in particular. The government claimed any further civic gatherings were considered "a part of an unlawful overthrow of the government."
On Sunday, Georgia's State Security Service announced it had found 35 km of explosives in Tbilisi, a stockpile of weapons, ammunition, explosives and a detonator, without evidence, claiming it was intended for "subversive acts."
European Union Condemns Misinformation, Tensions Escalate
Following the political events and protests, European Commissioner for Enlargement Marta Kops and Kaja Kallas, the EU's foreign policy cabinet official, made another joint statement condoning not the protestors but the misinformation regarding the involvement of the European Union regarding their relationship with the EU ambassador. The EU stressed they "firmly reject and condemn the disinformation surrounding the EU's role in Georgia."
In their statement, they stressed Georgia's local election occurred "in the context of an ongoing crackdown against dissent," and reminded authorities and civil society to remain peaceful and uphold democratic principles.
After the parliamentary election in October last year, which Georgia Dream claimed victory, the pro-Western opposition took to the streets in the protests. The ruling party claimed any claims of irregularities were a simple goal of the protestors.
Georgia was originally viewed as one of the most pro-Western countries to emerge from the collapse of the Soviet Union, but since the Ukraine conflict in 2022, relations with the West have deteriorated. The protests demonstrate a widening divide in the country associated with political divergence and foreign policy orientation.
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