
ArmInfo. The statement by Armenia's third president, Serzh Sargsyan, claiming that "Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan is not running for a third term because the previous elections were snap elections," could strip the opposition of its sole political justification for removing him from power. Political commentator Karpis Pashoyan, who participated in the recent parliamentary elections alongside Edmon Marukyan, leader of the Bright Armenia party, wrote on his Facebook page.
According to Pashoyan, critiquing this "third term" is currently the only sound political-science basis through which Pashinyan's administration can be discredited. "Everything else falls into the realm of poetry. Let us recall that back in 2018, the newly elected Prime Minister Serzh Sargsyan had everything perfectly aligned on paper. The vast majority of political forces and the public had accepted the results of the 2017 parliamentary elections; people were essentially ready to live by the rules of the new game—had it not been for the realization that a form of constitutional 'fraud' had been committed," Pashoyan noted. Thus, the politician believes that no (Velvet — Ed.) revolution would have occurred had Karen Karapetyan remained Prime Minister at the time, or had the Republican Party of Armenia (RPA) nominated another candidate, such as Vigen Sargsyan. "But Armenia's third president broke his promise, was nominated, and was elected Prime Minister. People realized that this step could perpetuate his grip on power indefinitely. It was precisely this realization that stripped his administration of legitimacy and doomed it to an inevitable collapse," Pashoyan explained.
According to him, the country is facing an almost identical situation today. As Pashoyan pointed out, the Armenian Prime Minister is essentially capitalizing on the limitless possibilities of that very same "tailored suit" to perpetuate his power, leveraging the exact same loophole. "He claims that he supposedly has the right to do so. On paper, everything is correct once again, and the results of the parliamentary elections, however contentious and questionable, nevertheless appear to be accepted by all. But what happens now? The question arises: can Pashinyan pull off what Serzh Sargsyan failed to do, and is he allowed to achieve what did not work out for Armenia's third president?" the politician asked rhetorically.
According to Pashoyan, their personal position is clear: the perpetuation of any individual's power cannot be permitted, nor can the establishment of "Azerbaijani- or Belarusian-style regimes" in Armenia. In his words, this is the shortest path to authoritarianism—a path dominated by violence, injustice, the degradation of the laws and the Constitution, corruption, and ultimately, the dissolution of the state. "Therefore, dear RPA representatives, instead of resisting objective reality, set your aggression aside for a moment and, for once in your lives, admit that Serzh Sargsyan made a profound, fatal mistake. Admit it, and let us move forward, clearing the political arena of this meaningless and endless bickering between Armenia's second and third presidents," Pashoyan concluded.