
ArmInfo. The Armenian National Congress (ANC) party of Armenia's first president, Levon Ter-Petrosyan, stated that the June 7, 2026, elections to the National Assembly of Armenia did not meet democratic standards for free, fair, transparent, and competitive elections.
The political party's statement noted that the entire electoral process was marked by systematic and widespread violations by the authorities, which seriously call into question the credibility of the published results and their true reflection of the free expression of the will of voters.
The political party cited the following violations: organized voting by military personnel at several polling stations from 8:00 PM until 1:00 AM after the end of voting hours. According to the ANC, this is an unprecedented violation that contradicts the principles of transparency and equality in the electoral process and requires a comprehensive investigation.
"The authorities fully utilized administrative resources, exploiting the public administration system for their own electoral gains. During the election campaign, the government made extensive use of state and municipal budgets, state institutions, public structures, and state resources, grossly violating the principle of equal competition. Public television grossly violated the principle of equal treatment of political forces, giving the government a clear informational advantage during the campaign.
The entire election process was accompanied by pressure, intimidation, hate speech, illegal arrests, and criminal prosecutions of opposition representatives, their representatives, activists, and voters, which continued even on election day. Numerous opposition leaders and activists were arrested, undermining free political competition," the ANC statement continued.
Ter-Petrosyan's party added that information had been received from numerous polling stations regarding directed and controlled voting, illegal influence on voters' will, as well as changes favoring the government, and other serious violations recorded during the vote count. Power outages were recorded at many polling stations during the voting and counting process, significantly undermining the transparency of the process and raising further doubts about the legitimacy of the count.
The ANC noted that in a number of localities, the election campaign of opposition political forces was hampered by violence, threats, physical pressure, and other illegal actions. Numerous instances of interference by external actors were recorded, which, in our assessment, negatively impacted the freedom and equality of the electoral process.
The political force noted that after the results from only 10% of polling stations (less than 5% of voters who participated in the vote) were published, the authorities' public announcement of their victory came at a time when the majority of votes had not yet been counted at most polling stations.
"This indicates that the authorities, having not obtained the expected results based on preliminary data, decided to grossly interfere with the electoral process with this announcement and illegally change the final vote result. Mathematical analysis based on the Gaussian curve anomaly method reveals evidence of tens of thousands of votes being falsified in favor of the authorities, which requires independent professional expertise and an international assessment," the ANC further emphasized.
It is noted that the combination of the above circumstances provides grounds for the conclusion that the published election results cannot be considered an indisputable expression of the free, equal, and unimpeded expression of the will of the citizens of the Republic of Armenia.
"Consequently, the government formed through such elections cannot be considered exemplary. We call on the competent authorities of the Republic of Armenia, international observation missions, and international organizations committed to democratic values to conduct a comprehensive, independent, and impartial investigation into all presented facts and allegations. They must provide a legal assessment of each violation and take the necessary steps to restore public confidence in the electoral process.
The Republic of Armenia can have an effective and legitimate government only when government formation is based on the free expression of the people's will, and not on administrative pressure, unequal competition, a climate of fear, and systemic violations that undermine public confidence in the electoral process. At the same time, the Armenian National Congress calls on the opposition forces that have entered parliament not to relinquish their mandates under any circumstances and to use all parliamentary levers to overthrow the illegitimate regime," the ANC concluded.