Defeat for Armenia's Nikol Pashinyan
May 1, 2018Nikol Pashinyan failed to persuade lawmakers to cross party lines so he could amass the 53 votes he needed in Armenia's 105-seat legislature.
Pashinyan described his setback as an "insult to the people" and said he was calling a campaign of civil disobedience from early Wednesday that would include blockades of key transport routes.
"Get sober [before] it's too late, because your behavior could cause a political tsunami," he told Republican parliamentarians.
Follow-on vote?
The Armenian constitution stipulates that parliament convene next week for another vote on who should become premier of the Caucasus nation.
Outside parliament in Yerevan, thousands of Armenians had rallied in support of the 42-year-old dissident, whose protest movement Elk (Way Out) forced the resignation of president-turned-premier Serzh Sargsyan last month.
Pashinyan, nicknamed "Abrek," had claimed that Armenia would be plunged into crisis if he were not made replacement premier as sought by opposition factions.
Before Tuesday's vote, Pashinyan had floored questions in the chamber, where control has long been held by Sargsyan's Republican backers.
"We will do everything to eliminate the EU visa requirement for Armenian citizens" while keeping ties with Russia, he said.
During debate, Republican lawmakers accused Pashinyan of being an irresponsible rabble-rouser and of lacking qualities to command the Armenian armed forces.
Armenia, an ex-Soviet state still closely aligned to Russia, has been run by what Pashinyan has called an elite since the late 1990s.
ipj/rc (AP, dpa, Reuters, AFP)