
The For Republic party will apply to the Constitutional Court to challenge not only the results of the parliamentary elections, but also the political, legal, and social environment in which those results were formed.
According to the party, information-related and external factors also cast doubt on the constitutional legitimacy of the electoral process.
“An election is a constitutional process for forming public authority, whose true value depends on the freedom of voters’ choice, equal competition among political forces, the legality of the process, and public trust in it.
When the electoral process is affected by unequal conditions, organized pressure, a distorted competitive environment, disproportionate financial and administrative influence, information attacks, and factors of foreign influence, it is not only the result recorded in favor of any political force that is called into question, but also the constitutional legitimacy of the entire electoral process.
Our goal is to protect the constitutional foundations of electoral rights, democracy, political competition, and the formation of public authority in the Republic of Armenia. Citizens of Armenia must be confident that their vote is formed in a free environment and that political forces compete under the law rather than under unequal conditions shaped by force, money, administrative advantage, or foreign influence.
We will remain consistent in ensuring that elections in Armenia are not a formal recording of numbers, but a genuine guarantee of free will, equal competition, and the constitutional legitimacy of public authority,” the statement says.
On June 14, the final results of the June 7 parliamentary elections were published, confirming the distribution of votes and mandates among participating forces.
Final results of the June 7 parliamentary elections were published on June 14. Civil Contract received 726,819 votes, or 49.7456%; Strong Armenia received 340,006 votes, or 23.2710%; and the Hayastan Alliance received 144,983 votes, or 9.9231%. The Prosperous Armenia party failed to pass the 4% electoral threshold and will not enter parliament, having received 58,287 votes, or 3.9893%.
Civil Contract will hold 64 mandates, including three allocated to representatives of national minorities. The Strong Armenia party will have 29 mandates, including one seat for an Assyrian representative, while the Hayastan Alliance will receive 12 mandates.