2012 Adjaran legislative election explained

Country:Adjara
Previous Election:2008
Next Election:2016
Election Date:1 October 2012
Seats For Election:21 seats in the Supreme Council of Adjara
Majority Seats:11
First Election:yes
Party1:Georgian Dream
Leader1:Bidzina Ivanishvili
Percentage1:57.66
Seats1:13
Party2:United National Movement (Georgia)
Leader2:Mikheil Saakashvili
Percentage2:37.01
Seats2:8
Chairman of the Supreme Council
Before Election:Mikheil Makharadze
Before Party:United National Movement
After Election:Avtandil Beridze
After Party:Georgian Dream

Legislative elections were held in Adjara, an autonomous republic within Georgia, on October 1, 2012. Adjara elected its 21-member parliament, Supreme Council, in the region's 6th local legislative election since Georgia declared independence from the Soviet Union in 1991.[1]

Background

The 21-member Supreme Council of Adjara is elected for a 4-year term. Six of its members are in single-member constituencies and the remaining 15 seats are filled through proportional representation from parties which clear a 5% threshold.[1]

The last election, held in November 2008, was won by Georgia's ruling United National Movement, which had 15 seats in the Council. The remaining 3 seats were won by the opposition Christian-Democratic Movement.[1]

Results

The election was held simultaneously with the nationwide parliamentary election on October 1, 2012. The opposition Georgian Dream coalition, spearheaded by Bidzina Ivanishvili, received 57.66% of votes in the proportional, party-list contest; the incumbent United National Movement party, led by President of Georgia Mikheil Saakashvili, garnered 37.01%. Other five parties, which were running in the Adjara election, failed to clear 5% threshold. The Christian-Democratic Movement received 2.82%, the Georgian Labour Party 1.28%, and the New Rights 0.56%. The Georgian Dream candidates won in 3 out of Adjara's 6 single-mandate constituencies (Batumi, Kobuleti, and Khelvachauri); other 3 constituencies (Keda, Khulo, and Shuakhevi) were won by the United National Movement.[2]

As a result, the Georgian Dream secured 13 seats and the remaining 8 seats were taken by the United National Movement.[2]

By constituency

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Elections for Adjara's Local Parliament Set for October 1. 2 August 2012. Civil Georgia. 2 August 2012.
  2. http://civil.ge/eng/article.php?id=25396 Ivanishvili Names His Pick for Head of Adjara Govt