2018 Armenian presidential election explained

Election Name:2018 Armenian presidential election
Country:Armenia
Type:presidential
Vote Type:electoral
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:2013 Armenian presidential election
Previous Year:2013
Election Date:2 March 2018
Next Election:2022 Armenian presidential election
Next Year:2022
Votes For Election:105 voters: All deputies of the National Assembly
Needed Votes:79
1Blank:Nominators
Candidate1:Armen Sarkissian
Party1:Independent politician
1Data1:Republican Party of Armenia, Armenian Revolutionary Federation
Electoral Vote1:90
Percentage1:90.0%
President
Before Election:Serzh Sargsyan
Before Party:Republican Party of Armenia
After Election:Armen Sarkissian
After Party:Independent politician

Presidential elections were held in Armenia on 2 March 2018.[1] As a result of the 2015 Armenian constitutional referendum, this was the first time in Armenia's history when the president was elected by the National Assembly instead of popular vote.[2] Another outcome of the referendum was that the newly elected president will perform a ceremonial role as the country is currently transitioning from a semi-presidential system to a parliamentary republic.[3] Incumbent president Serzh Sargsyan was barred by the Constitution of Armenia from running for a third consecutive term.[4] Armen Sarkissian ran unopposed due to no other party nominating a candidate and easily won the election in the first round with 90 electoral votes.

Background

In accordance with Article 124 of the amended constitution, a non-partisan president will be elected for a seven-year, non-renewable term.[5] In accordance with Article 125, the candidate that receives at least three fourths of votes of the total number of deputies of the National Assembly will be elected President of Armenia.[6] If the president is not elected, a second round is held wherein all candidates who took part in the first round may participate. In the second round, the candidate that receives at least three fifths of votes of the total number of deputies will be elected as president. If a president is still not elected, a third round of elections will be held wherein the two candidates who received a greater number of votes in the second round may participate. In the third round, the candidate who receives the majority of votes of the total number of deputies will be elected.

According to Article 125 of the constitution, at least one fourth of the total number of deputies of the National Assembly shall have the right to nominate a candidate for president.[7] This means that at least 27 members of parliament must back the respective candidate in order for that candidate to be officially nominated. Thus, in the case of a wide consensus, a candidate may very well run unopposed since minority parties with less than 27 members in the National Assembly will not be able to nominate a candidate.

Eligibility

According to the amended constitution, everyone who has reached the age of forty, held citizenship of only Armenia for the preceding six years and permanently resided in Armenia for the preceding six years, has the right of suffrage, and speaks the Armenian language may be elected as president.[8]

Candidates

President Serzh Sargsyan on 18 January recommended the candidacy of Armen Sarkissian, the former Armenian ambassador to the United Kingdom, for president to be supported by the ruling Republican Party. Sargsyan stressed the necessity for the presidential candidate to have wide support in the National Assembly when elected. On 16 February, Armen Sarkissian officially accepted Sargsyan's offer to become the Republican Party's candidate for president.

The ruling coalition, which consisted of the Republican Party and the Armenian Revolutionary Federation, officially nominated Armen Sarkissian for president on 23 February.[9] On 24 February, the Prosperous Armenia party, which was in opposition, signaled that it would vote for the ruling coalition's candidate.[10] This means that the only party left that did not nominate a candidate was the Way Out Alliance. As a party or coalition must have the support of at least one fourth of the deputies in the National Assembly, the Way Out Alliance were not able to nominate a candidate as they only had nine deputies in the National Assembly. Sarkissian took up office on 9 April 2018.[11]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Armen Sarkisian (No Relation) Elected Next Armenian President. RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty. en. 2018-03-02.
  2. Web site: RIAC report: Armenia and Azerbaijani 2018 presidential elections to renew contradictions on Karabakh. news.am. en. 2018-01-09.
  3. News: Elections in Armenia Explained: New Rules, New Voting, New Powers. Hairenik. 2017-02-28. The Armenian Weekly. 2018-01-09. en-US.
  4. News: Ruling party may put forward current president for position of Prime Minister. 2017-12-22. JAMnews. 2018-01-09. en-US. https://web.archive.org/web/20180109181902/https://jam-news.net/?p=77084. 2018-01-09. dead.
  5. Web site: Constitution of Armenia - Library - The President of Armenia. www.president.am. en. 2018-01-09.
  6. Web site: Constitution of Armenia - Library - The President of Armenia. www.president.am. en. 2018-01-09.
  7. Web site: Constitution of Armenia - Library - the President of Armenia.
  8. Web site: Constitution of Armenia - Library - The President of Armenia. www.president.am. en. 2018-02-16.
  9. News: Ruling Coalition Nominates Armen Sarkissian's Candidacy for President of Armenia - Armenian News By MassisPost. 2018-02-23. Armenian News By MassisPost. 2018-02-24. en-US.
  10. Web site: "Tsarukyan" parliament faction to vote for Armen Sarkissian's candidacy as next President of Armenia. news.am. en. 2018-02-24.
  11. News: Armenia lawmakers elect president as leader eyes 'super' powers - The Express Tribune. 2018-03-02. The Express Tribune. 2018-03-02. en-US.