Pashinyan’s party wins nearly 50% of the vote in Armenia’s parliamentary elections and will hold a majority in parliament
AI Summary
Armenians held a parliamentary election widely viewed as a referendum on pivoting toward Europe and the West versus maintaining traditional Russian ties. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan's Civil Contract party, leading in polls, seeks a mandate to deepen Western cooperation and pursue peace with Azerbaijan, while pro-Russia opposition parties resist the Western course amid mounting external pressure.
Progressive: Progressive-leaning outlets emphasize the election as a test of Armenian independence, foregrounding external threats and pressure (including Russian comparisons to Ukraine) as existential challenges to national autonomy.
Moderate: Moderate outlets frame the election as a geopolitical choice, reporting on polling data, Western cooperation efforts, and Russian pressure alongside electoral mechanics and regional peace initiatives.
Armenia’s ruling Civil Contract party, led by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, took 49.81% of the vote in parliamentary elections, the Central Election Commission reported after tallying results from all 2,005 precincts, according to News.am. ...