2017 Armenian parliamentary election


Parliamentary elections were held in Armenia on 2 April 2017. They were the first elections after a constitutional referendum in 2015 that approved reforms for the country to become a parliamentary republic. The result was a victory for the ruling Republican Party of Armenia, which won 58 of the 105 seats in the National Assembly.

Electoral system

At the time of the previous elections in 2012, the National Assembly had 131 seats, of which 41 were elected in single-member constituencies by first-past-the-post voting and 90 by proportional representation in a single nationwide constituency with an electoral threshold of 5%.
However, a referendum in December 2015 approved constitutional amendments reducing the minimum number of seats in the National Assembly to 101, all of which will be elected by party-list proportional representation, with seats allocated using the d'Hondt method and an election threshold of 5% for parties and 7% for multi-party alliances.
The ballot paper has two sections; one of which is a closed list of candidates for the party at the national level and the other an open list of candidates for the constituency that the voter is voting in. Voters vote for a party at the national level and can also give a preference vote to any of candidates of the same party in a district list. Seats are allocated to parties using the share of the vote at the national level, with half awarded to those in the national list and half to those who receive the most preference votes in the district lists. Four seats are reserved for national minorities, with parties having separate lists for the four groups. A party list can not include over 70% of representatives of the same sex, and any there cannot be four consecutive members of one sex on a nationwide party list.
If a party receives a majority of the vote but gets less than 54% of the seats, they will be awarded additional seats to give them 54% of the total. If a party wins over two-thirds of seats, the losing parties will be given extra seats reducing the share of seats of winning party to two-thirds. If a government is not formed within six days of the preliminary results being released, a run-off round of voting between the top two parties must be held within 28 days. A party winning the run-off will be given the seats required for a 54% majority, with all seats allocated in the first round are preserved.

List of participating parties and alliances

The following parties and electoral alliances participated in the election:
#Party or allianceCompositionHead of electoral listSeats heldEuropean affiliationSlogan
1Way Out AllianceBright Armenia,
Hanrapetutyun Party,
Civil Contract
Edmon MarukyanElection, change, victory
2Free DemocratsKhachatur KokobelyanWe can
3Armenian RenaissanceOrinats Yerkir,
Unified Armenians Party
Artur BaghdasaryanEPP Vote for change, vote for renaissance
4Tsarukyan AllianceProsperous Armenia,
Alliance party,
Mission Party
Gagik TsarukyanACRETime to change and build
5ANC-PPA allianceArmenian National Congress,
People's Party of Armenia
Levon Ter-PetrosyanALDEPeace, reconciliation, neighborliness
6Republican Party of ArmeniaVigen SargsyanEPP Security and progress
7Armenian Communist PartyTachat SargsyanMotherland, socialism, labour
8ORO alliance
Seyran Ohanyan,
Heritage party,
Vartan Oskanian,
Unity party
Seyran OhanyanEPP Heritage, unity, victory
9Armenian Revolutionary FederationArmen RustamyanPES A new beginning, a just Armenia

Opinion polls

Conduct

The OSCE criticised the election by saying it had been tainted by vote-buying, and pressure on civil servants and employees of private companies. Transparency International, along with various other organizations, confirmed cases of bribe distribution.
For the first time in Armenian elections, a voter authentication system was used. On election day, all voters were identified through the use of Voter Authentication Devices, which contained an electronic copy of the voter lists. Voters' fingerprints were also scanned and the Central Electoral Commission stated that it would conduct cross-checks to identify potential cases of multiple voting if any complaints were raised. The introduction of the technology was supported by the opposition and civil society groups.
In February 2017 the CEC tested the new devices, which were provided by the UNDP electoral assistance project, funded by the European Union, United States, Germany, United Kingdom and the Armenian government.
According to final reports from the International Elections Observation Missions, "the VADs functioned effectively and without significant issues." Observers reported the introduction of the VADs was welcomed by most IEOM interlocutors as a useful tool for building confidence in the integrity of election day proceedings. However, they mentioned in the final report that the late introduction of the VADs could have led to a limited time for testing of equipment and training of operators, stating "Observers noted some problems with scanning of ID documents and fingerprints; however, this did not lead to significant disruptions of voting. IEOM observers noted 9 cases of voters attempting multiple voting that were captured by the VADs. The VADs provided the possibility for voters to be redirected, in case they were registered in another polling station in the same TEC, and this was observed in 55 polling stations."

Results

By Electoral District