May 8, 2018 - 10:19 AMT
Armenia parliament set to elect new prime minister on second try

The Armenian parliament is set to elect a new prime minister on Tuesday, May 8 after weeks of political standoff, a civil campaign against the ruling authorities and massive protests in Yerevan and across the country.

The movement was in full swing throughout the republic for several weeks and got even stronger after the National Assembly failed to elect opposition leader Nikol Pashinyan as the country's new prime minister on May 1.

The founder and head of Civil Contract party and lawmaker from the Yelk bloc, Pashinyan leads the street campaign, which has seen hundreds of thousands of Armenians taking to the streets in massive protests in the past several weeks.

Former prime minister Serzh Sargsyan was forced to resign on April 23, and Pashinyan is now seeking the appointment as prime minister by the National Assembly of what he calls “the people’s candidate”, - i.e. himself - the formation of an interim government and snap parliamentary elections.

Pashinyan has promised to rid Armenia of corruption and poverty and is still the only candidate running for the PM's post.

Demonstrations have been halted since May 3 after the ruling Republican Party of Armenia (RPA) pledged to support Pashinyan’s candidacy.

Yelk and Tsarukyan blocs, as well the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) have pledged to support Pashinyan’s bid, while the RPA will “allocate the necessary number of votes, so that Armenia has a new prime minister on Tuesday.”