Home World News Voters in Georgia Republic Are at a Crossroads: Russia or the West?

Voters in Georgia Republic Are at a Crossroads: Russia or the West?

Voters cast ballots on Saturday in a parliamentary election that could derail the country’s pro-Western course.

Voters in Georgia, a mountainous country at the strategic center of the Caucasus, are casting their ballots in a parliamentary election on Saturday that could derail the country’s decades-long pro-Western course and push it closer to Russia and China.

The governing Georgian Dream party, which has been in power since 2012 and increasingly tilts toward Russia, seeks a supermajority. That way, the party has vowed, it could use the result to outlaw its main opponents, the United National Movement and its satellite groups, which favor the West.

In turn, the opposition, which has been divided into four main political forces, aims to end Georgian Dream’s rule and to more concretely steer the country toward membership in the European Union and NATO.

“The elections will decide whether Georgia will be democratic or authoritarian,” Giorgi Gakharia, a former prime minister and the leader of the For Georgia party, said in an interview. “The elections will decide Georgia’s future course not for the next four years, but for the next decade.”

The results will reverberate in the region and beyond. As of 5 p.m. Georgia time, the nation’s election administration said that the turnout was at 50.6 percent. And as the polls closed on Saturday night, opposition and pro-government television networks published exit polls that gave divergent results — and both sides were claiming victory. The country’s elections authority was expected to deliver first results in a few hours.

After more than three decades of being among the most pro-Western states to emerge from the collapse of the Soviet Union, Georgia could join the expanding group of illiberal states that try to perform a balancing act between Russia and China, and the West.

We are having trouble retrieving the article content.

Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.

Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times.

Thank you for your patience while we verify access.

Already a subscriber? Log in.

Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Articles

Spain not ruling out lab leak as cause of swine fever outbreak

Spain’s government said Friday it had not ruled out an accidental laboratory...

Four civilians killed in Pakistan-Afghanistan border clash

An overnight exchange of fire at the Chaman–Spin Boldak crossing killed four...

Thousands protest in Berlin against new German military conscription bill

Politicians approve the controversial law after months of heated debate, amid fears...

Arab, Muslim nations reject Israel exit-only plan for Gaza Rafah crossing

Ministers slam Israeli breach of truce and its exit plan which aims...