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Civil Contract (Armenia)

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Civil Contract
Քաղաքացիական Պայմանագիր
LeaderNikol Pashinyan
SecretarySasun Mikayelyan
SpokespersonAlen Simonyan
FoundedDecember 9, 2013 (2013-12-09) (as NGO)
May 30, 2015 (2015-05-30) (as political party)
IdeologyLiberalism[1]
Political positionCentre[2]
National affiliationMy Step Alliance (since 2018)
Way Out Alliance (2016-2018)
Colors  Blue
National Assembly
53 / 132
[3]
Website
civilcontract.am

Civil Contract (Template:Lang-hy, [K՛aghak՛aciakan paymanagir] Error: {{Lang}}: Non-latn text (pos 2: ՛)/Latn script subtag mismatch (help), ՔՊ, often shortened to Քաղպայմանագիր, K՛aghpaymanagir) is a political party in Armenia which was established on July 24, 2013 as an NGO. Its governing board was formed on December 9, 2013. On May 30, 2015, it became a political party. Civil Contract participated in the 2017 Armenian parliamentary election and the 2017 Yerevan City Council election as part of the Way Out Alliance (Yelk). After the 2018 Armenian Velvet Revolution led by Nikol Pashinyan, the Yelk political alliance rose to power and Civil Contract became part of the ruling coalition in the National Assembly.

History

Man speaking to reporters from a podium
July 3, 2014 press conference

Civil Contract was known for the first time on January 23, 2013, when MP Nikol Pashinyan from the opposition bloc publicized a project to establish a new political process in the newspaper Haykakan Zhamanak (The Armenian Times).[4] For several months afterwards, the text of the contract was widely discussed in Armenian political forums. An updated version of the contract was published and Civil Contract, a new political union, was announced on July 24 of that year. The union announced that before its first conference, the text of the contract would be amended and clarified and a detailed road map created.

Governing board

Man at podium, flanked by two women and four men
Civil Contract governing board in 2014

Civil Contract's governing board was introduced at a December 9, 2013 Ani Plaza Hotel press conference. The board, which makes decisions by consensus, has no chairman or director. It was formed to organize the first party conference, at which a new governing board would be elected and organizational and legal decisions made.

The governing board was:

Finances

The Civil Contract Return Fund was established to ensure that the party's funding complies with Armenian law and its activities are democratically organized. Funds donated to Civil Contract will be stored in the fund's account and vault. Accounting will be conducted under the supervision of the board of trustees, which is independent of the governing board and controls the fund's expenditures. According to the party's contract, "Citizens who have donated money or property to the Contract shall have the right to request information on spending, and their demands are to be satisfied within three days' time."[full citation needed]

Board of trustees

The Civil Contract board of trustees was announced on February 22, 2014. Haykak Arshamyan was elected chairman, and Hakob Simidyan was appointed director of the fund. Members of the are:

  • Lara Aharonian, Women's Resource Center co-founder, director
  • Haykak Arshamyan, PhD in history
  • Levon Bagramyan, economist, political scientist, Washington, D.C.
  • Arthur Ispiryan, musician
  • Levon Hovsepyan, economist
  • Ara Shirinyan, director
  • Maro Matossian, Women's Support Center director
  • Edgar Manukyan, PhD in economics, Toronto, Canada
  • Sargis Kloyan, businessperson

Funding

Man at a podium, addressing reporters
July 3, 2014 press conference

The Civil Contract governing board published "Financing Politics and Civil Contract", an article touching on the issues of fiscal transparency and financing public and political life in Armenia, on April 26, 2014:

Financing politics is one of the essential entangled knots of the history of the Third Republic. How is the public-political activity financed in Armenia? It's a question the proper answer of which is not known. One can guess, put forward hypotheses, but the society does not have a reliable and verifiable answer to the question ... The most popular answer is that "we are funded by thousands of our supporters". This is an answer, which generates new questions: whom and how do the supporters give the money? Who takes it and under what conditions? How do others learn whether their retainer has donated that much, more or less money ... ? From the very first stage of the debates over establishing “civil contract” public–political union the issues about funding the activities of the contract have been the subject of heated debate. How is the contract going to be financed? Who will be financing it? The answers to these questions were principal for us. And if we have serious ambition to achieve fundamental changes in public–political relations, we need to try to work ourselves out of the Armenian traditional funding mechanisms of political activity. We have formulated the problem the following way: if we need 1000 AMD, we need to find not a single person that will give us that money, but we need to find 1000 people each of whom will donate 1 AMD.[full citation needed]

Velvet Revolution

On March 31, 2018, Civil Contract leader Nikol Pashinyan and his supporters began a 200-kilometre (120 mi) march from Gyumri (Armenia's second-largest city) to the capital, Yerevan, to dissuade Prime Minister Serzh Sargsyan from retaining power beyond his term limit.[6] On April 17, Nikol Pashinyan announced the start of a national, nonviolent "velvet revolution" to thousands of supporters gathered near the National Assembly.[7] On April 22, several hours after a brief meeting with Sargsyan, Pashinyan was arrested with about 250 other protesters.[8] After mass strikes and blocked streets by over 300,000 protesters (including soldiers and Civil Contract members), Sargsyan resigned on April 23.[9] He said, "Nikol Pashinyan was right. I was wrong. The movement of the street is against my office. I'm fulfilling your demands."[10] According to al Jazeera's Robin Forestier-Walker, "Thousands of people are on the streets, cheering and hugging each other, jumping up and down and honking their horns ... things happened so quickly, I don't think the crowd was expecting this, but it is exactly what they wanted".[11]

Electoral record

Parliamentary elections

Election Alliance Votes % Seats +/– Position Government
2017 part of Way Out Alliance 122,049 7.78
9 / 105
Steady Steady 3rd Opposition (2017–2018)
Government (2018–2019)
2018 part of My Step Alliance 884,456 70.43
88 / 132
Increase 88 Increase 1st Government

Local elections

Yerevan City Council elections

Election Alliance Mayor candidate Votes % Seats in City Council +/– Position
2017 part of Way Out Alliance
Nikol Pashinyan
70,730
21
14 / 65
Steady Steady 2nd
2018 part of My Step Alliance
Hayk Marutyan
294,092
81.06
57 / 65
Increase 57 Increase 1st

References

  1. ^ Elliott, Raffi (July 18, 2018). "Armenia Needs More Women in Politics, But What Will It Take?". The Armenian Weekly. Retrieved December 2, 2018.
  2. ^ Synovitz, Ron; Musayelyan, Suren (March 31, 2017). "In Armenia, Unprecedented Outreach Ahead Of Elections". RFE/RL. Centrist opposition leader Nikol Pashinian ...
  3. ^ http://parliament.am/deputies.php?sel=factions&lang=eng
  4. ^ Harutyunyan, Tatev (January 30, 2013). "Can Nikol Pashinyan's Civic Contract Change Anything?". Aravot Daily. Retrieved April 27, 2018.
  5. ^ "National Assembly of the Republic of Armenia | Official Web Site | parliament.am".
  6. ^ "Thousands Rally Against Armenian Leader in Yerevan". April 14, 2018.
  7. ^ "Նիկոլ Փաշինյանը հայտարարեց ժողովրդական, "ոչ բռնի, թավշյա հեղափոխության" մեկնարկը (թարմացվող)". Hetq. April 17, 2018.
  8. ^ "Armenian PM resigns; here's what led to the surprise move". The Washington Post. April 23, 2018.
  9. ^ Andrew, Roth (April 23, 2018). "Shock as Armenia's prime minister steps down after 11 days of protests". The Guardian.
  10. ^ Alec, Luhn (April 23, 2018). "Armenian leader Serzh Sargsyan resigns after 11 days of protests". The Telegraph.
  11. ^ "Armenia opposition leader demands snap election after PM resigns". Al Jazeera. April 23, 2018.