GD retained power in Saturday's pivotal election that dealt a significant blow to the country's long-held aspirations for EU membership, amid allegations of voter intimidation and coercion.
But the country's pro-western opposition swiftly refused to concede defeat, accusing the ruling party of a "constitutional coup," setting the stage for a potential political crisis that could further polarise the Caucasus country.
At a press conference organised by the opposition yesterday evening, the country's pro-European president, Salome Zourabichvili, declared that she did not recognise the election results, asserting that Georgia had fallen victim to a "Russian special operation".
Zourabichvili, whose role is largely ceremonial, called on Georgians to protest against the results this evening. "This was a total rigging, a total robbery of your votes," Zourabichvili said.
The electoral commission yesterday announced that the ruling GD party secured 54% of the vote, winning 89 seats in parliament - one fewer than in 2020. Four pro-Western opposition parties collectively gained a total of 61 seats.
The result thwarts the opposition's hopes for a pro-western coalition of four blocs and in effect stalls the country's aspirations for EU integration.
Voters in the country of almost 4 million people headed to the polls in a watershed election to decide whether the increasingly authoritarian GD party, which has been in power since 2012 and steered the country into a conservative course away from the west and closer to Russia, should get another four-year term.
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