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2008 Georgian presidential election

Presidential elections were held in Georgia on 5 January 2008,[1] moved forward from autumn 2008 by President Mikheil Saakashvili after the 2007 demonstrations.[2]

2008 Georgian presidential election

← 2004 5 January 2008 2013 →
Registered3,527,964 ( 58.06%)
Turnout56.19% ( 31.78pp)
 
Nominee Mikheil Saakashvili Levan Gachechiladze
Party UNM National Council
Popular vote 1,060,042 509,234
Percentage 54.73% 26.29%

 
Nominee Badri Patarkatsishvili Shalva Natelashvili
Party Independent SLP
Popular vote 140,826 128,589
Percentage 7.27% 6.64%

Results by municipality
Saakashvili:      30–40%      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80%+

Gachechiladze:      30–40%      40–50%

Natelashvili:      40–50%

President before election

Mikheil Saakashvili
UNM

Elected President

Mikheil Saakashvili
UNM

A double referendum on when to hold the legislative elections and on NATO membership was held on the same date.[3]

Saakashvili was declared the winner with 53.7% of the votes, despite accusations of electoral fraud from the Georgian opposition.[4] International observers welcomed the elections as "the first genuinely competitive presidential election" in the history of Georgia,[5] and said, despite observed irregularities, the elections generally met the democratic standards.[6]

Background edit

In November 2007, tens of thousands of Georgians protested outside the parliament in the capital, Tbilisi, urging President Mikhail Saakashvili to step down. The crowd also called for early parliamentary elections. They accused Saakashvili of heading a corrupt, authoritarian government and wanted him to be ousted democratically.[7] The protests turned violent when the police used tear gas and water cannons to dislodge the protesters from the territory adjoining to the Parliament building, and prevented the demonstrators from resuming the protests. The government accused the Russian secret services of being involved in an attempted coup d'état and declared a nationwide state of emergency, which lasted until 16 November 2007. In addition, on 8 November, President Saakashvili announced a compromise solution to hold an early presidential election on 5 January 2008. Pursuant to the Constitution of Georgia, Saakashvili resigned on 25 November to launch his pre-election campaign.[8]

In late December, Badri Patarkatsishvili, a business tycoon and presidential candidate who had pledged his financial support to the November rallies, became embroiled in a major controversy. The authorities released a series of audio and video recordings of two separate meetings between a high-ranking Interior Ministry official Erekle Kodua, Patarkatsishvili himself and the head of his pre-election campaign, Valeri Gelbakhiani. According to these materials, Patarkatsishvili attempted to bribe Kodua into claiming voter fraud and taking part in what the Georgian officials described as an attempted coup d'état on January 6, 2008, the day after the scheduled presidential elections. The plan included staging a mass manifestation against the government and "neutralizing" the Interior Minister Vano Merabishvili. Patarkatsishvili confirmed that he met with Kodua in London, but denied the bribe was in connection to a coup plot. Instead, he claimed his intention was to uncover official plans to rig the election. He also confirmed that he had offered Kodua "a huge amount of money" in exchange for defecting from the authorities to avert the possible use of government force against the planned January rallies.[9][10][11] On December 26, 2007, several leading journalists defected from Imedi TV, co-owned by Patarkatsishvili. Later that day, the television station’s management announced that Imedi TV temporarily suspended broadcasts until the station's "legal status in respect of ownership is clarified." "By doing so we are distancing from dirty political games", said Giorgi Targamadze, head of the Imedi TV's political programs.[12] The opposition politicians formerly allied with him also made attempts to distance themselves from Patarkatsishvili and condemned what they described as illegal methods used by both the authorities and "other forces," apparently referring to Patarkatsishvili.[13]

On December 28, 2007, Patarkatsishvili announced that he would withdraw his bid for presidency, but would remain a candidate until January 4, 2008.[14] On January 3, 2008, he reversed himself and decided to run in presidential elections. In response, his top campaign official Giorgi Zhvania (brother of the late Prime Minister Zurab Zhvania) resigned, declaring that Patarkasishvili does not have a reputation one would expect of a country's president.[15]

Meanwhile, the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) released two interim reports on the election campaign, saying that the "legal framework [was] generally favorable to the conduct of democratic elections in Georgia, if implemented in good faith." However, they expressed concerns about "a highly polarized political environment" within the country's political spectrum, including the allegations of Saakashvili's use of administrative resources and the lack of balance in Georgian media.[16][17]

On December 28, 2007, Saakashvili vowed to lead Georgia into NATO and to restore its territorial integrity in his second term if reelected. He stated he would hand over a united Georgia to his successor after the end of his second term.[18]

The pre-election period in Georgia was also marked with rising tensions in breakaway Abkhazia. Early in January 2008, the Georgian media reported attacks on ethnic Georgians in the Gali district controlled by the de facto Abkhaz administration. The reports said that the Georgians living in Abkhazia were being intimidated by local Abkhaz officials to prevent them from participating in Georgia's presidential election. At least seven houses owned by ethnic Georgians were destroyed by fire. Although Abkhaz officials rejected the accusations,[19] the acting Georgian president Nino Burjanadze warned that attempts were being made to add conflict on the eve of the election.[20]

Candidates edit

Badri Patarkatsishvili, a business oligarch who made a fortune in Russia, announced he would be a candidate on 10 November 2007.[21] The opposition parties stated they would nominate a single candidate, who would have a "great chance of winning the election." The nominee would not be Patarkatsishvili, former Defence Minister Irakli Okruashvili or the activist Tina Khidasheli.[22] On November 12, the opposition parties nominated MP Levan Gachechiladze, a leader of the 2007 Georgian demonstrations, as their common candidate.[23] The Georgian Labour Party supported its leader Shalva Natelashvili as a candidate instead of Gachechiladze, and the New Right nominated MP Davit Gamkrelidze as their candidate.

Saakashvili was nominated as his party's candidate on 23 November.[24]

Twenty-two citizens of Georgia expressed willingness to run in the elections. According to the Georgian election code each of them had to submit at least 50,000 signatures of supporters in order to be registered by the Central Election Commission as official candidates.[25]

In total, thirteen candidates submitted signatures, but only seven were recognized by the Central Election Commission (CEC) as eligible to run for the presidency:

Opinion polls edit

In a November 2007 pre-election poll held by the weekly Mteli Kvira, the opposition candidate Gachechiladze defeated Saakashvili by 2% (18% to 16%).[27][28]

In a December 2007 poll commissioned by Saakashvili's party, the BCG company surveyed 13,000 respondents throughout Georgia and showed that 29.5% of voters were still undecided. 36.7% said they would vote for Saakashvili, followed by Gachechiladze with 9.7%; Patarkatsishvili – 4.7%; Gamkrelidze – 3%; Natelashvili – 2.5%; Maisashvili and Sarishvili had less than 1% each. One percent said they would vote for none of the candidates. The survey showed that 63.5% of those who had decided to vote for one of the candidates would vote for Saakashvili, followed by Gachechiladze and Patarkatsishvili with 16.7% and 8.1%, respectively.[29]

Another survey, also commissioned by Saakashvili's party, was overseen by the U.S. based Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research, but conducted by the Georgian ACT group. This survey involved 1,500 respondents and found that 41% would vote for Saakashvili, followed by Gachechiladze – 11.1%; Patarkatsishvili – 6.5%; Natelashvili – 3.5%; Gamkrelidze – 2.1%; Maisashvili and Sarishvili – less than 1% each. 20.6% were undecided and 2.3% said they wouldn’t vote for any candidate. Of those who had decided to vote for one of the candidates, 64% said they would vote for Saakashvili, followed by Gachechiladze and Patarkatsishvili with 17% and 10%, respectively.[29]

On December 23, 2007, the pro-opposition Imedi TV announced that an organization called Dialogue for Development of Democracy had conducted an opinion poll between December 17 and December 21. The survey showed that 22.1% of the 2,100 surveyed would support Levan Gachechiladze, followed by Mikheil Saakashvili with 20.3%; Badri Patarkatsishvili – 19.1%; Shalva Natelashvili – 6.5%; Davit Gamkrelidze – 4.9%; Giorgi Maisashvili – 1.1% and Irina Sarishvili – 0.2%. The survey reported that 21.7% remained undecided.[29]

A survey, commissioned once again by Saakashvili’s campaign from Greenberg Quinlan Rosner, was published on January 3, 2008. It showed that Saakashvili had the support of 42 percent, compared to 19 percent for Levan Gachechiladze, 11 percent for Badri Patarkatsishvili, 5 percent for Shalva Natelashvili, 4 percent for David Gamkrelidze, and 1 percent for Gia Maisashvili; 2 percent would not vote or vote blank, and 16 percent were undecided. The survey reported only a minority of Georgian voters felt the presidential elections would not be fair.[30]

Conduct edit

In addition to local watchdogs, 29 international or foreign organizations (including OSCE, Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, and International Crisis Group) observed the elections.[31]

Early on election day all polling stations were opened with the exception of the highland village of Shatili where heavy snow thwarted the process.[32]

Exit polls edit

All major national television broadcasters planned to conduct their own exit polls and commissioned seven local research groups.[29]

The first exit poll results were conflicting:

  • According to a survey commissioned by 4 TV stations (Georgian Public Broadcaster, Rustavi 2, Mze, and Achara TV) from the Georgian Institute of Public Affairs (GIPA), Ilia Chavchavadze State University and two think-tanks – the Caucasus Institute for Peace, Democracy and Development (CIPDD) and the Georgian Foundation for Strategic and International Studies (GFSIS), Mikheil Saakashvili was winning with a narrow absolute majority of 53.5% of the votes, with Levan Gachechiladze coming second with 29.1%.[33] Voter turnout was 46.4%.[34] Twenty-three percent of respondents refused to say for whom they had voted. The poll had a 2% margin of error. The figures were provisional, with final results not expected for another few hours.[35]
  • According to a relatively unknown[36] Ukrainian think tank "Common European Cause", which claimed to have interviewed 10,000 people at 200 polling stations, Gachechiladze won the most votes (31%), followed by Saakashvili (24.4%) and Patarkatsishvili (20.3%).[37]

Results edit

The Central Election Committee stated the turnout was 56.17%, or 1,912,943 voters. As announced by the Central Election Committee on 20:00 (16:00 GMT) of January 6, data from 2,605 precincts had been counted and showed Saakashvili in the lead with 51.95% of the votes, and Gachechiladze in second place with 25.14%.[38] 2 days later, with votes from more polling stations having been counted, Saakashvili was leading with 52.21%,[39] Gachechiladze following him with 25.26% of the votes.[39] On 9 January 2008, with 98.8% of the ballots counted, Saakashvili had 52.21%, meaning he could not fall below the 50% which would result in a run-off.[40]

CandidatePartyVotes%
Mikheil SaakashviliUnited National Movement1,060,04254.73
Levan GachechiladzeNational Council509,23426.29
Badri PatarkatsishviliIndependent140,8267.27
Shalva NatelashviliGeorgian Labour Party128,5896.64
Davit GamkrelidzeNew Rights Party79,7474.12
Gia MaisashviliParty of the Future15,2490.79
Irina Sarishvili-ChanturiaHope Party3,2420.17
Total1,936,929100.00
Valid votes1,936,92997.71
Invalid/blank votes45,3892.29
Total votes1,982,318100.00
Registered voters/turnout3,527,96456.19
Source: Civil.ge

By territory edit

Territory[a] Turnout Saakashvili Gachechiladze Patarkatsishvili Natelashvili Gamkrelidze Others Lead
Mtatsminda 64.15 29.28 44.77 4.74 4.27 7.35 9.59 15.49
Vake 61.64 28.35 48.54 4.08 3.88 7.78 7.37 20.19
Saburtalo 56.62 27.11 47.76 4.57 6.10 6.94 7.52 20.65
Krtsanisi 55.03 50.76 28.25 6.29 5.51 3.95 5.24 22.51
Isani 47.61 33.73 34.79 12.47 6.86 4.05 8.10 1.06
Samgori 49.71 37.56 33.20 9.77 8.94 3.87 6.66 4.36
Chughureti 52.14 28.92 44.86 8.37 7.20 5.15 5.50 15.94
Didube 61.34 31.31 46.26 6.02 6.03 6.36 4.02 14.95
Nadzaladevi 52.89 29.67 40.84 8.06 9.79 4.60 7.04 11.17
Gldani 48.03 33.82 35.74 9.29 10.44 4.62 6.09 1.92
Sagarejo 60.94 49.95 22.45 11.54 7.29 2.22 6.55 27.50
Gurjaani 59.53 40.12 21.37 19.89 9.47 3.42 5.73 18.75
Sighnaghi 70.79 59.36 20.21 4.57 7.94 3.82 4.10 39.15
Dedoplistskaro 54.96 38.80 24.28 18.40 10.86 3.29 4.37 14.52
Lagodekhi 60.91 53.98 22.91 7.54 7.10 1.79 6.68 31.07
Kvareli 65.42 49.70 23.61 12.81 6.13 1.68 6.07 26.09
Telavi 58.57 48.14 27.18 10.79 7.46 3.10 3.33 20.96
Akhmeta 51.35 47.19 24.28 9.95 10.42 3.37 4.79 22.91
Tianeti 56.23 44.80 13.60 7.81 26.67 3.37 3.75 18.13
Rustavi 46.63 42.17 31.54 6.34 8.38 5.07 6.50 10.63
Gardabani 57.34 70.62 11.55 3.31 5.21 2.30 7.01 59.07
Marneuli 63.22 89.23 5.57 0.73 0.65 2.41 1.41 83.66
Bolnisi 64.72 83.09 8.02 1.67 1.37 2.02 3.83 75.07
Dmanisi 51.03 81.49 7.02 5.04 1.55 1.53 3.37 74.47
Tsalka 39.42 72.69 10.03 2.27 2.16 9.01 3.84 62.66
Tetritskaro 52.07 63.25 16.55 5.53 7.85 4.89 1.93 46.70
Mtskheta 67.43 50.63 19.77 8.23 14.86 2.14 4.37 30.86
Dusheti 53.68 26.43 16.09 5.44 46.50 1.53 4.01 20.07
Kazbegi 31.66 34.53 42.42 4.36 9.83 6.10 2.76 7.89
Kaspi 60.80 52.12 24.02 6.64 10.55 2.35 4.32 28.10
Akhalgori 68.14 67.98 12.29 4.21 11.01 3.00 1.51 55.69
Gori 64.55 60.23 18.29 5.09 5.93 4.55 5.91 41.94
Kareli 70.14 64.02 16.74 4.91 7.50 3.26 3.57 47.28
Khashuri 71.74 59.08 20.84 3.37 7.79 3.41 5.51 38.24
Borjomi 62.43 43.27 35.57 8.42 7.11 3.55 2.08 7.70
Akhaltsikhe 76.37 77.51 10.55 2.83 1.93 1.00 6.18 66.96
Adigeni 81.65 78.95 10.35 4.97 2.73 1.86 1.14 68.60
Aspindza 64.58 68.75 12.60 3.99 5.86 3.18 5.62 56.15
Akhalkalaki 81.73 86.86 2.59 4.32 0.77 1.59 3.87 82.54
Ninotsminda 71.75 90.15 2.63 2.36 1.16 1.37 2.33 87.52
Oni 60.87 59.99 14.17 3.52 6.11 14.38 1.83 45.82
Ambrolauri 64.50 58.80 15.01 0.41 4.89 17.48 3.41 43.79
Tsageri 66.66 72.67 13.85 2.61 2.98 6.04 1.85 58.82
Lentekhi 56.18 48.59 26.51 13.67 4.05 4.28 2.90 22.08
Mestia 60.53 50.96 15.02 17.84 3.78 10.66 1.74 33.12
Kharagauli 64.86 52.22 29.60 6.46 6.38 3.20 2.14 22.62
Terjola 63.99 60.68 21.67 2.83 7.14 3.58 4.10 39.01
Sachkhere 53.54 51.73 27.36 2.83 8.17 6.13 3.78 24.37
Zestafoni 55.11 46.11 31.65 5.28 9.21 3.37 4.38 14.46
Baghdati 57.76 53.24 25.96 4.73 5.53 4.77 5.77 27.28
Vani 58.61 67.94 17.92 4.00 5.34 2.94 1.86 50.02
Samtredia 57.82 54.55 27.50 3.49 6.43 3.98 4.05 27.05
Khoni 62.29 69.70 17.76 1.81 4.36 4.06 2.31 51.94
Chiatura 48.67 48.46 26.50 7.13 9.89 3.56 4.46 21.96
Tkibuli 59.06 66.98 16.75 2.78 6.21 6.65 0.63 50.23
Tskaltubo 57.26 62.52 19.04 3.55 7.01 4.56 3.32 43.48
Kutaisi 45.27 44.29 30.44 4.40 8.50 7.97 4.40 13.85
Ozurgeti 55.88 38.51 31.07 15.99 4.27 3.80 6.36 7.44
Lanchkhuti 64.22 40.34 35.30 10.35 5.05 4.75 4.21 5.04
Chokhatauri 68.91 40.78 36.90 12.45 4.20 3.61 2.06 3.88
Abasha 68.45 62.83 19.39 5.02 4.32 2.65 5.79 43.44
Senaki 66.90 74.29 12.46 3.84 3.92 3.24 2.25 61.83
Martvili 62.84 68.12 15.47 4.00 2.91 2.53 6.97 52.65
Khobi 64.47 64.26 20.38 4.87 3.18 3.30 4.01 43.88
Zugdidi 48.84 70.17 13.65 2.91 2.52 2.88 7.87 56.52
Tsalenjikha 48.59 74.12 11.52 2.47 3.13 2.86 5.90 62.60
Chkhorotsqu 63.86 68.19 15.39 4.08 3.89 2.32 6.13 52.80
Poti 49.23 42.78 31.98 8.67 4.68 4.80 7.09 10.80
Batumi 51.11 38.63 32.99 14.32 4.70 3.65 5.71 5.64
Keda 69.79 58.10 19.60 12.49 4.68 2.69 2.44 38.50
Kobuleti 55.99 49.69 21.04 18.15 5.04 1.73 4.35 28.65
Shuakhevi 62.46 69.39 14.72 6.81 4.41 2.55 2.12 54.67
Khelvachauri 52.80 44.37 22.48 19.28 6.76 1.77 5.34 21.89
Khulo 66.57 66.58 16.72 8.74 3.84 2.43 1.69 49.86
Liakhvi* 87.29 88.53 6.32 0.76 0.98 1.28 2.13 82.21
Upper Abkhazia 78.28 86.42 5.84 1.78 1.84 1.84 2.28 80.58
Abroad N/A 76.40 10.20 1.41 2.08 2.67 7.24 66.20
Source: Electoral Geography CEC
  • ^* Municipalities of Kurta and Eredvi

Reactions edit

The opposition candidates claimed the polls were rigged and the exit-polls false. Supporters for Levan Gachechiladze were waiting for official results,[41] but the candidate himself called for a January 6 meeting in Tbilisi to protect the true results of the election.[42] On that day, about 7000 to 9000 supporters of the opposition went to the Rike Square in Tbilisi. Opposition leaders urged their adherents to return on 8 January and to celebrate the victory of Levan Gachechiladze.[43] While that rally was called off,[44] the opposition united in a large rally in downtown Tbilisi once again on 13 January, claiming vote-rigging had taken place, demanding a run-off, and asking for the resignation of the head of the CEC.[45][46] The protests continued through inauguration day, 20 January.[47]

On 10 January, Badri Patarkatsishvili was charged with attempting to organise a terrorist attack and plotting a coup.[48]

The Georgian Human Rights Ombudsman, Sozar Subari, was highly critical of the election proceedings. In addition to identifying breaches of the law, his report stated:

[T]he pre-election environment was not equal and fair. This time, as usual, the alarming tendency of blurring the distinction between the presidential candidate of the ruling party and the state authority occurred, which was expressed through the direct political involvement of the different agencies (especially law enforcement agencies) of the executive branch in the electoral processes. One of the proofs of the involvement of the mentioned agencies is that the electoral headquarters of the ruling party's candidate was in reality led by the Minister of Internal Affairs, who was conducting meetings and assigning local party leaders, heads of police departments, employees of the Constitutional Security and Special Operative Departments, prosecutors, and governors with particular election-related tasks.[49]

Meanwhile, the OSCE and EU election observers stated that the election met democratic standards, but there were problems that had to be addressed.[50] Western observers also hailed it as "the first genuinely competitive presidential election, which enabled the Georgian people to express their political choice."[citation needed][51] The EU called on all political forces in Georgia to respect the election results and "to engage constructively and democratically in order to ensure that Georgia continues moving forward."[52] NATO also welcomed the election, saying it was "an important step in Georgia’s democratic development."[53] By contrast, the Russian Foreign Ministry condemned the vote and described it as neither free nor fair: "The presidential race was marked by the widespread use of administrative resources, open pressure on opposition candidates and severe limitations on their access to financial and media sources."[54]

In an interview with the German newspaper Frankfurter Rundschau, German diplomat Dieter Boden, the head of the OSCE Election Observation Mission, stated the elections were massively falsified and that there were "rude, negligent and intentional manipulations during the vote count that were detected by our observers". He spoke of a "chaotic situation" within the electoral commission.[55] On January 10, however, a representative of the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights mission in Georgia, Rasto Kuzel, declared that the OSCE had not changed its positive evaluation of the January 5 presidential election. The OSCE Office explained: "Mr. Boden's published statements do not quite reflect what he really said, and we shall look into how that happened"[56] and that "the interview was not published completely. Some definitions were cut from the interview."[57] On January 11, Boden stated that the confusion "was the result of a journalist's misinterpretation" and said the final report would be published in February 2008.[58]

The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) final report was critical of the conduct of the election:

Election day was generally peaceful. Overall, voting was assessed positively by a large majority of IEOM observers, although it was at times disorganized and chaotic in a considerable number of precincts. Organizational and procedural shortcomings were observed, especially with regard to inconsistent application of inking procedures intended as a safeguard against multiple voting. Observers also reported a limited number of serious violations, including ballot box stuffing. The vote count and tabulation was evaluated less positively. Many PECs had problems completing the results protocols, which were often not posted for public scrutiny. IEOM observers reported cases of tampering with voter lists, results and protocols. The tabulation process at DEC level was slow and often chaotic. Some PEC protocols given to the OSCE/ODIHR EOM differed from those provided by DECs, and many PEC protocols were incomplete or inconsistent. A significant number of PECs reported unusually high turnout in the last three hours of voting, and several DECs reported a turnout considerably higher than the national average. Only a limited number of official complaints were filed during the pre-electoral period, almost all against the ruling party and its candidate. Although courts generally carried out open hearings in a professional and thorough manner, some complaints were ruled inadmissible without sound legal basis, and some written judgments did not set out sufficient reasoning. In addition, the CEC and courts tended to stretch the law beyond reasonable interpretation and without regard to its spirit in favour of the ruling party candidate and public officials. After election day, the election administration and the courts did not fully and adequately consider and investigate a considerable number of complaints regarding irregularities, some of which were of a serious nature. A large number of complaints were also ruled inadmissible or dismissed on technical grounds.[59]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Each territory refers to either a district of Tbilisi or a municipality, unless noted otherwise

References edit

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  2. ^ Georgia to hold early elections. BBC News. November 8, 2007.
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  20. ^ Attempts Made to Raise Tension in Conflict Zones – Burjanadze. Civil Georgia. January 4, 2008.
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  47. ^ ‘We will not Stop’ – Opposition Tells Thousands at Rally. Civil Georgia. January 20, 2008.
  48. ^ Al Jazeera English – News – Coup Charge Against Georgian Tycoon
  49. ^ Office of the Ombudsman of Georgia (2008). (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 February 2012. Retrieved 4 January 2012.
  50. ^ [2] 2008-01-09 at the Wayback Machine PR Inside: OSCE says Georgian election showed problems that must be addressed urgently
  51. ^ Georgia — Extraordinary Presidential Election, 5 January 2008. STATEMENT OF PRELIMINARY FINDINGS AND CONCLUSIONS 16 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine. INTERNATIONAL ELECTION OBSERVATION MISSION. January 6, 2008.
  52. ^ Respect Election Results – EU Tells Political Parties. Civil Georgia. January 7, 2008.
  53. ^ NATO on Georgia’s Elections. Civil Georgia. January 8, 2008.
  54. ^ Moscow Condemns Georgia’s Polls. Civil Georgia. January 6, 2008.
  55. ^ Massive falsifications during the election in Georgia. Frankfurter Rundschau. January 9, 2008.
  56. ^ OSCE mission has not changed opinion of Georgian election-official. Itar-Tass. 10.01.2008.
  57. ^ OSCE Does Not Change Position Related To Evaluation Of Presidential Elections Archived 2012-07-07 at archive.today. Prime Times. January 10, 2008.
  58. ^ Dieter Boden summoned to Foreign Ministry 2008-08-30 at the Wayback Machine. The Georgian Times. 2008.01.11.
  59. ^ "EXTRAORDINARY PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION 5 January 2008 – OSCE/ODIHR Election Observation Mission Final Report". 4 March 2008. Retrieved 4 January 2012.

External links edit

  • Georgian presidential election, 2008, Electoral Geography 2.0
  • Georgia Vote 2008, EurasiaNet
  • Elections 2008. Civil Georgia
  • Central Election Commission of Georgia 2007-09-29 at the Wayback Machine

2008, georgian, presidential, election, presidential, elections, were, held, georgia, january, 2008, moved, forward, from, autumn, 2008, president, mikheil, saakashvili, after, 2007, demonstrations, 2004, january, 2008, 2013, registered3, turnout56, 78pp, nomi. Presidential elections were held in Georgia on 5 January 2008 1 moved forward from autumn 2008 by President Mikheil Saakashvili after the 2007 demonstrations 2 2008 Georgian presidential election 2004 5 January 2008 2013 Registered3 527 964 58 06 Turnout56 19 31 78pp Nominee Mikheil Saakashvili Levan Gachechiladze Party UNM National Council Popular vote 1 060 042 509 234 Percentage 54 73 26 29 Nominee Badri Patarkatsishvili Shalva Natelashvili Party Independent SLP Popular vote 140 826 128 589 Percentage 7 27 6 64 Results by municipalitySaakashvili 30 40 40 50 50 60 60 70 70 80 80 Gachechiladze 30 40 40 50 Natelashvili 40 50 President before election Mikheil Saakashvili UNM Elected President Mikheil Saakashvili UNM A double referendum on when to hold the legislative elections and on NATO membership was held on the same date 3 Saakashvili was declared the winner with 53 7 of the votes despite accusations of electoral fraud from the Georgian opposition 4 International observers welcomed the elections as the first genuinely competitive presidential election in the history of Georgia 5 and said despite observed irregularities the elections generally met the democratic standards 6 Contents 1 Background 2 Candidates 3 Opinion polls 4 Conduct 5 Exit polls 6 Results 6 1 By territory 7 Reactions 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksBackground editIn November 2007 tens of thousands of Georgians protested outside the parliament in the capital Tbilisi urging President Mikhail Saakashvili to step down The crowd also called for early parliamentary elections They accused Saakashvili of heading a corrupt authoritarian government and wanted him to be ousted democratically 7 The protests turned violent when the police used tear gas and water cannons to dislodge the protesters from the territory adjoining to the Parliament building and prevented the demonstrators from resuming the protests The government accused the Russian secret services of being involved in an attempted coup d etat and declared a nationwide state of emergency which lasted until 16 November 2007 In addition on 8 November President Saakashvili announced a compromise solution to hold an early presidential election on 5 January 2008 Pursuant to the Constitution of Georgia Saakashvili resigned on 25 November to launch his pre election campaign 8 In late December Badri Patarkatsishvili a business tycoon and presidential candidate who had pledged his financial support to the November rallies became embroiled in a major controversy The authorities released a series of audio and video recordings of two separate meetings between a high ranking Interior Ministry official Erekle Kodua Patarkatsishvili himself and the head of his pre election campaign Valeri Gelbakhiani According to these materials Patarkatsishvili attempted to bribe Kodua into claiming voter fraud and taking part in what the Georgian officials described as an attempted coup d etat on January 6 2008 the day after the scheduled presidential elections The plan included staging a mass manifestation against the government and neutralizing the Interior Minister Vano Merabishvili Patarkatsishvili confirmed that he met with Kodua in London but denied the bribe was in connection to a coup plot Instead he claimed his intention was to uncover official plans to rig the election He also confirmed that he had offered Kodua a huge amount of money in exchange for defecting from the authorities to avert the possible use of government force against the planned January rallies 9 10 11 On December 26 2007 several leading journalists defected from Imedi TV co owned by Patarkatsishvili Later that day the television station s management announced that Imedi TV temporarily suspended broadcasts until the station s legal status in respect of ownership is clarified By doing so we are distancing from dirty political games said Giorgi Targamadze head of the Imedi TV s political programs 12 The opposition politicians formerly allied with him also made attempts to distance themselves from Patarkatsishvili and condemned what they described as illegal methods used by both the authorities and other forces apparently referring to Patarkatsishvili 13 On December 28 2007 Patarkatsishvili announced that he would withdraw his bid for presidency but would remain a candidate until January 4 2008 14 On January 3 2008 he reversed himself and decided to run in presidential elections In response his top campaign official Giorgi Zhvania brother of the late Prime Minister Zurab Zhvania resigned declaring that Patarkasishvili does not have a reputation one would expect of a country s president 15 Meanwhile the Organization for Security and Co operation in Europe OSCE released two interim reports on the election campaign saying that the legal framework was generally favorable to the conduct of democratic elections in Georgia if implemented in good faith However they expressed concerns about a highly polarized political environment within the country s political spectrum including the allegations of Saakashvili s use of administrative resources and the lack of balance in Georgian media 16 17 On December 28 2007 Saakashvili vowed to lead Georgia into NATO and to restore its territorial integrity in his second term if reelected He stated he would hand over a united Georgia to his successor after the end of his second term 18 The pre election period in Georgia was also marked with rising tensions in breakaway Abkhazia Early in January 2008 the Georgian media reported attacks on ethnic Georgians in the Gali district controlled by the de facto Abkhaz administration The reports said that the Georgians living in Abkhazia were being intimidated by local Abkhaz officials to prevent them from participating in Georgia s presidential election At least seven houses owned by ethnic Georgians were destroyed by fire Although Abkhaz officials rejected the accusations 19 the acting Georgian president Nino Burjanadze warned that attempts were being made to add conflict on the eve of the election 20 Candidates editBadri Patarkatsishvili a business oligarch who made a fortune in Russia announced he would be a candidate on 10 November 2007 21 The opposition parties stated they would nominate a single candidate who would have a great chance of winning the election The nominee would not be Patarkatsishvili former Defence Minister Irakli Okruashvili or the activist Tina Khidasheli 22 On November 12 the opposition parties nominated MP Levan Gachechiladze a leader of the 2007 Georgian demonstrations as their common candidate 23 The Georgian Labour Party supported its leader Shalva Natelashvili as a candidate instead of Gachechiladze and the New Right nominated MP Davit Gamkrelidze as their candidate Saakashvili was nominated as his party s candidate on 23 November 24 Twenty two citizens of Georgia expressed willingness to run in the elections According to the Georgian election code each of them had to submit at least 50 000 signatures of supporters in order to be registered by the Central Election Commission as official candidates 25 In total thirteen candidates submitted signatures but only seven were recognized by the Central Election Commission CEC as eligible to run for the presidency Levan Gachechiladze nominated by the nine party opposition coalition Davit Gamkrelidze leader of the New Right Gia Maisashvili leader of the Party of the Future Shalva Natelashvili leader of the Georgian Labour Party Badri Patarkatsishvili a business and media tycoon Mikheil Saakashvili the ex president and the leader of ruling United National Movement Irina Sarishvili Chanturia the only female presidential candidate and the leader of the Russian leaning Hope Party 26 Opinion polls editIn a November 2007 pre election poll held by the weekly Mteli Kvira the opposition candidate Gachechiladze defeated Saakashvili by 2 18 to 16 27 28 In a December 2007 poll commissioned by Saakashvili s party the BCG company surveyed 13 000 respondents throughout Georgia and showed that 29 5 of voters were still undecided 36 7 said they would vote for Saakashvili followed by Gachechiladze with 9 7 Patarkatsishvili 4 7 Gamkrelidze 3 Natelashvili 2 5 Maisashvili and Sarishvili had less than 1 each One percent said they would vote for none of the candidates The survey showed that 63 5 of those who had decided to vote for one of the candidates would vote for Saakashvili followed by Gachechiladze and Patarkatsishvili with 16 7 and 8 1 respectively 29 Another survey also commissioned by Saakashvili s party was overseen by the U S based Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research but conducted by the Georgian ACT group This survey involved 1 500 respondents and found that 41 would vote for Saakashvili followed by Gachechiladze 11 1 Patarkatsishvili 6 5 Natelashvili 3 5 Gamkrelidze 2 1 Maisashvili and Sarishvili less than 1 each 20 6 were undecided and 2 3 said they wouldn t vote for any candidate Of those who had decided to vote for one of the candidates 64 said they would vote for Saakashvili followed by Gachechiladze and Patarkatsishvili with 17 and 10 respectively 29 On December 23 2007 the pro opposition Imedi TV announced that an organization called Dialogue for Development of Democracy had conducted an opinion poll between December 17 and December 21 The survey showed that 22 1 of the 2 100 surveyed would support Levan Gachechiladze followed by Mikheil Saakashvili with 20 3 Badri Patarkatsishvili 19 1 Shalva Natelashvili 6 5 Davit Gamkrelidze 4 9 Giorgi Maisashvili 1 1 and Irina Sarishvili 0 2 The survey reported that 21 7 remained undecided 29 A survey commissioned once again by Saakashvili s campaign from Greenberg Quinlan Rosner was published on January 3 2008 It showed that Saakashvili had the support of 42 percent compared to 19 percent for Levan Gachechiladze 11 percent for Badri Patarkatsishvili 5 percent for Shalva Natelashvili 4 percent for David Gamkrelidze and 1 percent for Gia Maisashvili 2 percent would not vote or vote blank and 16 percent were undecided The survey reported only a minority of Georgian voters felt the presidential elections would not be fair 30 Conduct editIn addition to local watchdogs 29 international or foreign organizations including OSCE Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe and International Crisis Group observed the elections 31 Early on election day all polling stations were opened with the exception of the highland village of Shatili where heavy snow thwarted the process 32 Exit polls editAll major national television broadcasters planned to conduct their own exit polls and commissioned seven local research groups 29 The first exit poll results were conflicting According to a survey commissioned by 4 TV stations Georgian Public Broadcaster Rustavi 2 Mze and Achara TV from the Georgian Institute of Public Affairs GIPA Ilia Chavchavadze State University and two think tanks the Caucasus Institute for Peace Democracy and Development CIPDD and the Georgian Foundation for Strategic and International Studies GFSIS Mikheil Saakashvili was winning with a narrow absolute majority of 53 5 of the votes with Levan Gachechiladze coming second with 29 1 33 Voter turnout was 46 4 34 Twenty three percent of respondents refused to say for whom they had voted The poll had a 2 margin of error The figures were provisional with final results not expected for another few hours 35 According to a relatively unknown 36 Ukrainian think tank Common European Cause which claimed to have interviewed 10 000 people at 200 polling stations Gachechiladze won the most votes 31 followed by Saakashvili 24 4 and Patarkatsishvili 20 3 37 Results editThe Central Election Committee stated the turnout was 56 17 or 1 912 943 voters As announced by the Central Election Committee on 20 00 16 00 GMT of January 6 data from 2 605 precincts had been counted and showed Saakashvili in the lead with 51 95 of the votes and Gachechiladze in second place with 25 14 38 2 days later with votes from more polling stations having been counted Saakashvili was leading with 52 21 39 Gachechiladze following him with 25 26 of the votes 39 On 9 January 2008 with 98 8 of the ballots counted Saakashvili had 52 21 meaning he could not fall below the 50 which would result in a run off 40 CandidatePartyVotes Mikheil SaakashviliUnited National Movement1 060 04254 73Levan GachechiladzeNational Council509 23426 29Badri PatarkatsishviliIndependent140 8267 27Shalva NatelashviliGeorgian Labour Party128 5896 64Davit GamkrelidzeNew Rights Party79 7474 12Gia MaisashviliParty of the Future15 2490 79Irina Sarishvili ChanturiaHope Party3 2420 17Total1 936 929100 00Valid votes1 936 92997 71Invalid blank votes45 3892 29Total votes1 982 318100 00Registered voters turnout3 527 96456 19Source Civil ge By territory edit Territory a Turnout Saakashvili Gachechiladze Patarkatsishvili Natelashvili Gamkrelidze Others Lead Mtatsminda 64 15 29 28 44 77 4 74 4 27 7 35 9 59 15 49 Vake 61 64 28 35 48 54 4 08 3 88 7 78 7 37 20 19 Saburtalo 56 62 27 11 47 76 4 57 6 10 6 94 7 52 20 65 Krtsanisi 55 03 50 76 28 25 6 29 5 51 3 95 5 24 22 51 Isani 47 61 33 73 34 79 12 47 6 86 4 05 8 10 1 06 Samgori 49 71 37 56 33 20 9 77 8 94 3 87 6 66 4 36 Chughureti 52 14 28 92 44 86 8 37 7 20 5 15 5 50 15 94 Didube 61 34 31 31 46 26 6 02 6 03 6 36 4 02 14 95 Nadzaladevi 52 89 29 67 40 84 8 06 9 79 4 60 7 04 11 17 Gldani 48 03 33 82 35 74 9 29 10 44 4 62 6 09 1 92 Sagarejo 60 94 49 95 22 45 11 54 7 29 2 22 6 55 27 50 Gurjaani 59 53 40 12 21 37 19 89 9 47 3 42 5 73 18 75 Sighnaghi 70 79 59 36 20 21 4 57 7 94 3 82 4 10 39 15 Dedoplistskaro 54 96 38 80 24 28 18 40 10 86 3 29 4 37 14 52 Lagodekhi 60 91 53 98 22 91 7 54 7 10 1 79 6 68 31 07 Kvareli 65 42 49 70 23 61 12 81 6 13 1 68 6 07 26 09 Telavi 58 57 48 14 27 18 10 79 7 46 3 10 3 33 20 96 Akhmeta 51 35 47 19 24 28 9 95 10 42 3 37 4 79 22 91 Tianeti 56 23 44 80 13 60 7 81 26 67 3 37 3 75 18 13 Rustavi 46 63 42 17 31 54 6 34 8 38 5 07 6 50 10 63 Gardabani 57 34 70 62 11 55 3 31 5 21 2 30 7 01 59 07 Marneuli 63 22 89 23 5 57 0 73 0 65 2 41 1 41 83 66 Bolnisi 64 72 83 09 8 02 1 67 1 37 2 02 3 83 75 07 Dmanisi 51 03 81 49 7 02 5 04 1 55 1 53 3 37 74 47 Tsalka 39 42 72 69 10 03 2 27 2 16 9 01 3 84 62 66 Tetritskaro 52 07 63 25 16 55 5 53 7 85 4 89 1 93 46 70 Mtskheta 67 43 50 63 19 77 8 23 14 86 2 14 4 37 30 86 Dusheti 53 68 26 43 16 09 5 44 46 50 1 53 4 01 20 07 Kazbegi 31 66 34 53 42 42 4 36 9 83 6 10 2 76 7 89 Kaspi 60 80 52 12 24 02 6 64 10 55 2 35 4 32 28 10 Akhalgori 68 14 67 98 12 29 4 21 11 01 3 00 1 51 55 69 Gori 64 55 60 23 18 29 5 09 5 93 4 55 5 91 41 94 Kareli 70 14 64 02 16 74 4 91 7 50 3 26 3 57 47 28 Khashuri 71 74 59 08 20 84 3 37 7 79 3 41 5 51 38 24 Borjomi 62 43 43 27 35 57 8 42 7 11 3 55 2 08 7 70 Akhaltsikhe 76 37 77 51 10 55 2 83 1 93 1 00 6 18 66 96 Adigeni 81 65 78 95 10 35 4 97 2 73 1 86 1 14 68 60 Aspindza 64 58 68 75 12 60 3 99 5 86 3 18 5 62 56 15 Akhalkalaki 81 73 86 86 2 59 4 32 0 77 1 59 3 87 82 54 Ninotsminda 71 75 90 15 2 63 2 36 1 16 1 37 2 33 87 52 Oni 60 87 59 99 14 17 3 52 6 11 14 38 1 83 45 82 Ambrolauri 64 50 58 80 15 01 0 41 4 89 17 48 3 41 43 79 Tsageri 66 66 72 67 13 85 2 61 2 98 6 04 1 85 58 82 Lentekhi 56 18 48 59 26 51 13 67 4 05 4 28 2 90 22 08 Mestia 60 53 50 96 15 02 17 84 3 78 10 66 1 74 33 12 Kharagauli 64 86 52 22 29 60 6 46 6 38 3 20 2 14 22 62 Terjola 63 99 60 68 21 67 2 83 7 14 3 58 4 10 39 01 Sachkhere 53 54 51 73 27 36 2 83 8 17 6 13 3 78 24 37 Zestafoni 55 11 46 11 31 65 5 28 9 21 3 37 4 38 14 46 Baghdati 57 76 53 24 25 96 4 73 5 53 4 77 5 77 27 28 Vani 58 61 67 94 17 92 4 00 5 34 2 94 1 86 50 02 Samtredia 57 82 54 55 27 50 3 49 6 43 3 98 4 05 27 05 Khoni 62 29 69 70 17 76 1 81 4 36 4 06 2 31 51 94 Chiatura 48 67 48 46 26 50 7 13 9 89 3 56 4 46 21 96 Tkibuli 59 06 66 98 16 75 2 78 6 21 6 65 0 63 50 23 Tskaltubo 57 26 62 52 19 04 3 55 7 01 4 56 3 32 43 48 Kutaisi 45 27 44 29 30 44 4 40 8 50 7 97 4 40 13 85 Ozurgeti 55 88 38 51 31 07 15 99 4 27 3 80 6 36 7 44 Lanchkhuti 64 22 40 34 35 30 10 35 5 05 4 75 4 21 5 04 Chokhatauri 68 91 40 78 36 90 12 45 4 20 3 61 2 06 3 88 Abasha 68 45 62 83 19 39 5 02 4 32 2 65 5 79 43 44 Senaki 66 90 74 29 12 46 3 84 3 92 3 24 2 25 61 83 Martvili 62 84 68 12 15 47 4 00 2 91 2 53 6 97 52 65 Khobi 64 47 64 26 20 38 4 87 3 18 3 30 4 01 43 88 Zugdidi 48 84 70 17 13 65 2 91 2 52 2 88 7 87 56 52 Tsalenjikha 48 59 74 12 11 52 2 47 3 13 2 86 5 90 62 60 Chkhorotsqu 63 86 68 19 15 39 4 08 3 89 2 32 6 13 52 80 Poti 49 23 42 78 31 98 8 67 4 68 4 80 7 09 10 80 Batumi 51 11 38 63 32 99 14 32 4 70 3 65 5 71 5 64 Keda 69 79 58 10 19 60 12 49 4 68 2 69 2 44 38 50 Kobuleti 55 99 49 69 21 04 18 15 5 04 1 73 4 35 28 65 Shuakhevi 62 46 69 39 14 72 6 81 4 41 2 55 2 12 54 67 Khelvachauri 52 80 44 37 22 48 19 28 6 76 1 77 5 34 21 89 Khulo 66 57 66 58 16 72 8 74 3 84 2 43 1 69 49 86 Liakhvi 87 29 88 53 6 32 0 76 0 98 1 28 2 13 82 21 Upper Abkhazia 78 28 86 42 5 84 1 78 1 84 1 84 2 28 80 58 Abroad N A 76 40 10 20 1 41 2 08 2 67 7 24 66 20 Source Electoral Geography CEC Municipalities of Kurta and EredviReactions editThe opposition candidates claimed the polls were rigged and the exit polls false Supporters for Levan Gachechiladze were waiting for official results 41 but the candidate himself called for a January 6 meeting in Tbilisi to protect the true results of the election 42 On that day about 7000 to 9000 supporters of the opposition went to the Rike Square in Tbilisi Opposition leaders urged their adherents to return on 8 January and to celebrate the victory of Levan Gachechiladze 43 While that rally was called off 44 the opposition united in a large rally in downtown Tbilisi once again on 13 January claiming vote rigging had taken place demanding a run off and asking for the resignation of the head of the CEC 45 46 The protests continued through inauguration day 20 January 47 On 10 January Badri Patarkatsishvili was charged with attempting to organise a terrorist attack and plotting a coup 48 The Georgian Human Rights Ombudsman Sozar Subari was highly critical of the election proceedings In addition to identifying breaches of the law his report stated T he pre election environment was not equal and fair This time as usual the alarming tendency of blurring the distinction between the presidential candidate of the ruling party and the state authority occurred which was expressed through the direct political involvement of the different agencies especially law enforcement agencies of the executive branch in the electoral processes One of the proofs of the involvement of the mentioned agencies is that the electoral headquarters of the ruling party s candidate was in reality led by the Minister of Internal Affairs who was conducting meetings and assigning local party leaders heads of police departments employees of the Constitutional Security and Special Operative Departments prosecutors and governors with particular election related tasks 49 Meanwhile the OSCE and EU election observers stated that the election met democratic standards but there were problems that had to be addressed 50 Western observers also hailed it as the first genuinely competitive presidential election which enabled the Georgian people to express their political choice citation needed 51 The EU called on all political forces in Georgia to respect the election results and to engage constructively and democratically in order to ensure that Georgia continues moving forward 52 NATO also welcomed the election saying it was an important step in Georgia s democratic development 53 By contrast the Russian Foreign Ministry condemned the vote and described it as neither free nor fair The presidential race was marked by the widespread use of administrative resources open pressure on opposition candidates and severe limitations on their access to financial and media sources 54 In an interview with the German newspaper Frankfurter Rundschau German diplomat Dieter Boden the head of the OSCE Election Observation Mission stated the elections were massively falsified and that there were rude negligent and intentional manipulations during the vote count that were detected by our observers He spoke of a chaotic situation within the electoral commission 55 On January 10 however a representative of the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights mission in Georgia Rasto Kuzel declared that the OSCE had not changed its positive evaluation of the January 5 presidential election The OSCE Office explained Mr Boden s published statements do not quite reflect what he really said and we shall look into how that happened 56 and that the interview was not published completely Some definitions were cut from the interview 57 On January 11 Boden stated that the confusion was the result of a journalist s misinterpretation and said the final report would be published in February 2008 58 The Organization for Security and Co operation in Europe OSCE final report was critical of the conduct of the election Election day was generally peaceful Overall voting was assessed positively by a large majority of IEOM observers although it was at times disorganized and chaotic in a considerable number of precincts Organizational and procedural shortcomings were observed especially with regard to inconsistent application of inking procedures intended as a safeguard against multiple voting Observers also reported a limited number of serious violations including ballot box stuffing The vote count and tabulation was evaluated less positively Many PECs had problems completing the results protocols which were often not posted for public scrutiny IEOM observers reported cases of tampering with voter lists results and protocols The tabulation process at DEC level was slow and often chaotic Some PEC protocols given to the OSCE ODIHR EOM differed from those provided by DECs and many PEC protocols were incomplete or inconsistent A significant number of PECs reported unusually high turnout in the last three hours of voting and several DECs reported a turnout considerably higher than the national average Only a limited number of official complaints were filed during the pre electoral period almost all against the ruling party and its candidate Although courts generally carried out open hearings in a professional and thorough manner some complaints were ruled inadmissible without sound legal basis and some written judgments did not set out sufficient reasoning In addition the CEC and courts tended to stretch the law beyond reasonable interpretation and without regard to its spirit in favour of the ruling party candidate and public officials After election day the election administration and the courts did not fully and adequately consider and investigate a considerable number of complaints regarding irregularities some of which were of a serious nature A large number of complaints were also ruled inadmissible or dismissed on technical grounds 59 Notes edit Each territory refers to either a district of Tbilisi or a municipality unless noted otherwiseReferences edit Georgia to hold presidential election on Jan 5 2008 Archived 2007 12 24 at the Wayback Machine Itar Tass November 8 2007 Georgia to hold early elections BBC News November 8 2007 Georgia to Hold Plebiscite on NATO Membership Civil Georgia 2007 11 26 Saakashvili officially declared winner in Georgian presidential election Interfax 2008 01 13 Archived from the original on May 25 2011 Retrieved 2008 01 13 Georgia On the Right Track The New York Times April 10 2009 Retrieved 2018 01 05 Tom Parfitt 7 January 2008 Opposition claims Georgia president rigged election victory Guardian Retrieved 7 January 2013 Mass protest in Georgian capital BBC News 3 November 2007 Archived from the original on 20 April 2010 Retrieved 22 April 2010 Saakashvili Steps Down as Parliament Calls for Early Polls Civil ge Retrieved 2 June 2015 Patarkatsishvili Ally a Suspect in Coup Plot Civil Georgia 2007 12 24 13 22 55 More Coup Plot Tapes Released Civil Georgia Tbilisi 2007 12 25 20 33 27 Patarkatsishvili Forced onto Defensive Archived August 30 2008 at the Wayback Machine Georgian Times Civil Georgia 2007 12 26 12 52 Imedi TV Suspends Broadcasts Civil Georgia Tbilisi 2007 12 26 Authorities Attack Nine Party Coalition over Patarkatsishvili Ties Civil Georgia 2007 12 27 Patarkatsishvili Nominally Remains in Race Civil Georgia 2007 12 28 Georgian Media Tycoon Returns to Presidential Race Archived January 7 2008 at the Wayback Machine Voice of America January 03 2008 OSCE Interim Report on Election Campaign Civil Georgia December 21 2007 Interim Report No 2 The OSCE Observer Mission December 28 2007 Georgian president vows to join NATO if reelected People s Daily Online Sokhumi Denies Reported Attacks on Georgians in Gali Civil Georgia January 4 2008 Attempts Made to Raise Tension in Conflict Zones Burjanadze Civil Georgia January 4 2008 The Anatolian Times Archived from the original on 24 December 2007 Retrieved 3 January 2017 Zurabishvili Opposition To Nominate One Candidate For Presidential Elections Archived from the original on 2007 11 10 Retrieved 2007 11 10 Georgia poll challenger nominated BBC News November 12 2007 IC Publications Archived from the original on 2012 02 07 Retrieved 2007 11 23 22 Bid for Presidency CEC Civil Georgia 2007 11 26 Seven Remain in Presidential Race Civil Georgia 2007 12 11 Interfaks novosti Archived from the original on 24 December 2007 Retrieved 3 January 2017 Low Numbers for Candidates in Georgia Angus Reid Global Monitor Archived from the original on 2007 12 24 Retrieved 2007 11 24 a b c d Imedi TV Plans Exit Polls Civil Georgia 2007 12 23 Survey Shows Saakashvili with Strong Lead in Presidential Ballot Archived 2011 07 11 at the Wayback Machine Greenberg Quinlan Rosner January 3 2008 International Observers Civil Georgia All Polling Stations Opened Except of One in Shatili Civil Georgia January 5 2008 Exitpoll 2008 permanent dead link 1 Archived 2012 07 07 at archive today Prime News Agency statement Early Exit Poll Results Show Saakashvili in Lead Civil Georgia January 5 2008 Do not Trust Exit Polls Nine Party Opposition Coalition permanent dead link Civil Georgia January 3 2008 Ukrainian think tank None of presidential contenders in Georgia obtained more than 50 of votes REGNUM News Agency 2008 01 05 Archived from the original on 2008 01 08 Retrieved 2008 01 05 http www civil ge eng category php id 32 dead link a b შედეგები 2016 მეორე ტური Archived from the original on 2 November 2013 Retrieved 3 January 2017 AFP com Agence France Presse a global news agency Archived from the original on 2012 07 28 Retrieved 2008 01 11 Novosti Gruziya Novosti Gruzii Prazdnovanie pobedy na vyborah storonnikami Saakashvili yavlyaetsya provokaciej Salome Zurabishvili Archived from the original on 8 January 2008 Retrieved 3 January 2017 Novosti Gruziya Novosti Gruzii Levan Gachechiladze obyavil chto ego storonniki nachnut massovuyu akciyu protesta protiv itogov vyborov Archived from the original on 8 January 2008 Retrieved 3 January 2017 Novosti Gruziya Novosti Gruzii V centre Tbilisi proshel mnogotysyachnyj miting v podderzhku oppozicionnogo kandidata Levana Gachechiladze Archived from the original on 9 January 2008 Retrieved 3 January 2017 Opposition Calls Off Protest Rally Civil Georgia January 8 2008 Al Jazeera English News Georgia Parties Demand Run Off Vote Opposition Vows to Keep Protesting against Election Results Civil Georgia January 13 2008 We will not Stop Opposition Tells Thousands at Rally Civil Georgia January 20 2008 Al Jazeera English News Coup Charge Against Georgian Tycoon Office of the Ombudsman of Georgia 2008 Human Rights in Georgia Report of the Public Defender of Georgia Second half of 2007 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 17 February 2012 Retrieved 4 January 2012 2 Archived 2008 01 09 at the Wayback Machine PR Inside OSCE says Georgian election showed problems that must be addressed urgently Georgia Extraordinary Presidential Election 5 January 2008 STATEMENT OF PRELIMINARY FINDINGS AND CONCLUSIONS Archived 16 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine INTERNATIONAL ELECTION OBSERVATION MISSION January 6 2008 Respect Election Results EU Tells Political Parties Civil Georgia January 7 2008 NATO on Georgia s Elections Civil Georgia January 8 2008 Moscow Condemns Georgia s Polls Civil Georgia January 6 2008 Massive falsifications during the election in Georgia Frankfurter Rundschau January 9 2008 OSCE mission has not changed opinion of Georgian election official Itar Tass 10 01 2008 OSCE Does Not Change Position Related To Evaluation Of Presidential Elections Archived 2012 07 07 at archive today Prime Times January 10 2008 Dieter Boden summoned to Foreign Ministry Archived 2008 08 30 at the Wayback Machine The Georgian Times 2008 01 11 EXTRAORDINARY PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION 5 January 2008 OSCE ODIHR Election Observation Mission Final Report 4 March 2008 Retrieved 4 January 2012 External links editGeorgian presidential election 2008 Electoral Geography 2 0 Georgia Vote 2008 EurasiaNet Elections 2008 Civil Georgia Central Election Commission of Georgia Archived 2007 09 29 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2008 Georgian presidential election amp oldid 1212788149, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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