
ArmInfo. In all Yerevan districts, the Civil Contract party (CC) received the majority of votes. Vahagn Aleksanyan, a member of parliament from the ruling party, told reporters on June 9.
He recalled that although the ruling party received fewer votes in percentage terms than in the 2021 elections, in absolute numbers, it received more support. Thus, in 2026, 727,000 people voted for the Civil Contract party, while in 2021, the party received approximately 680,000 votes.
The MP also drew attention to the results in Gyumri, where, according to him, the opposition was expecting a victory. However, the Civil Contract party received the support of 27,000 voters, which, as Aleksanyan noted, represents more than 50% of the vote.
Commenting on the opposition's accusations of violations during the vote count, particularly at polling stations where undercounts were recorded, Aleksanyan stated that the current electoral system is based on mechanical processes, so the possibility of errors cannot be ruled out. He also expressed confusion that opposition representatives only mention polling stations where they believe their votes were undercounted, but do not complain about cases where the actual number of votes in their favor exceeded the actual count.
Responding to a question about possible personnel changes in the government, the parliamentarian stated that no such discussions had taken place within the Civil Contract party.
As a reminder, regular parliamentary elections were held in Armenia on June 7, 2026. Voter turnout was 58.97%. According to preliminary data from the Central Election Commission of Armenia, Nikol Pashinyan's ruling Civil Contract party, Samvel Karapetyan's Strong Armenia bloc, and second president Robert Kocharyan's Armenia bloc have all entered parliament. The remaining candidates scored below the required threshold of 4% for parties and 8-10% for blocs. Notably, businessman Gagik Tsarukyan's Prosperous Armenia party lost its 4% threshold after the Central Election Commission adjusted the preliminary vote counts for the country's parliamentary elections. Therefore, the party will not enter the new parliament.
From early morning on election day, observers and journalists reported numerous violations by the ruling party during the voting process. Thus, Pashinyan's party has the opportunity to single-handedly form the country's government by securing a majority of seats in Armenia's parliament. Pashinyan solemnly announced this late at night, when data from only about 10% of polling stations had been processed.
Human rights activists, observation missions, and the opposition disagree with the election results. In particular, the Ayakve Civil Initiative Council declares the need to challenge the results of the Armenian parliamentary elections in the Constitutional Court, with the prospect of their final annulment and the calling of new elections.
Ayakve recalled that the electoral process took place under extremely unequal conditions, and that cases of widespread abuse of administrative resources were also recorded.
Human rights activist Ruben Melikyan stated that the parliamentary elections in Armenia were completely falsified. "This unfolded before our very eyes, both before the campaign (for example, through the 'extraordinary' pension increase), and during the campaign (administrative resources, political persecution, etc.), and on election day. However, Pashinyan's 'Civil Contract' failed to achieve the desired result- neither a constitutional majority nor a 50% + 1 vote. It failed even with the elections completely rigged. And this happened thanks to the unprecedented activism of our conscientious citizens," he wrote.