As time passes, opposition prolongs legitimacy of ruling party - political analyst Jejelava

As time passes, opposition prolongs legitimacy of ruling party - political analyst Jejelava

As time passes and the opposition prolongs the legitimacy of the Georgian dream by being in the parliament, it will face a worse day in the upcoming elections, political analyst lela Jejelava told Front News on Wednesday.

 

She suggested that the presence of the opposition in the parliament is the “same type of crime as the Georgian dream is commiting”. 

 

Jejelava said that if the opposition failed to push the adoption of the deoligarchisation bill with Bidzina Ivanishvili, the founder of the ruling party “who actually runs the country”, was not included in it, which was then the opposition’s task in the state legislature . 

 

“While the weather was good, the opposition did not even give people that luxury of standing on the street. Now will they call for rallies to prove that Ivanishvili is an oligarch?” she asked. 

 

The analyst said that the ruling party had no plans to meet the  EU conditions for the country’s membership candidate status and that this was “obvious”.





As time passes and the opposition prolongs the legitimacy of the Georgian dream by being in the parliament, it will face a worse day in the upcoming elections, political analyst lela Jejelava told Front News on Wednesday.

 

She suggested that the presence of the opposition in the parliament is the “same type of crime as the Georgian dream is commiting”. 

 

Jejelava said that if the opposition failed to push the adoption of the deoligarchisation bill with Bidzina Ivanishvili, the founder of the ruling party “who actually runs the country”, was not included in it, which was then the opposition’s task in the state legislature . 

 

“While the weather was good, the opposition did not even give people that luxury of standing on the street. Now will they call for rallies to prove that Ivanishvili is an oligarch?” she asked. 

 

The analyst said that the ruling party had no plans to meet the  EU conditions for the country’s membership candidate status and that this was “obvious”.