
ArmInfo. The Civil Contract Party is just two votes short of a 3/5 majority in parliament. Former Justice Minister and former Deputy Speaker of the Armenian Parliament Arpine Hovhannisyan wrote this on her Facebook page, referring to the preliminary vote counts from all 2,005 polling stations following the country's parliamentary elections.
She explained that, based on the results summarized by the Central Electoral Commission (CEC), as well as various calculations and formulas applied to the distribution of mandates for national minorities and the accounting for dispersed votes, the distribution of mandates in parliament looks as follows: 61 mandates go to the Civil Contract party, 28 to the Strong Armenia bloc, 11 to the Armenia bloc, and 5 to the Prosperous Armenia party.
"Under these circumstances, the Civil Contract party is forming the government, but it lacks just two votes to achieve a 3/5 majority in parliament and nine mandates to achieve a 2/3 majority," Hovhannisyan noted.
At the same time, she urged opposition representatives not to rush to hold press conferences to justify their mandates, and not to rush to declare that the government lacks a certain number of votes. "We all remember similar statements made after previous elections, and we also remember who supported the Civil Contract party and how during various subsequent votes. Therefore, as a friendly piece of advice: if there's anything worth focusing on right now, it's the strength of your lists entering parliament and the political reliability of the deputies who end up there. Because the issue isn't just about today's distribution of mandates; it's also about the extent to which those same mandates and votes will retain their political affiliation and position tomorrow," the former minister concluded.
As a reminder, parliamentary elections were held in Armenia on June 7, 2026. According to preliminary data from the Central Election Commission of Armenia, based on the vote count from all 2,005 polling stations, Nikol Pashinyan's ruling Civil Contract party received 49.81% or 727,160 votes, Samvel Karapetyan's Strong Armenia bloc received 23.29% or 340,062 votes, second president Robert Kocharyan's Armenia bloc received 9.94% or 145,097 votes, and businessman Gagik Tsarukyan's Prosperous Armenia party received 4% or 58,368 votes. The remaining candidates' results fell below the required threshold of 4% for parties and 8-10% for blocs. Voter turnout was 58.97%. A total of 1,476,597 citizens voted in the elections nationwide, out of approximately 2,505,228 eligible voters. It should be noted that on election day, observers and journalists reported numerous violations by the ruling party during the voting process from early morning.
Pashinyan's party thus has the opportunity to single-handedly form the country's government by securing a majority of seats in the Armenian parliament. This was something he solemnly announced late at night, when data from only about 10% of polling stations had been processed.