
ArmInfo. Almost half of respondents in Armenia believe that the country is moving in the wrong direction, as evidenced by data of a new poll carried out by the Research Center of the International Republican Institute (IRI).
When asked, "Is Armenia heading in the right direction?" - 49% of respondents gave a negative answer, another 15% found it difficult to answer, and only 35% of respondents are sure that the country is moving in the right direction. Moreover, 61% of respondents do not trust any political figure in Armenia, while 19% gave other answers, 10% found it difficult to answer. 13% - believe the current Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan, 5% - the head of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan, 4% - the second president Robert Kocharyan, and 2% each were received by the speaker of the parliament Alen Simonyan and the head of the Republic party Aram Sargsyan.
Additionally, when asked which political force they would vote for if the elections were held next Sunday, 28% of respondents said that they would not take part in the elections, 22% found it difficult to answer, 17% named the ruling Civil Contract party led by Nikol Pashinyan, 12% said that they would spoil the ballot, 4% - the Armenia bloc, 2% - the second president Robert Kocharyan, 6% gave a different answer and several political forces received 1% each. According to the indicators, over the past year, Pashinyan's party lost 3% of the vote, and Kocharyan's bloc gained 2%. The Armed Forces of Armenia had the best performance rating in the survey. 43% are satisfied with the activities of the Armed Forces, 29% are rather satisfied, 11% are rather dissatisfied, 13% are dissatisfied, and 4% found it difficult to answer. The Armenian Apostolic Church is in second place: 34% of respondents are completely satisfied with its activities, another 24% are rather satisfied, 11% are rather dissatisfied, 24% are dissatisfied, and another 6% found it difficult to answer. Regional municipalities are in third place. 19% of respondents are satisfied with their activities, another 37% are rather satisfied, 15% are rather dissatisfied, 18% are dissatisfied, and another 11% found it difficult to answer.
Citizens are most dissatisfied with the work of the parliament, which closes the list of 16 structures. Only 7% of respondents are satisfied with its work, another 17% are rather satisfied, 18% are rather dissatisfied, 54% are dissatisfied, and 4% found it difficult to answer. The top three "losers" also included the courts and the presidential administration. Only 8% of respondents are satisfied with the work of the courts, 23% are rather satisfied, 22% are rather dissatisfied, 30% are dissatisfied, and another 16% found it difficult to answer. 10% of respondents are satisfied with the work of the presidential administration, 22% are rather satisfied, 14% are rather dissatisfied, 37% are dissatisfied, and another 17% found it difficult to answer. The office of the Prime Minister of Armenia is in 9th place. 15% of respondents are satisfied with its work, 23% are rather satisfied, 14% are rather dissatisfied, 44% are dissatisfied, and another 4% found it difficult to answer.
When asked what the biggest success of the current government of Armenia over the past 6 months has been, 42% of respondents said there are no such achievements, another 22% either found it difficult or refused to answer, 16% gave other answers, 11% named road reforms, 9% - security, ensuring peace, 7% - education reforms, school renovations, 5% - economic diversification, 4% - reforms in the army, 3% - the fight against corruption, and 2% - economic growth. When asked what the biggest mistake of the current government over the past 6 months has been, 37% of respondents refused/found it difficult to answer, 33% gave other answers, 8% - no mistakes, 14% - named incorrect foreign policy, 10% - incorrect personnel policy, 9% - lack of regional security, 6% - the campaign against the Armenian Church. 4% - lack of progress in the fight against corruption, 3% - low level of education, 3% - inflation, growth of external debt, and 3% - weakening of the army.
The survey was conducted on behalf of the International Republican Institute's Center for Insights in Survey Research by Breavis (represented by IPSC LLC). Data was collected from June 16-26, 2025 through CATI administered telephone interviews. The sample consisted of n=1,505 resident citizens of Armenia and forcibly displaced former residents of Nagorno Karabakh who are now residing in Armenia (who may or may not be citizens). Residents who have lived in Armenia for fewer than six months were excluded from the sample. It is representative of the population with access to a mobile phone, which excludes approximately 1.7% of adults. The achieved sample was weighted for age, gender, regions, and urbanicity according to the 2023Yearbook of the Statistical Committee of Armenia and education; the education weight target has been calculated to the midpoint between the 2022 census data (for those aged 18+) and the achieved sample's education level. The response rate was 25%. The margin of error does not exceed +2.5% for the full sample.