
ArmInfo. Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has clearly chosen a new logic for his election campaign: every day brings new abomination. Vahe Hovhannisyan, a member of the Alternative Projects Group, writes in his article.
According to him, this is no longer a question of good or evil, but a conscious decision. Opposition forces must be flexible and adaptable to this decision. Otherwise, the upcoming crucial months will devolve into a "campaign of nonsense."
"It's not enough to monotonously expound our programmatic positions. They will drown in the government's abomination, which will continue to unfold daily and become increasingly abominable. Reacting to abomination is rarely successful, but it shouldn't become the primary tactic. In the current situation, the joint tactic of the political opposition and healthy segments of society must become a new public project, 'Life After June 7.' This is both a tactic and a psychology. It is a unique basis for joint action. Opposition forces must communicate with each other and, most importantly, with the public, and build their relationships according to this logic: what will we do, how will we cooperate, how will we move forward, what will we agree on, what will we abandon, how will we emerge step by step from the consequences of the catastrophes they left in their wake, and so on. Our programs must be presented to the public precisely through this tactic," the political scientist emphasized.
He added that it will change the public atmosphere, creating a huge cloud of change that will linger in the air and technically be resolved on June 7. "The upcoming elections are exclusively internal Armenian elections, in which we will determine our internal life for the coming years: abomination or reason? It is necessary to explain that life after June 7 will first and foremost solve the most simple and important issue: the return of reason to power, to the state system. As for the story of abomination and slander, we must muster the courage and admit that for 5-6 years now, the world, and especially our neighboring countries, have been watching us as an experiment in how much the people can tolerate. We must speak openly about this with each other and with our people, so that, starting from June 7, these shameful situations will finally begin to be forgotten," Vahe Hovhannisyan concluded.