‘It’s
time to move forward’: Armenians vote in election closely watched by Russia and
EU
Voters to
choose between pro-Russian opposition and incumbent Nikol Pashinyan, who is
more closely aligned with the west
Pjotr
Sauer in Yerevan
Sun 7 Jun
2026 10.56 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/jun/07/armenia-vote-election-closely-watched-russia-eu
Armenians
are going to the polls in an election that could cement the country’s shift
towards Europe and away from its traditional alliance with Russia.
Prime
minister Nikol Pashinyan’s Civil Contract party enters the vote as the
favourite, ahead of three opposition candidates who advocate for closer ties
with Moscow. Pashinyan’s main challenger, Samvel Karapetyan, a Russian-Armenian
billionaire who built much of his fortune in Russia, has been forced to
campaign from house arrest at his mansion outside Yerevan.
Much is
at stake for the South Caucasus nation of 3 million people, with Moscow,
Brussels and Washington all closely watching the vote.
A
Karapetyan victory could set Armenia on a trajectory similar to neighbouring
Georgia, where a billionaire with Russian-made wealth has spent years
dismantling pro-western reforms and pulling the country back towards Moscow.
A strong
majority for Pashinyan would give him a mandate to pursue his signature and
politically sensitive goal: a peace agreement with Armenia’s longtime enemy
Azerbaijan and the normalisation of relations with Turkey.
A former
journalist who swept to power during the 2018 Velvet Revolution, Pashinyan has
campaigned on a platform of peace, arguing that ending Armenia’s decades-long
confrontation with its neighbours would unlock economic opportunities, improve
security and reduce its dependence on Russia.
The prime
minister, known for his populist and often emotional rhetoric, has sought
closer ties with Europe, signalling that Armenia’s future lies in deeper
integration with the west and expressing hope that the country could one day
join the European Union.
Pashinyan
has received an endorsement from Donald Trump, who described him as “a great
friend and leader”. The US has taken on an increasingly prominent role in
efforts to broker a peace agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan.
Sunday’s
vote is the first national election since Armenia’s loss of Nagorno-Karabakh to
Azerbaijan in 2023, a traumatic defeat that ended more than three decades of
Armenian control over the disputed region.
The
opposition has sought to portray the loss as evidence of Pashinyan’s failures,
accusing him of surrendering historical Armenian lands to its enemies.
Yet
Pashinyan has tried to turn the issue into a political asset. Arguing that
Armenia’s pursuit of Karabakh helped trap the country in perpetual conflict and
dependence on Russia, he has presented the painful chapter as the necessary
starting point for a more secure and prosperous future.
Anahit
Sarkisyan, a lawyer from Yerevan, said after casting her vote on Sunday:
“Pashinyan has a vision for the future, the rest are stuck in the past. We
can’t be in endless wars with our neighbours. It’s time to move forward”
Pashinyan’s
course has put him in the crosshairs of Moscow, which has long projected
influence over Armenian politics and the economy.
Many
Armenians became disillusioned with Russia after Moscow failed to come to their
aid when Azerbaijan seized Nagorno-Karabakh despite the presence of Russian
peacekeepers in the region. The fallout prompted Pashinyan to suspend Armenia’s
participation in the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) of six
post-Soviet states, including Russia, marking the most dramatic rupture in
relations with Moscow since the country’s independence.
In the
run-up to the election, the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, said Armenia,
which has not formally applied for EU membership, was heading down the same
path as Ukraine.
“And
where did it start?” Putin said, referring to Armenia’s EU push. “With Ukraine
seeking to join the European Union.”
Armenian
officials and analysts have accused Russia of attempting to influence the
election through disinformation campaigns in favour of pro-Russian candidates,
and efforts to fly Armenians living in Russia back home to vote against
Pashinyan.
In recent
weeks, Moscow has adopted a more overt approach, imposing a series of trade
restrictions affecting everything from flowers and fish to fruit and Armenian
brandy.
But these
last-ditch measures have so far failed to put a dent in Armenia’s economy.
Buoyed up
by strong economic growth following the influx of Russian businesses and
capital after the invasion of Ukraine, Pashinyan has invested heavily in
Armenia’s regions, where his support remains strongest.
Yet
observers have also pointed to his increasingly personalised style of politics,
and what critics describe as growing authoritarian tendencies in Armenia, a
country that remains a rare democratic outlier in a region largely governed by
strongmen.
In the
run-up to the elections, Armenian authorities arrested opposition figures,
including members of Karapetyan’s party, on accusations ranging from
vote-buying and financial crimes to calls to overthrow the government.
Karapetyan himself was detained in June and charged with calling for the
seizure of power, leading him to campaign from house arrest.
Pashinyan
has at times appeared erratic, engaging in ugly public disputes with refugees
from Nagorno-Karabakh, whom he accused of having “run away” from the region
rather than staying to fight.
The EU,
meanwhile, has largely brushed aside criticism of Pashinyan, making little
secret of its support for Armenia’s shift away from Moscow. Brussels this week
announced an initial €50m support package to help Armenia withstand Russian
economic pressure.
Karen
Grigoryan, a doctor, who voted for Karapetyan on Sunday, said: “Pashinyan is
not the man he was when he came to power.”
Referring
to the Ottoman-era mass killings of Armenians that Yerevan and many western
countries recognise as genocide, he added: “We can’t just be friendly with
Turkey and pretend the past is erased.”
Observers
say many voters continue to back Pashinyan largely because the opposition
remains deeply discredited and closely linked to Russia.
Tatul
Hakobyan, a popular Armenian commentator, saidL “People are choosing the lesser
of two evils. The alternatives to Pashinyan are much worse.”

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