(Yerevan, June 5, 2026): The International Observatory for Democracy in Armenia (IODA) today released its final report assessing the political and civic environment ahead of the 7 June 2026 parliamentary elections. The findings are based on two fact-finding missions conducted in Armenia in March and May 2026.
The report concludes that while Armenia’s formal democratic institutions remain in place, their functioning is increasingly shaped by concentrated political power, uneven electoral conditions, selective application of legal and administrative measures, and expanding pressure on dissenting political and civic voices.
According to the assessment, decision-making power is highly centralized around the Prime Minister’s office, while the distinction between state institutions and the ruling party continues to erode. The report finds that incumbents benefit from disproportionate access to state resources and administrative structures, creating unequal conditions for political competition in the pre-electoral period.
The report also documents a growing pattern of pressure on dissent, including surveillance practices, selective legal proceedings, administrative measures, and coordinated public smear campaigns targeting opposition figures, journalists, civic activists, clergy, and government critics. It further notes an expansion in the use of detention and arrest measures in politically sensitive contexts, alongside broader concerns regarding the proportionality and timing of such actions within the pre-electoral environment.
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Opposition actors in particular face heightened legal scrutiny, restrictive administrative and procedural measures, and sustained stigmatizing rhetoric in public discourse. These conditions significantly reduce their ability to campaign on an equal footing, limit access to media and public space, and constrain their organizational capacity during the pre-electoral period. As a result, conditions for genuine political pluralism are weakened, while the overall fairness of political competition is undermined.
At the same time, the report notes an asymmetry in the application of investigative and coercive measures. While opposition figures and their supporters have been subject to extensive investigations, searches, arrests, and instances of detention, comparable allegations involving individuals associated with the ruling party have not, in most cases, led to similar procedural or enforcement outcomes. This perceived imbalance contributes to concerns regarding the consistency and impartiality of law enforcement and judicial practices in politically sensitive contexts.
These dynamics also have broader implications for voters. The narrowing of civic and political space, combined with polarized information environments and pressure on dissenting voices, restricts citizens’ access to diverse and reliable political information. This constrains the ability of voters to form fully informed political choices, thereby undermining both the inclusiveness and competitiveness of the electoral process.
In the justice sector, IODA notes continued reliance on pre-trial detention despite reforms, alongside concerns over standardized judicial reasoning and the selective application of broadly defined criminal provisions in politically sensitive cases, such as “hooliganism,” “calls for violence,” and “calls for overthrow of the constitutional order.”
Regarding the media environment, the report highlights formal pluralism but deep polarization along political lines, legal and financial pressure on journalists, and coordinated online harassment. It further identifies a growing presence of AI-generated and manipulative digital content during the pre-electoral period, including synthetic media and fabricated material presented as authentic, alongside a broader rise in unverifiable online content. The report finds that current legal and regulatory frameworks are not equipped to effectively address these developments.
A key feature of Armenia’s civic space is the emergence of a binary political framework, in which electoral competition is framed as a choice between mutually exclusive and existentially charged outcomes. The report also describes increasing securitization of political discourse, where opposition actors and critical voices are often framed through narratives of national security and “hybrid threats,” contributing to a narrowing of space for legitimate political competition. It further notes stigmatizing rhetoric directed at vulnerable groups, including Artsakhi refugees, and concerns regarding institutional pressure on the Armenian Apostolic Church.
IODA concludes that Armenia’s formal legal and institutional framework broadly aligns with democratic standards, but its implementation is increasingly affected by concentrated power, selective enforcement, and informal governance practices. The report raises questions regarding compliance with international obligations under the ICCPR, the ECHR, and the OSCE Copenhagen Document in the context of the upcoming elections.
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