Armenian National Congress

The Armenian National Congress (Armenian: Հայ Ազգային Կոնգրես, Hay Azgayin Kongres) is a political party in Armenia, led by former President Levon Ter-Petrosyan and formed in 2008. Its direct predecessor was the Pan-Armenian National Movement.

Armenian National Congress

Հայ Ազգային Կոնգրես
LeaderLevon Ter-Petrosyan
Founded2008
Preceded byPan-Armenian National Movement
HeadquartersYerevan, Armenia
IdeologyClassical liberalism
Market liberalism
Soft Pro-Europeanism[1][2]
Political positionCentre to centre-right
European affiliationALDE Party[3]
National Assembly
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Website
http://www.anc.am/

It is often abbreviated as ՀԱԿ or HAK, in keeping with its Armenian spelling, but it is occasionally referred to as the ANC in English-language media, including in its official website.

From 2008 to 2013 it was a coalition of 13 opposition parties. In 2013, when certain member parties left the Pan-Armenian National Movement, the remainder of the organization collectively decided during a conference to form a new party called the Armenian National Congress.[4][5]

Formation and goals

The website of the Armenian National Congress lists five main goals:

  The immediate release of all political prisoners.
  Attaining complete freedom of speech, access to media, and assembly.
  Truly independent investigation of the crimes of March 1 with the significant participation of International experts.
  Initiation of a dialogue with the authorities about democratic reforms after the fulfillment of at least the first condition.
  Holding of pre-term presidential and parliamentary elections.

Armenian National Congress, official website[6]

In addition, the ANC also believes in maintaining good relations with Armenia's neighbors, including normalizing relations with both Turkey and Azerbaijan, developing closer relations with the Middle East, self-determination of the Republic of Artsakh, encouraging further European integration of Armenia and deepening cooperation with the European union, the United States, Russia and maintaining strong relations with CIS member states.[7]

History

2008 merge

The Impeachment Union party was officially dissolved in 2008 as members opted to join the ANC.

2011 protests

During the 2011 Armenian protests, the HAK played a major role in organizing demonstrations and pushing for the government of President Serzh Sargsyan, who defeated Ter-Petrosyan in the 2008 election, to accept the demands of protesters.[8] The death of 10 supporters of Ter-Petrosyan as a result of protests that followed Sargsyan's disputed victory are a major rallying point for protesters.

Relations between the HAK and Heritage, a fellow opposition party, have historically been rocky, with differences in tactics during the 2011 protests widening the rift.[9]

2012 parliamentary election

After the 2012 parliamentary elections Armenian National Congress gained 7 seats in the National Assembly of Armenia.[10]

2015 Armenian constitutional referendum

In the 2015 constitutional referendum in Armenia, the ANC supported the "no" camp. ANC leader Levon Ter-Petrosyan, stated that "the constitutional changes initiated by Serzh Sargsyan was destroying the bases of the state".[11]

2017 Armenian parliamentary election

The ANC formed a political alliance with the People's Party of Armenia, however the alliance failed to win any seats following the election.

2018 Armenian parliamentary election

The ANC did not participate in the 2018 Armenian parliamentary elections.

Recent activities

2019

A statement from the Armenian National Congress in 2019 addressed tax reform: "On 7 March 2019, the Government of the Republic of Armenia approved the package of draft amendments to the Tax Code and to several laws regulating tax relations, but certain draft laws will cause harm to the activities of small and medium enterprises."[12]

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gollark: UTTER differential equation.
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gollark: With NON-MATHEMATICALLY-OPTIMAL spacing?
gollark: Oh, and use a foolish LINE-Y x?

See also

References

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