The country’s constitutional judges have thrown out lawsuits filed by the president and opposition parties
The Constitutional Court of Georgia on Tuesday dismissed lawsuits filed by President Salome Zourabichvili and opposition parties, asking for an annulment of the recent general election won by the ruling Georgian Dream party.
The ruling was backed by the overwhelming majority of judges, with only two out of nine voting against it. A decision of the Constitutional Court is final and cannot be appealed.
“The Constitutional Court of Georgia did not accept the lawsuits of the president and political parties regarding the recognition of the October 26 elections as unconstitutional,” the body said in a statement.
The election results are contested by the nation’s pro-Western president and opposition, who allege widespread fraud without providing solid evidence to back up such claims. The vote greatly reinforced the position of Georgian Dream, with the party now enjoying a comfortable majority in parliament.
Georgia has been enduring mass protests over the election outcome since early November, with the country facing mounting pressure from abroad. The unrest further escalated last week after PM Irakli Kobakhidze announced that he would freeze accession talks with the EU until 2028.
Zourabichvili, who is slated to leave her post shortly with a new presidential election scheduled for December 14, has already refused to step down, calling for further protests and even urging schoolchildren to join them.
“I remain your President! There is no legitimate parliament that will elect a new president,” she said in a video address on Saturday. “My mandate continues until there is a legitimately elected parliament that will legitimately elect a President who will replace me!”
Under the 2017 Georgian Constitution, the head of state, who holds mostly ceremonial powers, is to be chosen by an electoral college consisting of 300 members. Half of it is composed of MPs, with the rest selected from representatives of various Georgian regions.
The violent unrest has been openly backed by the EU, with the new foreign policy chief of the bloc, Kaja Kallas, calling the protests legitimate and threatening Tbilisi with “consequences” for trying to quell them.
“It is clear that using violence against peaceful protesters is not acceptable, and the Georgian government should respect the will of the Georgian people,” she stated.