The announcement that Samvel Karapetyan’s team will prepare for parliamentary elections has re-shaped Armenia’s political field. With public fatigue toward the incumbent government and the parliamentary opposition’s weakness, a business-driven political project with real managerial capacity and diaspora ties looks like an alternative center of gravity.
The key unknown is leadership: who will be the face and the candidate for prime minister? Public chatter suggests Karen Karapetyan (former PM) might cooperate. Below is a sober assessment of resources, constraints, scenarios — and whether this could be the country’s reset or just another elite list.
1) Why now: the opening
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Fatigue & demand for results: society wants order, security, jobs, predictable tariffs.
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Opposition void: current parliamentary forces lack a managerial roadmap.
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“Tashir” capacity: the new team can mobilize project management, engineering, finance, plus diaspora links — a rare package in politics.
Note: around some assets (incl. energy) there’s a fierce narrative battle — from “state control” to “political re-allocation.” Voters will judge by outcomes: reliability, price, investment, transparency.
2) Who leads: three leadership models
Model A — Karen Karapetyan (ex-PM technocrat)
Pros: recognition, managerial record, ability to speak to business and partners.
Cons: ties to the “old system,” limited youth mobilization, accusations of external dependency.
Meaning: a bid for stability, tariffs, infrastructure, investment.
Model B — New technocrat/mayoral type
Pros: fresh start, no toxic baggage, KPI focus.
Cons: low name recognition, little political experience.
Meaning: pragmatism without ideological wars.
Model C — Symbolic figure “himself”
A direct run by Samvel Karapetyan (or another symbol) is unlikely due to legal/political risks.
Meaning: strong initial momentum, but high turbulence.
Takeaway: If rumors about Karen Karapetyan prove true, that’s the most predictable and reassuring option for many. If not, a carefully chosen clean technocrat with a strong back-office can still work.
3) Assets & constraints
Strengths:
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Management & delivery (build, launch, maintain).
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Diaspora capital & know-how.
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A credible social contract narrative (tariffs, jobs, livable cities, infrastructure).
Risks:
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Skepticism of big capital (state capture fears).
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Legal/administrative pressure (funding, registration, media access).
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Fragmentation (clashes with older opposition, egos, talent scarcity).
4) Minimum winning program
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Energy & tariffs: 3-year reliability/price plan; public audits; KPI on losses/investment.
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Jobs & SMEs: tax holidays for new regional manufacturing; fast-track industrial sites.
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Urban basics: water/roads/waste/transit — “100 days / 10 projects” in Yerevan + 5 big cities.
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Justice & compliance: independent party oversight board; disclosures; open tenders; zero “phone law.”
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Values & identity: respect for the Armenian Apostolic Church, memory, tradition; zero tolerance for mocking national symbols.
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Security & foreign policy: pragmatic balance; red lines on sovereignty; targeted funds for border communities and the army.
5) Who can be united
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Urban professionals (IT, engineers, doctors): services, order, predictability.
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SMEs: rules without rent-seeking.
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Regions: roads, water, jobs, schools.
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Traditionalists: respect for Church, family, memory.
Coalition matrix: independent mayors/groups; a slice of “older” forces under anti-corruption filters; diaspora platforms. No backroom pacts — only public agreements.
6) Three pre-election scenarios
1 — Strong start
Clear leader (e.g., Karen Karapetyan), tight staff work, 10 priorities with metrics, regional offices, public coalition.
Outcome: real fight for first place, if discipline and protection from admin pressure hold.
2 — Legal turbulence
Courts, checks, media hurdles; late/unclear leadership.
Outcome: potential remains, but campaign becomes reactive.
3 — Elite project
Closed lists, backroom deals, slogan-only messaging.
Outcome: fast demobilization; “just another party.”
7) Will it save Armenia?
Only if four lines are drawn in public:
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Transparent funding & compliance (external audit, conflict-of-interest firewall).
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Leader + cabinet-in-waiting: not one name, but a reform cabinet with roadmaps.
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100 days → 10 deliverables: measurable city and border projects.
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Values: respect for Church, memory, sovereignty and social justice — in policy, not slogans.
Otherwise, it becomes another elite list with nice slides.
Watch in the next 30 days
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Who is named PM candidate.
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The strategy council (economy, energy, justice, security).
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Regional offices, KPIs, calendar.
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Church & diaspora dialogue.
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Shielding from administrative pressure (legal/media/cyber).
Bottom line: the project has a shot — if it stays public, open, and contract-based, not a return to old “phone-call politics.” Armenia needs competent pragmatism with a values core — and that window is still open.
By Lida Nalbandyan, Founder and CEO of Octopus Media Group