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New Deal on Electoral System

After dropping plans to increase an overall number of seats in the next Parliament, the ruling party and some opposition parties agreed on Monday to slightly change the current distribution of seats between MPs elected in majoritarian, single-mandate constituencies and through party-list proportional system.

According to the new agreement number of majoritarian MPs will go down from current 75 to 73 and number of MPs elected through party-list system will be increased from current 75 to 77.

Other key points of the new agreement include:

Technically this planned change in the number of majoritarian and party-list MPs will come as a result of scrapping to majoritarian seats, which originally were allocated for two single-mandate constituencies located in breakaway South Ossetia.

Among those 75 majoritarian MPs currently holding seats in the Parliament there are two who were elected in May, 2008 elections in Liakhvi and Akhalgori – constituencies which before the August, 2008 war were under the Tbilisi’s control in breakaway South Ossetia. Scrapping of these majoritarian, single-mandate constituencies from the electoral system, creates vacant seats in the Parliament, which will now be filled by PMs elected through party-list, proportional system.

The deal also means that the initial plan of dividing several largest single-mandate constituencies will also be dropped, thus keeping a wide disparity between the single-mandate constituencies involving large variance in number of voters in various districts. Providing an approximately equal size of single-mandate constituencies in order to guarantee the equality of the vote has long been a call from the Venice Commission, the Council of Europe’s advisory body for legal and constitutional affairs.

The agreement was reached during a meeting of senior ruling party lawmakers, including parliamentary speaker Davit Bakradze with some opposition parties, among them Christian-Democratic Movement and New Rights Party – those who have joined an initial deal on election system reform in summer.