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The Dispatch – March 15-16: He Came to Stay

Endless Enthusiasm of Brussels Envoy – UNM Chair’s Jail Letters – (Re)Birth of Participatory Political Culture in Western Georgia – Public at Odds over Basilashvili’s Win – CSO to Defend Single Men’s Surrogacy Rights – Anti-vaxxers and Minister’s Pending Vaccine Jab – Parties Eye Gakharia’s Political Potential

Greetings from Georgia – a divided nation in a continued (if half-hearted) search for unity. As the Envoy from Brussels has extended his Tbilisi visit in the hope to reconcile parties’ positions, the public still does not run out of topics to disagree about.

The Dispatch and me, your operator – Nini – are having our ear to the ground – seeking context in isolated events – and trying to glean the meaning in the absurd. Subscribe here! 

Tired Nation, Tireless Envoy

200 km apart: (Re)Birth of Western Georgian Political Culture

ALTERNATIVE POLICY SOURCES For many in Georgia, Tbilisi is like Mount Olympus to the ancient Greeks – if something bad happens, it’s mainly because some self-proclaimed Gods got jealous of each other, or another “Zeus” could not keep his predatory instincts in check… Some 200 km away from this Olympos, Western Georgians in the city of Kutaisi chose to turn to Athens for their political inspirations: with another large-scale rally against the controversial Namakhvani HPP project happening yesterday, the protests – with an initial focus on environmental impacts and suspicious investor agreements – eventually laid the groundwork for a new, more participatory political culture where people ask to be consulted first prior to being presented with fait accompli. The activists in the “Rioni Gorge Movement” vow to move to Tbilisi if authorities again fail to respond to their demands. We can only hope that they bring some of that culture with them.

Where More Growth is Needed

That’s the full lid for today. Celebrate the bizarre and the curious in Georgia’s politics with us every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday!