Russian state television has been consumed by outrage over Armenia’s parliamentary election. In a way, the panic is understandable.
For months, Moscow appeared to hope that Armenia would punish Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan at the ballot box and return to Russia’s political orbit. Instead, Pashinyan’s Civil Contract party won the June 7 vote with nearly 50 percent, securing the right to continue governing.
JOIN US ON TELEGRAM
Follow our coverage of the war on the @Kyivpost_official.
Russian propagandists immediately presented the outcome as the product of “dirty games,” arrests, manipulation, and alleged voting violations. But the real frustration in Moscow lies elsewhere: despite Russia’s increasingly open attempts to shape Armenia’s political mood, Armenian voters again backed a leader whose policies have increasingly challenged Moscow’s influence.
Moscow had invested heavily in the information campaign. Russian propagandist Margarita Simonyan, herself of Armenian origin, had long called for Pashinyan’s removal. Years ago, she accused him of betraying Armenia and lashed out at his voters, suggesting they were blind or foolish for supporting him.
But the result delivered a painful surprise to Simonyan, Vladimir Putin, and the broader circle of Kremlin loyalists. Pashinyan did not merely survive the election; he won decisively.
Questioning the legitimacy
Following the vote, Moscow quickly switched to questioning its legitimacy. Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova claimed the election took place amid repression and Western interference. The accusation was striking, not only because of Moscow’s own dismal democratic record, but because it exposed Russia’s growing desperation over its fading influence in the South Caucasus.
Other Topics of Interest


