Ad
Widespread intimidation of voters, especially public sector employees, along with extensive tracking of voters and compromised voting secrecy, undermining the ability of voters to cast their vote freely and without fear (Photo: Wikipedia)

Opinion

The 'smoking gun' in the Georgian election? The whole process was a smoking gun

Georgia held elections to parliament on 26 October. Ostensibly these were ordinary parliamentary elections. But on substance they amounted to a referendum on the orientation of the country: becoming  more authoritaria...

Get EU news that matters

Back our independent journalism by becoming a supporting member

Already a member? Login here

Disclaimer

The views expressed in this opinion piece are the author’s, not those of EUobserver

Author Bio

Michael Meyer-Resende and Nino Tsereteli work for Democracy Reporting International,  a Berlin-based NGO focussed on elections, democratic norms and transparency. Meyer-Resende is also an EUobserver columnist.

Widespread intimidation of voters, especially public sector employees, along with extensive tracking of voters and compromised voting secrecy, undermining the ability of voters to cast their vote freely and without fear (Photo: Wikipedia)

Tags

Author Bio

Michael Meyer-Resende and Nino Tsereteli work for Democracy Reporting International,  a Berlin-based NGO focussed on elections, democratic norms and transparency. Meyer-Resende is also an EUobserver columnist.

Ad

Related articles

Ad
Ad