Georgian Dream – Democratic Georgia ქართული ოცნება – დემოკრატიული საქართველო | |
---|---|
Chairman | Irakli Garibashvili |
Secretary-General | Kakha Kaladze |
Honorary Chairman | Bidzina Ivanishvili |
Executive Secretary | Mamuka Mdinaradze |
Political Secretary | Irakli Kobakhidze |
Regional Secretary | Dimitri Samkharadze |
Relations with Political Parties Secretary | Gia Volski |
Founder | Bidzina Ivanishvili |
Founded | 21 April 2012[1] |
Registered | 7 May 2012[2] |
Ideology | |
Political position | Syncretic[26][A] |
National affiliation | Georgian Dream (coalition) (until 2016) |
European affiliation | Party of European Socialists (observer) (2015–2023)[29] |
International affiliation | Progressive Alliance (until 2023) |
Colors | Blue and Amber |
Slogan | მხოლოდ მშვიდობით, ღირსებითა და კეთილდღეობით ევროპისკენ ('Only with peace, dignity, and prosperity to Europe')[30][31] |
Seats In Parliament | 83 / 150 |
Municipal Councilors | 1,333 / 2,068 |
Seats In Supreme Council of Adjara | 14 / 21 |
Seats In Tbilisi City Assembly | 29 / 50 |
Seats In Kutaisi City Assembly | 18 / 35 |
Seats In Batumi City Assembly | 16 / 35 |
Municipal Mayors | 63 / 64 |
Party flag | |
Website | |
gd.ge | |
^ A: The party has been variously described as centre-left,[32] fiscally centre-left but socially conservative,[33] nominally centre-left,[34] centre to centre-left,[35] and social democratic.[35][36] Some observers have also accused it of adopting some far-right ideas.[37] |
Georgian Dream – Democratic Georgia (GD),[a] also colloquially known as the Kotsebi,[b] is a populist political party in Georgia. It is currently the ruling party in Georgia. Irakli Garibashvili serves as the party chairman, while the former chairman Irakli Kobakhidze has served as the Prime Minister since February 2024. Bidzina Ivanishvili, widely considered the de facto leading person of the party, serves as its honorary chairman.
The party was established on 19 April 2012 by billionaire businessman and oligarch Bidzina Ivanishvili.[38] It won the general election in the same year, being part of an eclectic coalition also called Georgian Dream, which included both pro-Western liberal and anti-NATO nationalist parties.[39] Subsequently, the Georgian Dream party (independent of its coalition) won the general elections of 2016, 2020 and 2024.[40]
Georgian Dream originally declared itself and was described as a centre-left pro-European party, pursuing Euro-Atlantic integration.[41] However, over time it transformed into an explicitly culturally conservative illiberal Eurosceptic party. The main criticism of the party has always been its alleged anti-Western and pro-Russia foreign policy, which the party fiercely denies. It has also been accused of vote-bribing, democratic backsliding, authoritarianism and autocratic governance.[c] It is today described as combining ideas of left and right,[42] despite remaining to the left on fiscal matters.[45]
Georgian Dream has passed legislation considered by the United States and European Union to contradict the country's EU and NATO candidacy commitments. In June 2024 United States sanctioned Georgian Dream officials for "undermining democracy".[46] According to the party itself, it plans to make Georgia part of the EU while "playing by Georgian rules".[d]
Since the start of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Georgian Dream has supported anti-Western narratives, including claims about a "Global War Party" attempting to embroil Georgia in war against Russia.[53]
Ivanishvili founded the Georgian Dream-Democratic Georgia party on 21 April 2012.
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was invoked but never defined (see the help page).He is a founder of the "Georgian Dream- Democratic Georgia" party, which is staying for social democracy, social market economy, and social conservatism, however, its politics is different from Mikheil Saakashvili's "United National Movement" party.
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was invoked but never defined (see the help page).And with a five per cent threshold to enter parliament, the dozen smaller parties opposing the government are likely to be left out of the legislature, leaving only one party – the centre-right United National Movement – to stand against the centre-left Georgian Dream.
Whilst fiscally centre-left, Georgian Dream campaigned on a socially conservative platform, aiming to preserve Georgian traditions and religious culture as opposed to submitting to the liberal behemoth of the EU.
As the relationship between Georgian Dream (still nominally a centre-left party) and its partners in the Party of European Socialists has largely ended through its exit from the parliamentary bloc, GD could still count on Orbán's Hungary to advocate for the country's candidacy into the EU.
... and the ruling party "Georgian Dream" (Pro-Europeanism, Social democracy, Third Way, Social liberalism, Conservatism, political position: Centre to Centre-left).
Georgia's government, led by Irakli Garibashvili of the social democratic Georgian Dream party, is being exceedingly careful on the geopolitical and military files for fear of provoking a fight with Russia.
Founded by the oligarch Bidzina Ivanishvili, a friend of Putin, the Georgian Dream lacks a clear ideology. Despite being labelled by some European media as a "centre-left" party, its leadership has adopted far-right ideas.
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