Nika Melia, the former chair of the United National Movement (UNM), Georgia’s largest opposition party, and Nika Gvaramia, the founder of opposition TV channel Mtavari Arkhi, have officially unveiled their new political party, Ahali (‘New’), OC Media reports.
Announcing the party’s formation, Gvaramia stated that his and Melia’s party would fight for changes in Georgia ‘in new ways’.
‘We will change [it] because we know the struggle, we know the price of integrity, we know the price of serving the motherland, we know how to overcome difficulties and how to respond to challenges’, Gvaramia said at the party’s presentation on Monday.
Explaining the logo’s colours, Gvaramia said that green represented newness and a new beginning, orange: energy, progress, and hope, and white: purity, innocence, and happiness.
Ahali will be participating in October’s parliamentary elections under the number four.
Gvaramia emphasised that the party would ‘only move forward’ and ‘not look back’. Both of the party’s co-founders have served as UNM MPs and held government positions. Gvaramia served as Georgia’s Deputy Prosecutor General, Justice Minister, and Education Minister between 2007 and 2009.
Melia stated that the party’s launch had followed three months of discussions between its co-founders, and similarly noted that the party aimed to distance itself from the past.
‘The future is our common goal, victory is our common goal, not revenge’, said Melia. ‘Innovation is our goal, our goal is to find something new, not to settle with the past’.
Both noted that the founding congress of the party would take place in the near future, with Gvaramia suggesting it might be held in April.
Gvaramia and Melia are set to be co-chairs of the party, but the Mtavari Arkhi founder stated that the party’s political council would have primary decision-making power, and added that the council’s chair had not yet been chosen.
Neither ruling party nor opposition politicians have commented on the party since its founding on Monday afternoon.
A few hours before the presentation of the party, UNM MP Ana Tsitlidze commented that ‘cloning’ the UNM ‘has not worked for anyone for 12 years’, and that she did not expect Ahali to detract from the UNM’s votes.