Georgian Dream ქართული ოცნება | |
|---|---|
| Abbreviation | GD |
| Leader | Bidzina Ivanishvili (2012-2013) Irakli Garibashvili (2013-2015) Giorgi Kvirikashvili (2015-2016) |
| Founder | Bidzina Ivanishvili |
| Founded | 21 February 2012 |
| Dissolved | 31 March 2016 |
| Headquarters | Tbilisi,Georgia |
| Ideology | Big tent[1] Pro-Europeanism[2] Factions: Liberalism[3] National conservatism[4] Social democracy[5][6] Protectionism[7] Neutralism[8] Russophilia[9] |
| Political position | Syncretic |
| Former constituent parties | Georgian Dream - Democratic Georgia (GD-DG) Our Georgia – Free Democrats (OG – FD) Republican Party of Georgia (RPG) Conservative Party of Georgia (CPG) Industry Will Save Georgia (IWSG) National Forum (NF) Supported by: Greens Party of Georgia (GPG) People's Party (PP) Social Democrats for the Development of Georgia (SDDG) |
| Colors | Blue and Amber |
Georgian Dream (Georgian:ქართული ოცნება,romanized:kartuli otsneba) was acatch-allpolitical alliance inGeorgia formed aroundGeorgian Dream – Democratic Georgia (GD – DG) party in opposition to the then-rulingUnited National Movement (UNM) party. The coalition was formed in 2012 with it winning theparliamentary election held in the same year. The alliance was dissolved in 2016 after which GD – DG went on to win2016 and2020 parliamentary elections independently.
The coalition initially included six political parties of diverse ideological orientations.[10][11] The parties ranged frompro-market andpro-Westernliberals tonationalists andprotectionists, united in their dislike of Mikheil Saakashvili and UNM.[12][13] The alliance was further supported by 3 other parties who while formally not a part of the coalition ran their candidates on Georgian Dream list.

United National Movement led byMikheil Saakashvili had become increasingly unpopular due to numerous scandals, alleged abuse of power, and controversial economic reforms.[14] The Georgian Dream coalition was founded byBidzina Ivanishvili on 21 February 2012, as a vehicle for his newly established Georgian Dream movement to unite the opposition and challenge the ruling UNM in theparliamentary election of the same year.[15][16]
Republican Party, led byDavid Usupashvili, andOur Georgia – Free Democrats, led byIrakli Alasania, had been outlined by Ivanishvili as his future coalition partners in November 2011.[17] In January 2012, Ivanishvili brokered partnership with theConservative Party, while theNational Forum announced its alliance with GD-DG on 6 February.[18][19] Moreover, some parties, such asPeople's Party (PP),Social Democrats for the Development of Georgia (SDDG) andGreens Party of Georgia (GPG), also fielded their candidates on the coalition's ticket without formally joining the coalition.[20] In April,Industry Will Save Georgia also joined the alliance.[21]
On 27 May 2012, in a rally held in downtown Tbilisi with 80,000 participants, Ivanishvili announced the start of the election campaign.[22] The rally was one of the largest public demonstrations in the country's post-independence history.[23] In the subsequent months, rallies were held in other major cities in Georgia, includingKutaisi,Zugdidi, andGori.[24][25][26]
The Georgian Dream's campaign surged after theGldani prison scandal, which highlighted widespread torture in Georgian prisons under Saakashvili's administration.[27][28] In response to GD rallies that regularly attracted tens of thousands of people, the government responded by staging a rival mass event.[29][30]

The Georgian Dream coalition successfully challenged the ruling UNM party in the2012 parliamentary election.[31] It won this election with 54.97% of the vote, gaining 85 seats in parliament. Out of the 85 seats, GD-DG and the non-coalition parties running on its list got 47 seats, Free Democrats - 11, Republican Party - 9, while Conservative Party, Industry Will Save Georgia, and National Forum each got 6 seats. Out of the 47 MPs elected from GD-DG's ticket, GPG, PP, and SDDG got a seat each.[32]
Widespread celebrations were held inTbilisi in support of Georgian Dream. The next day, President Saakashvili accepted the results as legitimate, while at the same time noting that he remained deeply opposed to the coalition.[33] Saakashvili pledged to support the constitutional process of forming a new government and peaceful transfer of power.[34]
On 22 October 2012 theGeorgian Parliament elected the leader of the Republican Party,Davit Usupashvili as its new speaker.[35] Three days later Ivanishvili was voted in as the country's new prime minister, with 88 votes in favor to 54 against.[36] The most ministries in the 21-member cabinet went to the Georgian Dream party, while the Free Democrats party was represented in the government by four ministers:Tea Tsulukiani as the Minister of Justice,Irakli Alasania as the Minister of Defense and Vice Premier,Alexi Petriashvili as the State Minister for European and Euro-Atlantic Integration, and Kote Surguladze as the State Minister on the Diaspora Issues. The Republican Party was represented by Paata Zakareishvili as theState Minister for Reintegration, while the National Forum was represented by the Davit Darakhvelidze as theMinister of Internally Displaced Persons.[37]
Being a diverse and eclectic coalition, the Georgian Dream parliamentary majority diversified into several parliamentary factions, with each constituent party in the coalition having its own parliamentary group within the majority: "Georgian Dream-Democratic Georgia", "Georgian Dream-Republicans", "Georgian Dream-Conservatives", "Georgian Dream-National Forum", "Georgian Dream-Industrialists", and "Georgian Dream-Free Democrats".[38]

Georgia, under Ivanishvili's leadership, retained most of the reforms passed during the UNM government. Georgia maintained thefree market economic model, while also establishing a functionalsocial safety net.[39] During Ivanishvili's tenure as the prime minister, the government increased social spending.[40] In 2013, the government increased pensions, social assistance allowances, and education spending.[40] Georgian Dream introduced theUniversal Healthcare Program (UHP).[41] The reform made state-sponsored health insurance available on a mass scale.[42] In June 2013, the parliament adopted a new Labour Code in line withInternational Labour Organization (ILO) standards.[40]
The government implementedprison and crime reform. During the previous administration, that pursued azero-tolerance policy, the prisoner numbers shot up from 6,000 in 2003 to 24,000 in 2012. The prisons were overcrowded and prisoners were subject to systematic torture. During GD’s rule, the mortality rate in prisons considerably went down and prison healthcare was overhauled. Additionally, the practice of cumulative sentencing was abolished in April 2013.[43]
The government persecuted thirty-five officials who had served under the previous government with criminal charges ranging from embezzlement to abuse of power and torture. Former Prime MinisterVano Merabishvili, governor of KakhetiZurab Tchiaberashvili, and Head of the Penitentiary DepartmentBacho Akhalaia were among the ones who were arrested. Overall more than 20,000 complaints were filed by citizens and inmates with the Prosecutor's Office in connection to the past administration, including 4,000 cases of alleged torture or ill-treatment.[44]
In December 2012, Parliament passed the Amnesty Bill, which granted either full exemption from punishment or a reduction of prison sentences—by up to one-fourth—to nearly all prisoners, except those covered by other forms of amnesty. 190 inmates were also recognized as thepolitical prisoners. President Saakashvili vetoed the bill. On 28 December, the Parliament overturned the President's vote, for the first time in Georgia's history. President Saakashvili still refused to sign the bill, after which Usupashvili signed the bill into law on 12 January 2013.[45] By March 2013, Georgia's prison population was reduced by half compared to January 2012 with near 8,000 prisoners being released.[46]
Ivanishvili's government took steps to improve relations withRussia. However, since the Georgian Dream coalition opposed the restoration of formal diplomatic and political relations with Russia until thedisputes with Russia over Abkhazia and South Ossetia were resolved, a Georgian diplomat Zurab Abashidze was appointed as a Special Representative of the Georgian government to mend ties outside formal diplomatic relations by meeting periodically with his Russian counterpartGrigory Karasin on neutral ground in Prague.[47] Thus, diplomatic relations between Russia and Georgia remained formally broken (a fact resulting from the2008 August Russo-Georgian war). In December 2012, Russian and Georgian representatives met inPrague and had the first two-way discussions since the war.[48] The "Prague Format" of Russia-Georgia relations was not meant to facilitate the resolution of disputes regarding Abkhazia and South Ossetia, as both sides remained at odds over these issues.[49] Abashidze emphasized that the question of its territorial integrity is Georgia's "red line" on which no concession is conceivable.[50] The Prague Format was rather focused on a pragmatic process on matters of mutual interest that are unrelated to the breakaways, such as economics and humanitarian issues.[49] However, the Georgian government also took steps towardsEuropean Union integration, which Ivanishvili described as a foreign policy priority.[51] In February 2013, Tamar Beruchachvili, the Deputy State Minister for European and Euro-Atlantic Integration of Georgia, ruled out joining theEurasian Economic Union.[52]

For the2013 presidential election the coalition decided on a common candidate in May 2013, with Ivanishvili presentingGiorgi Margvelashvili, the education minister.[53] In October 2013, Margvelashvili, with Ivanishvili's backing, managed to secure a landslide victory in the election, garnering 62% of votes. Subsequently, Ivanishvili announced his intention to resign as prime minister. On 20 November 2013, Ivanishvili resigned as prime minister. He was succeeded by Interior MinisterIrakli Garibashvili, whom he had announced as his successor on 2 November 2013.[54]

Upon taking office, Garibashvili made no changes to the cabinet. He named Alexandre Tchikaidze, the chief of Tbilisi police department, as his replacement on the post of the Interior Minister.[55] Garibashvili andhis cabinet was confirmed with the vote of 93–19.[56] Garibashvili listed economic growth and Georgia's EU and NATO aspiration as his main priorities.[31]
During Garibashvili's tenure,Association Agreement was signed with the European Union on 27 June 2014, with it being fully ratified by Georgia and all EU member states by January 2016.[57][58] A second agreement about the country's involvement in EU crisis management operations, was also signed.[59]
On 2 May 2014, theParliament approved ananti-discrimination law.[60][61][62] The parliament voted unanimously to pass the bill, with 115 votes in favour and zero against. The adoption of the anti-discrimination law was recommended by the European Neighbourhood Policy (ENP) Country Progress Report for Georgia and it became a prerequisite for finalizing the Visa Liberalization Action Plan between Georgia and the European Union.[63]
Georgian Orthodox Church andconservative groups voiced their opposition to the bill, highlighting the part that specified sexual orientation and gender identity as grounds for prohibited discrimination, with some conservative activists and priests arguing that the bill would "enshrine perversion" in the Georgian society. In response to the criticism of the anti-discrimination law, Georgian Dream proposed to put a constitutional ban on same-sex marriage, despite an existing implicit ban in the Civil Code.[a] Prime Minister Garibashvili stated that the new anti-discrimination law exemplified the "long Georgian tradition of tolerance", however, he also noted that the marriage is a union between a man and a woman. He cited European Union members such asCroatia andLatvia that constitutionally define marriage with the same terms. Garibashvili added that a constitutional amendment was necessary to avoid confusion in the society that the anti-discrimination law granted any new rights or privileges to any group and therefore would lead to same-sex marriage in the future. Prime Minister added that the anti-discrimination law was designed to enable every citizen equally use the rights that are already defined by the legislation.[65]
Major cracks began to appear within the ruling coalition in 2014, with some observers already in January 2013 describing the government as a "fragile unity", predicting it would dissolve either due to disagreements over the distribution of government positions, foreign policy differences, or the receding threat of the United National Movement returning to power.[66] However, some other analysts have questioned the speculations about the coalition's prospective swift disintegration, citing the weakness of the majority of coalition's member parties and their consistent inability to overcome the 5% threshold to make it into the parliament prior to joining their forces with theGeorgian Dream party in a coalition in 2012.[67]
People's Party was first to withdraw, doing it so all the way back in February 2013, withKoba Davitashvili, the leader of the party, citing the "elite" making all decisions within the coalition and its inability to act as a united team.[68] Davitashvili only formally remained in the parliament, claiming he was quitting politics with him not participating in parliamentary work.[69] On 19 February 2014, Giorgi Gachechiladze, the only MP representing the Greens party, decided to leave the parliamentary majority and set as an independent, citing Georgian Dream's alleged unwillingness to have his and his party's opinion be heard.[70]

Free Democrats were the next to announce their withdrawal in November 2014 a day after Prime Minister Garibashvili's decision to dismiss Irakli Alasania from his post of Defence Minister.[71] Alasania was replaced by the Georgian Dream candidateMindia Janelidze and later the Republican Party candidateTina Khidasheli in May 2015.[72][73] The Free Democrats' withdrawal led to the emergence of a new opposition faction in the Georgian parliament and aparty-switch by several MPs between the ruling coalition and the new Free Democrats faction.[74] While State Minister for European IntegrationAlexi Petriashvili and Foreign MinisterMaia Panjikidze, Alasania's sister-in-law, announced their resignation, the Justice MinisterThea Tsulukiani stated that she would keep the post.[75]
The defection of MPs from the Georgian Dream coalition initially led to it losing the parliamentary majority. However, by 10 November, 12independentmajoritarian MPs, initially elected under UNM but later quitting the party following its defeat in the 2012 election, joined the Georgian Dream coalition, which led to its number of MPs increasing to 87 in the parliament. Thus, as a result of the crisis, Georgian Dream managed to increase its representation in the parliament by four seats. Analysts saw this as unsurprising as those independent MPs were frequently voting along with the Georgian Dream coalition, despite not being official members. Some of these new MPs joined the Georgian Dream coalition as a new faction "Independent Majoritarians-For Strong Regions", while others directly joined the Georgian Dream-Democratic Georgia faction. The Free Democrats faction emerged with 8 MPs.[38]

In December 2015, the Georgian Dream party memberGiorgi Kvirikashvili was nominated by the Georgian Dream coalition as the new Prime Minister after Irakli Garibashvili announced his resignation. Kvirikashvili and hiscabinet won the confidence vote with 86-28 votes in the Parliament on 30 December 2015. The only newcomer in the cabinet wasMikheil Janelidze as the Foreign Minister.[76]
Kvirikashvili's government focused on economic growth as well as strengthening relations with the West, with him stating that his goal would be to make Georgian–American relations "a backbone of regional stability, economic development, and democratization".[77][78] Describing himself as a "more of acentre-right politician", Kvirikashvili focused on attracting foreign investment and presented his vision of Georgia as a "stable democracy" with "open market" and "liberal economy".[79][80][81] One of the major reforms during his premiership was the introduction of the "Estonian Tax Model" in May 2016, which taxes a company’s dividends but not its profits. This reform adopted the Estonian approach by exempting all businesses, except those distributing profits, fromincome tax, thereby encouraging companies to reinvest their earnings by removing the obligation to pay income tax unless dividends are distributed.[82]
In the run-up to the2016 parliamentary election tensions became visible between coalition parties, with Industry Will Save Georgia and the Republican Party trading accusations at each other.[83][b] The coalition was divided over the issue with a part siding with Topadze, while others (including some leading members) supported the Republicans and called Topadze's statements "damaging to the coalition's image".[90]
On 31 March 2016, the remaining five constituent parties of the coalition announced that they would run separately in the upcoming election, formally dissolving the coalition, after the Republican Party voiced its intention to run independently in the election. The all of former coalition members expressed a desire to remain within the parliamentary majority until the election, except National Forum which left the Georgian Dream parliamentary majority in April 2016,[91] Prime Minister Giorgi Kvirikashvili has also confirmed the desire of Georgian Dream - Democratic Georgia party to run separately in the upcoming election, citing a "different reality" from that of the 2012 election.[84][92] Despite the pledge to remain within the parliamentary majority, in July 2016 the Republican Party left the majority and renounced two of its three cabinet posts. Their third minister quit the Republican Party and remained in the government.[93]

Kvirikashvili led the Georgian Dream party to a landslide victory in the2016 parliamentary election, winning aconstitutional majority of 115 seats out of 150. In the election, the Conservative Party, Social Democrats and the Green Party ran candidates on the Georgian Dream party list, winning respectively four, three and one seat.[92]
Additionally,Salome Zourabichvili, an independent candidate supported by GD, won in theMtatsminda district. All other parties previously in the coalition failed to cross the 5% threshold and ended up outside of parliament. Free Democrats had the best showing, getting 4.63%. IWSG was the only party to win a majoritarian district in the second round against GD, with Simon Nozadze winning in theKhashuri district.[92]
Following the election, inside the parliamentary majority "Georgian Dream – Conservatives", "Georgian Dream – Social Democrats", and "Georgian Dream – Greens" factions were established.[94][95] Additionally, the Georgian Dream – Industrialists faction was established by Nozadze and five other Georgian Dream MPs.[96][97]
In April 2018, the Social Democrats announced their intention to run independently in the2020 parliamentary election.[98] In February 2019, the party announced that it was leaving the Georgian Dream majority, with its leader Gia Jorjoliani citing disagreements on economic, agricultural, and pension matters. At the same time, Jorjoliani made it clear that they would be willing to cooperate with all parties, except for theUnited National Movement andEuropean Georgia.[99] The disassociation with the Georgian Dream party was eventually formalized by March 2019, with some members becoming independent MPs, while Social Democrats leader Jorjoliani and others joined theAlliance of Patriots faction in parliament. Jorjoliani cited general agreement on core issues such as "support for lower classes" and patriotic values as the reason for him joining the faction.[100]
Further cracks in the Georgian Dream majority came to light during the2019 anti-government protests. The Conservative Party left the Georgian Dream parliamentary majority following disagreements within the government over electoral reform in November 2019. Its leaderZviad Dzidziguri would later negatively assess the period of his party's association with Georgian Dream party, saying that while being a part of the Georgian Dream majority, the party lost the ability to directly communicate with voters and its electoral base.[101]
This configuration left the Greens party the only party that maintained its ties with the Georgian Dream after 2019. However, before the2020 parliamentary election, the Greens Party announced that they would run independently in the election. Georgian Dream was able to re-create its 2016 performance in the popular vote but lost 25 seats under the amended electoral system, while neither the Greens nor the Conservatives managed to win any seats in parliament on their own.[102]
The Georgian Dream coalition included parties of diverse ideological orientations.[103][104] The lead party Georgian Dream described itself associal-democratic, with observers attributing "social-democratic tendencies" to the party in its early days.[105][106] Furthermore, the coalition was made up of parties ranging frompro-market andpro-westernliberals tonationalists andprotectionists, united in their dislike of Saakashvili and the United National Movement.[12][107][108][109]
Georgian Dream's 12-point manifesto included among other policies, the development ofliberal democracy, deepening integration with the European Union and NATO, and improvement of education and healthcare infrastructure.[110] The main goals of Georgian Dream were stated to be a revival of agriculture, lowering taxes on the poor, universal health insurance, normalization of relations with Russia and strengthening Georgia's ties to the EU and NATO.[111]
Georgian Dream's style of governance has been characterized astechnocratic populism with an "ideology-free" governance strategy transcending the traditionalright–left ideological divide through an appeal to the "effective governance" based on expertise garnered outside of politics. Ivanishvili has been described as a central figure maintaining the unity of the coalition through his leadership, with his message to the public being based on utilizing output-oriented expertise as a governance strategy, in particular, the managerial skills he earned as a business leader, promising "effectiveness".[112]
The coalition has often undertaken ideology-free zigzagging, in particular, when it first passed an anti-discrimination law to satisfy the EU's requirements for visa liberalization but later enshrined the traditional definition of marriage in the constitution to satisfy conservative voters. An additional example is the government introducing universal health care but later reverting it to a non-universal system after a significant increase in public expenses.[112]
The Georgian Dream coalition united parties with eclectic fiscal views. The coalition included both economicallyliberal andsocial democratic wings. The coalition has introduced a universal healthcare system and a new labor code. Nevertheless, they have committed to "economic openness" and "market-driven growth", implementing bothsocial democratic andneoliberal policies. In addition, the leading Georgian Dream party itself held mixed views on economic issues, with it having a prominent liberal wing despite being a self-described social democratic party.[113][114]
The coalition's social policy has been described as inconsistent. The coalition passed an anti-discrimination law that provided "protection against discrimination of sexual minorities". However, at the same time, it supported a constitutional amendment to define marriage as a union between a man and a woman. The proposed amendment caused a split within the ruling coalition itself, with members of the liberal-leaningRepublican Party of Georgia campaigning against the initiative, despite two of its lawmakers putting their signatures on the initiation of the bill.[112][115]
Similarly, Bidzina Ivanishvili brushed off the proposal to ban abortion in 2013, stating that solving demographic problems "first and foremost needs economic development", despite other leading members of the coalition, such as Irakli Garibashvili, speaking against abortion, describing it as a murder.[116][117]
The constituent parties of Georgian Dream held divergent views on foreign policy issues. Two of the coalition members — the liberal parties Republicans and Free Democrats — expressed a pro-Western foreign policy, while some members of the coalition did not supportEuropean integration or membership intoNATO. National Forum and Industry Will Save Georgia (IWSG) opposed Georgia's NATO membership and advocatedneutrality. They did not reject EU integration.[66] Ivanishvili and the GD party expressed support for the EU and NATO membership, and the coalition overall supported it.[118] Parts of the coalition have been labeledpro-Russian with even Ivanishvili himself commenting on "pro-Russian aspirations" of IWSG.[9][119]
The coalition's program itself sought to combine the European Union and NATO integration with a balanced foreign policy with Russia. Upon taking office as prime minister in October 2012, Ivanishvili promised to push for Georgia's integration with the West, while at the same time combining it with a bid to restore relations with Russia.[51][120] One of the means for achieving this, explicitly mentioned in the coalition's programme, was for Georgia "not to be a point of contention between the West and Russia".[121] Ivanishvili explicitly described himself as "being in favor of balance" and for Georgia to be "interesting for everyone".[122]
Ivanishvili has described returningAbkhazia andSouth Ossetia under Georgia's sovereignty as one of his main goals. The coalition sought to reintegrate South Ossetia and Abkhazia into Georgia diplomatically rather than by military confrontation with Russia. The first step towards de-escalation was mending cultural and economic ties with Russia. Ivanishvili recognized that Georgia lacked leverage for negotiations with Russia, however, he still thought thatoccupation of Georgian territories was potentially more damaging to Russia itself compared to a peaceful resolution of conflict. As for Abkhazians and Ossetians, Ivanishvili envisaged making various economic, legal, and other incentives for their reintegration into Georgia.[122][123][124]
At the same time, while supporting the normalization of relations with Russia, the coalition envisaged Georgia as firmly aligned with theWestern world, with the Georgian Dream coalition describing the EU and NATO integration as Georgia's foreign policy priorities. In 2013, Georgia rejected membership to theEurasian Economic Union, instead signing theassociation agreement with the European Union.[51][52][125]
The six full members of the Georgian Dream coalition.
The three supporting members of the Georgian Dream coalition.
| Party | Main ideology | Leader | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Greens Party of Georgia (GPG) | Green conservatism | Giorgi Gachechiladze | |
| People's Party (PP) | Conservatism | Koba Davitashvili | |
| Social Democrats for the Development of Georgia (SDDG) | Social democracy | Gia Zhorzholiani | |
| Election | Leader | Votes | % | Seats | +/– | Position | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2012 | Bidzina Ivanishvili | 1,184,612 | 54.97 | 85 / 150 | new | 1st | Government |
| Election year | Candidate | Results | |
|---|---|---|---|
| # of the overall vote | % of the overall vote | ||
| 2013 | Giorgi Margvelashvili | 1,012,569 | 62.12 (#1) |
| Election | Votes | % | Seats | +/– | Position |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2014 | 719 431 | 50.82 | 1,370 / 2,088 | new | 1st |
| Name | From | To |
|---|---|---|
| Giorgi Margvelashvili | 17 November 2013 | 16 December 2018 |
| Name | From | To |
|---|---|---|
| Bidzina Ivanishvili | 25 October 2012 | 20 November 2013 |
| Irakli Gharibashvili | 20 November 2013 | 30 December 2015 |
| Giorgi Kvirikashvili | 30 December 2015 | 13 June 2018 |
If GD and UNM seem to be in opposition over domestic subjects, they are unanimous about EU issues. Georgia's Parliament adopted, on 7 March 2013, a resolution, drafted jointly by GD and UNM, which reiterated the country's commitment to the pro-European and pro-Western foreign policy course. The resolution, passed unanimously by Parliament, states that integration into the European and Euro-Atlantic structures represents the country's overarching foreign policy priority.
Two of the coalition members—RP and OGFD—are formally liberal parties, with declared pro-Western foreign policy orientations. RP is led by Speaker of the Parliament David Usupashvili. OGFD is led by Minister of Defense Irakli Alasania. Regardless of their ideological closeness these two parties tried but failed to establish an enduring political coalition in the past (www.interpressnews.ge, June 16, 2010).
GD also includes the nationalist Conservative Party, led by Zviad Dzidziguri, a former loyalist of the overthrown Georgian President Zviad Gamsakhurdia (1991–1992)
Its political system includes a small Social Democratic Party and a Labour Party, with the former having joined the coalition government led by the Georgian Dream, the ruling party.
NF opposes Georgia's NATO membership, advocating neutrality. The coalition's sixth member, Industry Will Save Georgia (IWSG), led by the beer magnate Gogi Topadze, also resists Georgia's NATO membership.
Irakli Alasania's Our Georgia Free Democrats (OGFD) and the Republican Party, led by brothers David and Levan Berdzenishvili and the husband-and-wife team of Davit Usupashvili and Tina Khidasheli, are two prominent, liberal parties in the coalition with a strong, pro-Western foreign policy orientation. Other members include the nationalist Conservative Party, led by Zviad Dzidziguri, a loyalist of former President Zviad Gamsakhurdia; the National Forum (NF), which includes former high-ranking Shevardnadzeera bureaucrats; and the Industrialists. These parties are united in their dislike of Saakashvili and the UNM and have limited political prospects individually.
Irakli Alasania's Our Georgia Free Democrats (OGFD) and the Republican Party, led by brothers David and Levan Berdzenishvili and the husband-and-wife team of Davit Usupashvili and Tina Khidasheli, are two prominent, liberal parties in the coalition with a strong, pro-Western foreign policy orientation. Other members include the nationalist Conservative Party, led by Zviad Dzidziguri, a loyalist of former President Zviad Gamsakhurdia; the National Forum (NF), which includes former high-ranking Shevardnadzeera bureaucrats; and the Industrialists. These parties are united in their dislike of Saakashvili and the UNM and have limited political prospects individually.
One should not forget that, despite having a strong liberal wing, GD views itself as a center-left party and is an observer member of the Party of European Socialists (PES) in the European Parliament.
Separately, Ivanishvili also committed to pursuing a pro-Western and pro-NATO foreign policy, but pledged a more pragmatic relationship with Russia.