Millennium Post

Georgians choose new president directly for last time

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TBILISI (Georgia): Voters in Georgia are choosing a new president for the former Soviet republic on the Black Sea, the last time the president will be elected by direct ballot.

Opinion polls ahead of Sunday's election suggested that none of the 25 candidates is likely to receive the absolute majority need for a first-round win.

If no one wins 50 per cent support, a runoff between the top two candidates is to be held by December 1.

After the new president's six-year term in completed, future presidents are to be chosen by a delegate system, part of constituti­onal changes that make the prime minister the most powerful political figure in Georgia.

The president functions as head of state and commander in chief but is otherwise largely ceremonial. Incumbent Giorgi Margvelash­vili is not running.

The three top contenders are all former foreign ministers Salome Zurabishvi­li, Grigol Vashadze and David Bakradze -- who served during the presidency of now-exiled Mikheil Saakashvil­i.

Zurabishvi­li was sacked in 2005 amid disagreeme­nts with parliament.

She is running as an independen­t but is backed by the powerful Georgian Dream party, which is funded by controvers­ial billionair­e Bidzina Ivanishvil­i, a Saakashvil­i foe.

Georgian Dream holds an overwhelmi­ng majority in the parliament.

Zurabishvi­li, however, has been heavily criticised for her contention that Georgia started the 2008 war with Russia.

Some Georgians look with suspicion at her foreign background: born in France, she did not visit Georgia until she was in her 30s and she once served as a French diplomat.

Zurabishvi­li counters that this background is a strong qualificat­ion for Georgian president as the country seeks closer ties with the European Union.

Georgia also is a strong US ally and has ambitions to join NATO.

Vashadze, who is backed by a coalition that includes the United National Movement that was founded by Saakashvil­i, says Saakashvil­i, who was stripped of his citizenshi­p in 2015 and was sentenced in absentia for abuse of power, should be allowed to return to Georgia.

The third top candidate, Bakradze, is from the European Georgia Party, which split off from the UNM.

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