You're reading: Signs of rancor as Georgia’s new parliament meets

KUTAISI, Georgia (AP) — The newly elected parliament of Georgia on Sunday held its first session since an opposition coalition defeated President Mikhail Saakashvili's party, which had dominated all branches of government for nearly nine years.

By winning the Oct. 1
parliamentary election, the Georgian Dream coalition gained the power to
install its billionaire leader, Bidzina Ivanishvili, as prime minister
and form the government. Now that the new parliament has convened, this
was expected to take place within days.

Saakashvili, however, remains president for another year.

In addressing Sunday’s session, Saakashvili said the election was proof that the former Soviet republic had become a “normal European democracy,” and he said his party was ready to work with Georgian Dream.

“We
are not enemies, we are political rivals,” Saakashvili said. “Now is
not the time for hatred. Now is the time for action and cooperation.”

In
a sign of the antagonism between the two sides, however, Georgian Dream
parliament members refused to stand when Saakashvili entered the hall.

Ivanishvili said the refusal to stand shows that the wounds from the contentious election campaign have not healed.

“But
there will not be revenge and persecution of political opponents,” the
future prime minister told journalists. “We will avoid any kind of
confrontation, we will do everything for cooperation.”

Georgian Dream holds 85 of the 150 seats in parliament. The remaining 65 are held by Saakashvili’s United National Movement.

The parliament was moved from Tbilisi, the capital, to Kutaisi, Georgia’s second city, and Sunday’s session was the first in the new building.