Savanta
Mtavari Arkhi
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Mtavari Arkhi
1561 respondents
The next General election in Georgia is expected in 2028.
In the latest opinion poll for the Georgian election, conducted by Savanta on October 8, 2024, GD leads with 36%. Trailing behind are CfC: 18%, Unity: 14%, ForGeo: 10%, SG: 8%, AP: 3%, Girchi: 3% and LP: 2%. Other parties secure 6% of the votes.
Savanta achieved a PolitPro Score of ? out of 100.
On average, Savanta's figures deviate by 5.6 percentage points between their final pre-election polls and actual election results.
The electoral threshold for the election in Georgia is 5%.
According to data from Savanta, 8 parties are projected to surpass the electoral threshold and enter the Georgia parliament: GD with 58 representatives, CfC with 29 representatives, Unity with 23 representatives, ForGeo with 16 representatives, SG with 13 representatives, AP with 4 representatives, Girchi with 4 representatives and LP with 3 representatives.
Georgia's Parliament (Sakartvelos Parlamenti) comprises 150 members, elected for a four-year term. The October 2024 election marked the complete abolition of the previous mixed-member electoral system. The Parliament is now elected solely through proportional representation within a single nationwide constituency. A significant innovation was the introduction of an electronic voting system in most polling stations, where ballots are machine-scanned and counted to enhance the speed and transparency of results.
Since 2024, a nationwide electoral threshold of 5% applies for entry into the Georgian Parliament. Previously, this threshold had been temporarily lowered to 1%. A key tightening of the new rules is the prohibition of official electoral alliances (party blocs). Consequently, parties must either individually clear the 5% hurdle or formally merge to compete jointly. This regulation aims to consolidate the party landscape, yet significantly complicates parliamentary representation for smaller opposition parties.
Government formation in Georgia mandates a simple majority of at least 76 out of 150 parliamentary seats. The Prime Minister is nominated by the party or coalition holding the most mandates. As Georgia operates under a parliamentary system, actual executive power rests with the Prime Minister and their cabinet, while the President primarily performs representative duties. The political landscape is highly polarized, often hindering the formation of broad, cross-party coalitions and frequently leading to the dominance of a single powerful force.