The latest survey ahead of Armenia’s decisive elections on 7 June has projected that Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s Civil Contract party could win nearly 65% of decided voters, suggesting it could be headed for a landslide victory and a considerable majority in the future parliament.
The Breavis poll measured voting intentions between 5 and 11 May among 1,551 respondents, showing that Civil Contract would win a comfortable lead over the fragmented opposition — some of which are actively supported by Russia — with no party rising above 12%.
If the vote next Sunday confirms the poll's projections, Armenians would give Pashinyan a decisive mandate to solidify the South Caucasus country's strategic realignment towards a pro-Western path, setting it on a collision course with the Kremlin and cementing the historic peace agreement with Azerbaijan over Karabakh, further advancing regional stability and cooperation.
The agreement was signed at the White House last year with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, ending decades of conflict between the two countries.
The Breavis poll also signals a recalibration of Yerevan's national strategy and a further pivot towards the West after decades in Russia’s post-Soviet orbit.












