Tbilisi (GBC) - Shalva Papuashvili announced that the ruling party plans to file a lawsuit with the Constitutional Court to declare the United National Movement (UNM) and affiliated groups unconstitutional. Papuashvili cited evidence accumulated after the October 4 coup attempt as the basis for the legal action, accusing the party of anti-constitutional and extremist activities.

“We saw great hysteria from the defenders of the National Movement, but October 4 gave us a sea of evidence. We reviewed the failed coup attempt not only from the perspective of restoring law and order, but also in detail with our lawyers. Evidence has been added that the National Movement is an extremist force undermining Georgian democracy and the state,” Papuashvili said.

He also criticized international actors, claiming that foreign silence is a result of their indirect involvement in the events of October 4. “Foreigners realized they had created additional evidence against the National Movement and were involved as accomplices, which is why they remain silent,” Papuashvili added. He further urged opposition figures to reflect on their actions and consider whether they may have committed criminal offenses during the unrest.

The move follows earlier statements by Georgian Dream prior to the 2024 parliamentary elections, when party leaders promised that the UNM and its satellite parties would be declared unconstitutional if the ruling party gained a constitutional majority. In March 2025, Mamuka Mdinaradze submitted a draft law to parliament seeking to ban the successors of the UNM from participating in elections.