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Elections falsified by the ruling regimes typically result in periodic cycles of mass protests, and become key political events in many of the modern world’s new countries. Such “post-election movements” usually give rise to two phenomena: emergence of a new dominant opposition, and transformation within the regime—which takes place rarely. The character of the political regime, however, does not change. The article is aimed at clarifying essence of the existing structures of Armenia’s political regime in light of the principle on the distribution of rights and responsibilities.