You are right not to come to the hall. You should be ashamed to come. Alen Simonyan
I want to understand how much strength and energy a representative of the Republican party needs to have to come here and speak about lies. Your entire political career, one could say, is the logo, the leader, is a lie. This was stated by the Speaker of the National Assembly, Alen Simonyan, during an extraordinary speech in response to the speech of Hayk Mamijanyan, the head of the "Honorary Diluted" faction.
“You lost power because of this, do you understand? Serzh Sargsyan spoke so many lies that both colleagues and the people said, ‘Enough of deceiving us.’ You lied in elections, you lied in speeches, ‘I won’t submit my candidacy,’ ‘I invented Armenikum.’ In 1999, Serzh Sargsyan was talking about Armenikum. One could write books about lies.”
“By the way, what happened with your negotiations with Aghazaryan and Aslanyan? Did they join the impeachment? Seriously, what did your serious negotiations end with?” Simonyan asked, addressing Mamijanyan.
“You are right not to come to the hall. You should be ashamed to come, and you are right to be ashamed. You need to be silent. You have nothing to say; you have passed through the National Assembly in the role of a teapot. You have no voice, no supporters, no message. Lies and Serzh Sargsyan are synonymous in the field of Armenian politics,” the Speaker said.
According to him, the opposition wants the negotiation documents from the 1990s to be published, and he suggested that Mamijanyan's leader and Robert Kocharian engage in a debate.
“Why aren’t you coming? It was because of your diplomacy that Serzh Sargsyan was saying from this podium, ‘Well, it’s a dead end,’” Simonyan accused the opposition of not seeing any good, then, addressing the MPs of the ruling party, he expressed pride in them.
“I am proud of our faction. We have brought out substantial political figures in this faction. The political field has strong politicians of a new generation,” concluded the Speaker of the National Assembly, thanking them for their goodness.