Adjara government Eka Kherkheulidze first appeared in politics when elected to the
Supreme Council of the Autonomous Republic of Adjara in the June 20, 2004 regional elections that immediately followed the overthrow of local strongman
Aslan Abashidze during the
Adjara Crisis. A member of the ruling
United National Movement, she was seen as a close ally to Koba Khabazi, Deputy Chairman of the Supreme Council, and allegedly sided with him during an intra-party conflict between him and regional party leader
Levan Varshalomidze. She accused the latter of
nepotism by appointing relatives to official positions, although refusing to disclose the names of the appointees. During the
2008 Georgian parliamentary election, she was recruited by UNM to appear as 15th on its electoral list, winning a seat in the
Parliament of Georgia and resigning from her position in Adjara.
First term as MP In Parliament, she served as vice-chairwoman of the Human Rights and Civil Integration Committee, operating as a strong ally to then-President
Mikheil Saakashvili. She notably accused opposition leaders such as
Zviad Dzidziguri,
Kakha Kukava and
Badri Patarkatsishvili of being part of a "Russian plot" to overthrow the government, thus justifying law enforcement's violent dispersal of
protests in November 2007. Kherkheulidze also denied the existence of torture in Georgian prisons despite a report by the
Public Defender in 2009, even though that report noted "progress" compared to previous years. She was seen as a potential candidate to replace
Sozar Subari as Georgia's Public Defender, although the job eventually went to Giorgi Tughushi. She supported an exhumation of the body of former President
Zviad Gamsakhurdia as part of an investigation into his death in 1993, which has not happened to this day. In 2009, she became the Parliament Majority Representative on the Commission on Early Conditional Release (also known as the UDO Commission). As such, she rejected criticism on the controversial early release of four
MIA officials that had been convicted of the
2006 murder of Sandro Girgvliani.
In the opposition Second term as MP Following the loss of the
2012 parliamentary elections by UNM, she became part of the opposition, while her position as 36th on the party's electoral list that year prevented her winning her reelection outright. She regained a seat in Parliament on March 18, 2015, after UNM MP
David Sakvarelidze resigned to become Deputy
General Prosecutor of Ukraine. One of the more active party activists, she was on site in
Zugdidi during a special local election that was marred by a controversial physical confrontation between UNM and
Georgian Dream activists. She was 36th in UNM's electoral list during the
2016 parliamentary elections and failed to win a seat that year.
Third term as MP 28th on UNM's electoral list in the
2020 elections, Eka Kherkheulidze was elected to Parliament once again that year, although she refused to take her seat after allegations surfaced of massive voter fraud. She rescinded her resignation in April 2021 after a short-lived
European Union-facilitated agreement between the opposition and Georgian Dream. Since then, she has served as a member of the Human Rights and Civil Integration Committee. As an MP, she visited
Ukraine in May 2021 a first time, along with opposition leader
Nika Melia, to pay a visit to exiled former president Mikheil Saakashvili. She returned once more to
Kyiv in April 2022 with former president
Giorgi Margvelashvili to show her solidarity with Ukraine in the midst of the
Russian invasion. Kherkheulidze has been one of the most vocal supporters of Mikheil Saakashvili since his return to Georgia in October 2021. Shortly before his interpellation by the authorities, she admitted having had at least one video conversation with the former leader while he was hiding from police in
Batumi. She has visited him several times in prison and often acted as his messenger to the media, calling on the opposition to not boycott the
local election runoffs in 2021, to avoid a parliamentary boycott in order to push for electoral reform, and criticizing his treatment in prison several times. == References ==