's President
Ilham Aliyev In December 2015, Kviriashvili was nominated by the Georgian Dream coalition as new prime minister after Irakli Garibashvili announced his resignation. Kvirikashvili and his incoming
cabinet won the confidence vote in the Parliament with 86 votes to 28 on 30 December 2015. Kvirikashvili's government was focused on growing the economy and promoting entrepreneurship. One of the major reforms under his premiership was the so-called Estonian Tax model, which taxes a company's pay-out dividends but not its profits, in 2016. Kvirikashvili has said that he would like to make Georgian–American relations "a backbone of regional stability, economic development, and democratization." In May 2018,
two waves of protests erupted in
Tbilisi: one over police raids on nightclubs over alleged illegal drug trade, and another over perceived miscarriage of justice by the
Prosecutor's Office of Georgia in the case involving killing of teenagers in a street knife-combat. On 31 May 2018, Georgia's Chief Prosecutor
Irakli Shotadze resigned over the case, calling accusations against him "political vengeance" by the opposition. On 1 June 2018, Prime Minister Irakli Kvirikashvili announced that the case would be transferred from the Prosecutor's Office to the
Ministry of Internal Affairs for further investigation, and the creation of a special parliamentary fact-finding commission chaired by an opposition politician. The protests calling for
drug liberalization were met by
conservative,
nationalist and
fascist counter-protests against the "drug dealers and LGBT propagandists", with Georgian president
Giorgi Margvelashvili saying that Georgia "is on the brink of civil war". The Minister of Internal Affairs
Giorgi Gakharia showed up in front of protesters on May 13 and apologized for alleged instances of police misconduct. He met the organizers of the protests and agreed to create two working groups. One group would work on the draft of a drug policy and another on the police raid and whether the individual law enforcers exceeded their powers or not. The actions of the minister caused negative reaction among the conservative public. Prime Minister Kvirikashvili suddenly resigned on 13 June 2018, claiming "disagreements over fundamental issues with the leader of the ruling party" as the reason for his resignation, including possibly on economic issues. The incoming government was formed by the Finance Minister
Mamuka Bakhtadze, who won the parliamentary vote of confidence with 99 votes in favor to 6 against on 20 June 2018. The cabinet was reconfirmed, with 101 votes in favor to 12 against, by the parliament on 14 July after the previously announced structural reforms in the cabinet ministries were implemented. == External links ==