The chairman of the For Georgia faction, Shalva Kereselidze, publishes a post on social media, where he talks about 25 “achievements” of the Georgian Dream.
According to him, the “achievements” of the Georgian Dream include increased bank loans and increased corruption.
“The 25 “achievements” of the Dream government in 2025:
Increased cost of living and basic food products and medical drugs;
Increased bank loans, which are a heavy burden on the population;
Pension increase by only 20 GEL;
The 255-GEL subsistence minimum established by the state;
Unappropriated funds worth hundreds of millions and an unfulfilled budget;
Hundreds of millions of GEL of unfinished, failed, abandoned and poorly implemented infrastructure projects that are vital to the people;
Socially vulnerable people used and deceived for political purposes and in exchange for electoral votes;
The transfer of the capital to the most corrupt mayor in Tbilisi’s history for a third term;
Increased corruption, clan disputes and government officials engaged in the distribution of business interests;
Theft of money intended for feeding children in Tbilisi kindergartens and the plunder of the defense budget instead of strengthening the Georgian army;
A sham fight against corruption, protection of the corrupt system and its replacement with new patrons;
Increased crime and drug epidemic among young people;
Increased contract killings;
A year of continuous protests against the government’s political course and complete ignorance of its own people;
Hundreds of illegally detained young political prisoners;
Ban on peaceful protest and imposition of anti-constitutional regulations with imprisonment and draconian fines;
Sabotage of local self-government elections and seizure of municipal councils by the National Movement;
A fragmented society left without hope for the future and faith in justice, complete hopelessness and polarization of the nation;
Imprisoned, persecuted, neutralized opposition leaders and the use of state institutions to carry out personal revenge;
Increased migration and a historic minimum in Georgian demographic indicators;
Mass persecution and dismissal of civil servants from public service for dissenting opinions;
Forests and forest parks of public and state importance secretly sold to Arabs without public accountability to the Georgian people;
Repressive and non-state changes adopted in the name of education reform, which restrict academic freedom and isolate the Georgian educational space from the international educational space;
Broken foreign relations, closed diplomatic ties and the abolition of the European choice for Georgian citizens in exchange for maintaining their own power;
Criminalization of the construction of the Chorchana checkpoint on the occupation line to protect Georgian sovereignty, thereby opening space for further occupation by the occupation regime," Shalva Kereselidze writes.