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Ukraine’s Zelensky gains parliamentary faction in snap election

21-7-2019 < RT 24 821 words
 

The party of Volodymyr Zelensky entered Ukraine’s parliament on the back of his popularity, giving the president a much-needed faction in the legislature. Now he needs to walk the walk and deliver on his campaign promises.


Zelensky is a professional comedian who entered politics last year to successfully defeat his predecessor, Petro Poroshenko, in April in a crushing landslide victory with over 70 percent of the vote.


His ability to enact his policies, however, has been undermined by a lack of representation in the parliament, where allies of Poroshenko have held a ruling majority and defeated Zelensky’s numerous attempts to sack senior officials loyal to the previous president. His response was to call a snap election in his inauguration speech in May.



Sunday’s vote proved a reasonable success for the new head of state. His party, called ‘Servant of the People’ after a TV show in which he played a fictional Ukrainian president, scored almost 44 percent of the vote, according to the national exit poll.


It is larger than Zelensky’s results in the first round of the presidential election, but a far cry from his ultimate win. Without a majority of seats, his faction will need an ally to form a ruling coalition.


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Among the 21 other parties that took part, at least three are slated to overcome the five percent threshold and win seats in the parliament: the ‘Opposition Platform – For Life’ of former Vice President Yuri Boyko, Poroshenko’s ‘European Solidarity’, and ‘Fatherland’, which is led by the mercurial veteran politician Yulia Tymoshenko.



‘Holos’, a party created by singer Svyatoslav Vakarchuk shortly before the election, which is perceived by many as a possible coalition partner for Zelensky, also made it to the parliament, according to the preliminary results. 


The poll also showcased the growing apathy of Ukrainian voters, with turnout of just over 36 percent reported by the election commission, compared to over 60 percent in both rounds of the presidential election. Zelensky managed to rally his supporters to oust the deeply unpopular Poroshenko with promises to fight corruption, bring peace in the rebellious east, and reverse the plunge in living standards that Ukrainians experienced under his predecessor.


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However, it was more difficult to convince Ukrainian voters that the composition of the next parliament was more important for their future than summer vacations, working jobs in other countries, or whatever other plans they had. Several million Ukrainian citizens living in Russia were barred from voting since the Ukrainian authorities once again chose not to open polling stations there.


With a new coalition formed, the president will be able to put a loyal government in place – and presumably start doing what the voters entrusted him to do. Earlier, he did manage to achieve some progress, for example, by curbing the violence in the rebel-held eastern Ukraine. A ceasefire was announced between Kiev’s forces and those of the self-proclaimed Donetsk and Lugansk People’s Republics (DNR and LNR) on election day.


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But overall, resistance from the uncooperative parliament served as a comfortable excuse for Zelensky and his people, who spent three months delivering contradictory statements on their future policies, issuing demands for rapid change to lower-level officials, and bickering with Poroshenko’s old guard.


Zelensky will need to prove he is not influenced by oligarch Igor Kolomoisky, whose TV channel aired the president’s comedy show and who had a brutal fight with Poroshenko over the now-nationalized PrivatBank. There are a number of high-profile criminal cases that were allegedly kept quiet under Poroshenko and which the new government is expected to look into.


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The new ceasefire with the rebels will need to be protected as well. Several have collapsed since the armed conflict began five years ago, when nationalist-aligned politicians took power in the country in a coup and attempted to quash by force dissent in the historically Russia-friendly eastern part of the country.


Despite promising to negotiate peace, the new president rejected direct talks with rebel leaders, insisting that they are nothing more than Russian proxies, despite Moscow’s assurances to the contrary. If that’s an indicator of his future policies, it’s hard to see how peaceful resolution of the conflict may come under the new president, regardless of how much support he has in the parliament.


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