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2014 Ukrainian parliamentary election

Snap parliamentary elections were held in Ukraine on 26 October 2014 to elect members of the Verkhovna Rada. President Petro Poroshenko had pressed for early parliamentary elections since his victory in the presidential elections in May.[1] The July breakup of the ruling coalition gave him the right to dissolve the parliament, so on 25 August 2014 he announced the early election.[2]

2014 Ukrainian parliamentary election

← 2012 26 October 2014 2019 →

423 of the 450 seats in the Verkhovna Rada[a]
226 seats needed for a majority
Turnout51.91%
Party Leader % Seats +/–
People's Front Arseniy Yatsenyuk 22.14 82 New
Petro Poroshenko Bloc Yuriy Lutsenko 21.82 131 New
Self Reliance Andriy Sadovyi 10.98 33 New
Opposition Bloc Yuriy Boyko 9.43 29 New
RPOL Oleh Liashko 7.45 22 +21
Batkivshchyna Yulia Tymoshenko 5.68 20 -81
Svoboda Oleh Tyahnybok 4.71 6 -31
Strong Ukraine Serhiy Tihipko 3.12 1 New
Zastup Vira Ulianchenko 2.66 1 New
Right Sector Dmytro Yarosh 1.81 1 +1
Independents 97 +54

Voting did not take place in the Russian-occupied Autonomous Republic of Crimea and Sevastopol, nor in large parts of Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts because of the ongoing war in Donbas.[3] Because of this, 27 of the 450 seats remained unfilled.

The elections were seen as a realignment. Ruling from 2010 to 2014, and taking one of the top two spots in elections since 2006, the Party of Regions did not participate in the 2014 elections, while its informal successor Opposition Bloc received only 9% of the vote. For the first time since Ukrainian independence, the Communist Party of Ukraine failed to win a seat. Four newly created parties received the highest vote shares; the Petro Poroshenko Bloc (formed in July 2014 by Poroshenko's supporters), People's Front (split from Fatherland in August 2014), Self Reliance (registered in 2012) and Opposition Bloc (formed in September 2014 by a group of the former Party of Regions members).

The work of the new parliament started on 27 November 2014.[4] On the same day, five factions formed the "European Ukraine" coalition: Petro Poroshenko Bloc, People's Front, Self Reliance, Radical Party and Fatherland.[5] On 2 December the second Yatsenyuk government was approved.[6]

Background Edit

According to the election law of November 2011, elections to the Verkhovna Rada must take place at least every five years.[7][8] That law came into effect with the 2012 Ukrainian parliamentary election. If the Rada had sat for the maximum allotted time, the next parliamentary election would have occurred on 29 October 2017.[7] Despite this, the president-elect Petro Poroshenko said that he wanted to hold early parliamentary elections following his victory in the presidential election on 25 May 2014.[1] At 26 June session of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, Poroshenko said that he hoped to hold parliamentary elections in October 2014, portraying this as "the most democratic way".[9][b]

The parliamentary coalition that supported the Yatsenyuk Government, formed in the aftermath of the 2014 Ukrainian revolution and of the Euromaidan movement, was dissolved on 24 July.[11] If no new coalition formed within thirty days, President Poroshenko would become entitled to dissolve the Rada and to call early parliamentary elections.[11] On the same day as the dissolution, the Sovereign European Ukraine faction submitted a bill to the Rada that called for elections to take place on 28 September 2014.[12]

In an interview with Ukrainian television channels on 14 August, Poroshenko justified early elections because the Rada refused to recognise the self-proclaimed breakaway Donetsk and Luhansk People's Republics as terrorist organisations.[13] The two republics, situated in the eastern Ukrainian region of the Donbas, originated in the Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts of Ukraine respectively, and have been fighting Ukrainian government forces in the war in Donbas.[14] President Poroshenko said: "I don't know how to work with a parliament in which a huge number [of deputies], whole factions, make up 'the fifth column' controlled from abroad [referring to Russia]. And this danger is only increasing".[13] He also said that new elections "are the best and the most efficient form of lustration of not only the parliament but also the political forces".

Poroshenko announced on 25 August that he had called for elections to the Rada to take place on 26 October 2014.[2][15] In his accompanying television address, he portrayed the elections as necessary to "purify the Rada of the mainstay of [former president] Viktor Yanukovych". These deputies, Poroshenko said, "clearly do not represent the people who elected them".[16] Poroshenko also painted these Rada deputies as responsible for "the [January 2014] Dictatorship laws that took the lives of the Heavenly Hundred".[16] Poroshenko also stated that many of the (then) current MPs were "direct sponsors and accomplices or at least sympathizers of the militants/separatists".[16]

Electoral system Edit

The Verkhovna Rada has 450 members, elected to a five-year term in parallel voting, with 225 members elected in single-member constituencies using FPTP system and 225 members elected by proportional representation (closed list) in a single nationwide constituency using the largest remainder method with 5% threshold.[17] Parties are not allowed to form electoral blocs (in contrast to 1998-2007 elections). Attempts to return to proportional representation with open party lists and electoral blocs were failed.[18]

The division into 225 electoral districts was the same as at the 2012 election. The voting was organized only in 198 of them.

 
Electoral districts

Non-voting areas Edit

The voting was impossible to provide on the territories that was not under government control. Particularly, because of Russian occupation of Crimea there was no voting in all 10 districts in Autonomous Republic of Crimea and 2 in Sevastopol. The voting in Donbas was provided partially. The democratic watchdog OPORA estimated that 4.6 million Ukrainians were unable to vote: 1.8 million in Crimea and the city of Sevastopol, 1.6 million in Donetsk Oblast and 1.2 million in Luhansk Oblast.[19]

 
Light green coloured parts of the Donetsk Oblast took part in the Ukrainian parliamentary election, purple coloured parts in the 2 November Donetsk People's Republic elections and yellow parts took part in neither.

Crimea Edit

About 1.8 million of eligible voters live in Autonomous Republic of Crimea and the city of Sevastopol, that is 5% of the whole number of voters in Ukraine. Ukrainian government lost control over the region in March 2014 during the Crimean crisis. Since that time no legitimate elections are provided there. In the 2014 legislative election Crimean voters had ability to vote in any other region for party-lists in the single nationwide constituency, but they were unable to vote for candidates in single-member constituencies.[20]

Donbas Edit

"Donbas" is an unofficial name of 2 the most eastern Ukrainian oblasts: Donetsk and Luhansk. About 5 million of eligible voters live there, that is 14% of the whole number of voters in Ukraine. After an active phase of war in Donbas in the summer 2014 and September ceasefire, roughly a half of the region remained to be controlled by separatists loyal to Yanukovych. On the day before the election, the CEC stated that there was no ability to provide voting in the captured areas.[3] Thus, full-fledged voting was provided only in 8 districts of 32. Other 9 districts were split by the front line for controlled and not controlled areas, so voting was provided there only partly. In 2 of them only slight number of polling station was opened: in 53rd district only 9% of voters were able to vote and in 45th district only 2%. In spite of this, the elections in these single-member constituencies were recognized as successful, and the winners (Oleh Nedava and Yukhym Zvyahilsky) got mandates. To the other 15 districts ballots were not transferred at all.

Donetsk Oblast Luhansk Oblast Total
Districts with full-fledged voting 7 1 8
Districts with partial voting 5 4 9
Districts with no voting 9 6 15

Instead of this election, on the captured territories separatists organized so-called "Donbas general elections" on 2 November, that were a violation of Minsk agreement and were not recognized by the world community.[21]

Campaign Edit

In the 225 electoral districts some 3,321 candidates participated, out of which 2,018 were independent candidates.[22] 52 political parties nominated candidates.[22] 147 candidates withdrew after the 1 October candidate registration deadline.[23]

In the election campaign the parties positions on foreign relations and the war in Donbas could be roughly divided into two groups.[24] The first group consisted of pro-European parties that advocated to end the war in Donbas by use of force and consisted of Fatherland Party, Civic Position, Radical Party and People's Front (this party was ambiguous about use of force).[24] Svoboda also wanted to end the war in Donbas by use of force.[24] The party Petro Poroshenko Bloc was the only pro-European party that wanted to end the war in Donbas by a peaceful solution.[24] The second group was Strong Ukraine and Opposition Bloc who were considered pro-Russian and they advocated to end the war in Donbas by a peaceful solution.[24] The Communist Party of Ukraine (according to political scientist Tadeusz A. Olszański) "effectively supports the separatist rebellion".[24]

According to Olszański Radical Party and the Communists were the only left-wing parties.[24]

Registered parties and candidates Edit

Nationwide party lists Edit

On 26 September 2014 the Central Election Commission of Ukraine finished registering the nationwide party lists. A total of 29 parties participated in the election.[25] Parties appeared on the ballot in the following order:[26]

  1. Radical Party of Oleh Lyashko
  2. Solidarity of Ukrainian Women
  3. Internet Party of Ukraine
  4. Opposition Bloc
  5. People's Front
  6. 5.10
  7. All-Ukrainian Agrarian Union "ZASTUP"
  8. Revival
  9. New Politics
  10. United Country
  11. People's Power
  12. Svoboda
  13. National Democratic Party of Ukraine
  14. Communist Party of Ukraine
  15. Self Reliance Party
  16. Ukraine is United
  17. Right Sector
  18. Ukraine of the Future
  19. Liberal Party of Ukraine
  20. Party of Greens of Ukraine
  21. Green Planet
  22. Petro Poroshenko Bloc
  23. Strength and Honour
  24. Congress of Ukrainian Nationalists
  25. Strong Ukraine
  26. Fatherland
  27. Civil Position
  28. Bloc of Ukrainian Left Forces
  29. Ukrainian Civil Movement
Forming of political coalitions Edit

On 2 September Vitaliy Kovalchuk (the parliamentary leader) of UDAR stated that since his party and Petro Poroshenko Bloc had agreed to "joint participation in parliamentary elections" on 29 March 2014 the two parties were "in discussion" about "the format" for how to do so in these elections. On 15 September it became clear that 30% of the Petro Poroshenko Bloc election list would be filled by members of UDAR and that UDAR leader Vitali Klitschko is at the top of this list, Klitschko vowed not to resign as incumbent Mayor of Kyiv.[27][28]

7 September party congress of Civil Position decided that the party would participate in the election on a partly list with members of Democratic Alliance.[29]

On 10 September, the Fatherland Party split because party leaders Yatsenyuk and Turchynov became founding members of the new party People's Front.[30]

The biggest party in the previous 2012 parliamentary elections, Party of Regions, chose not to participate in the election because of a perceived lack of legitimacy (of the election), because not every resident of the Donbas could vote.[31] Individual members of the Party of Regions would take part in the election as candidates of the party Opposition Bloc.[32] According to Yuriy Boyko, who is heading the party's election list, Opposition Bloc does not represent parties, but consists only of individual politicians.[32]

Opinion polls Edit

Conduct Edit

The elections were monitored by 2,321 accredited foreign observers,[33] 304 of them on behalf of 21 states and 2,017 from 20 international organisations.[33]

The Ukrainian democratic watchdog OPORA stated about the elections that they were legitimate, but that "the [election] campaign cannot be called fully free within the limits of the country" because of the fighting in the Donbas region.[34] The NGO Committee of Voters of Ukraine asked the Central Election Commission of Ukraine to declare invalid the results of constituencies 45 and 102 because there "significant irregularities were numerous".[34]

The OSCE stated about the elections that they were "in line with international commitments, and were characterized by many positive aspects, including an impartial and efficient Central Election Commission, competitive contests that offered voters real choice, and general respect for fundamental freedoms".[34] European Council President Herman Van Rompuy and European Commission President José Manuel Barroso called the elections "a victory of the people of Ukraine and of democracy".[34] US President Barack Obama and his Secretary of State John Kerry also congratulated Ukraine "on successful parliamentary elections".[34] The day after the election Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov stated "I think we will recognize this election because it is very important for us that Ukraine will finally have authorities that do not fight one another, do not drag Ukraine to the West or to the East, but that will deal with the real problems facing the country".[35] He also hoped that the new Ukrainian government "will be constructive, will not seek to continue escalating confrontational tendencies in society, (in ties) with Russia".[35] Lavrov's Deputy Foreign Minister Grigory Karasin stated "the election is valid in spite of the rather harsh and dirty election campaign".[35] Karasin also "welcomed the success of parties supporting a peaceful resolution of the conflict in eastern Ukraine" and warned that "nationalistic and chauvinistic forces" in parliament could undermine peace efforts and were "extremely dangerous".[35] Senator Vladimir Dzhabarov, acting chairman of the (Russian) Federation Council's International Affairs Committee, stated that "The contacts earlier established between the State Duma and the Federation Council on the one hand and the Verkhovna Rada on the other will hopefully be re-launched in some format" although he stated he could not imagine how these contacts would be developed since he believed "The new Ukrainian parliament has become more radical-minded".[35] Dzhabarov claimed about the elections that "If such elections had been held in some other country, in Russia for instance, the West would have never recognized them as legitimate. Nevertheless, the West and Europe have recognized the Ukrainian elections as valid".[35] Observers of the Organization of the Black Sea Economic Cooperation were positive about the elections and in particular welcomed that "administrative resources" were not used in the elections.[34] Observers of the International Republican Institute also expressed this opinion and stated that its observers had witnessed only minor non-systemic irregularities that could not have affected the outcome of the election.[34]

Results Edit

The counting of votes was significantly delayed: Central Electoral Commission announced that all ballots were counted on 10 November only.[36] The announcement of the result for 38th electoral district was delayed until mid-November due to the results being challenged in court.[37]

 
Voter turnout throughout Ukraine.

Voter turnout was much reduced from 2012 (16,052,228 down from 20,797,206).[38] The main reason of this decrease was the impossibility to organize voting in some regions. Because of this, the official turnout was calculated by division by the number of people who live in areas where voting was provided only (according to the CEC, it was 30,921,218).[38] So, the official voter turnout was 51.91%. In any case this percent is smaller than in 2012, when the turnout was 57.43%.

The turnout level had obvious geographical differences. The highest turnout (60-70%) was registered in western regions (except Zakarpattia and Chernivtsi Oblast), the level of turnout in central regions was average (54-58%) and in southern and eastern regions it was quite low (40-48%). The turnout in two oblasts of Donbas (or more exactly in the parts of these oblasts where the voting was provided) was 32% - the lowest in the country.[39]

Previously, the Donbas region displayed high turnout for every election. According to Tadeusz Olszański of Centre for Eastern Studies, The Party of Regions that had plenitude of the power over this region until the 2014 Ukrainian revolution artificially increased voter turnout there. The 2014 election was the end of this artificial increase. One more reason of low turnout in Donbas as well as in other south-eastern regions was a feeling among a significant part of the local population that no party represented their interests.[40]

 
PartyProportionalConstituencyTotal
seats
+/–
Votes%SeatsVotes%Seats
People's Front3,488,11422.14641,461,8709.641882New
Petro Poroshenko Bloc3,437,52121.82632,896,64019.1168131New
Self Reliance1,729,27110.9832161,1751.06133New
Opposition Bloc1,486,2039.4327223,6491.48229New
Radical Party of Oleh Liashko1,173,1317.4522601,0223.96022+21
Batkivshchyna894,8375.6817960,2856.33320–81
Svoboda742,0224.710358,0612.3666–31
Communist Party of Ukraine611,9233.880226,1761.4900–32
Strong Ukraine491,4713.120259,6761.7111New
Civil Position489,5233.11051,7310.34000
Spade418,3012.660134,4180.8911New
Right Sector284,9431.810156,7631.0311+1
Solidarity of Women of Ukraine105,0940.6708,6490.06000
5.1067,1240.4304,3240.0300New
Internet Party of Ukraine58,1970.3708,7090.06000
Party of Greens of Ukraine39,6360.2504,6120.03000
Green Planet37,7260.24019,2380.13000
Revival31,2010.20000
United Country28,1450.1800New
Ukraine — United Country19,8380.1300New
New Politics19,2220.1207,4810.05000
Power of the People17,8170.11044,1610.2900New
Ukraine of the Future14,1680.0900New
Strength and Honor13,5490.0900New
Civil Movement of Ukraine13,0000.0800New
Bloc of Left Forces of Ukraine12,4990.08037,8000.2500New
National Democratic Party of Ukraine11,8260.0807,2430.0500New
Congress of Ukrainian Nationalists8,9760.06031,8890.21000
Liberal Party of Ukraine8,5230.05036,4210.24000
Ukrainian Platform "Sobor"38,2570.25000
Democratic Alliance31,7960.2100New
Ukrainian Republican Party24,8450.1600New
Public Power21,7230.1400New
Joint Action19,3430.1300New
Justice14,2840.0900New
People's Party13,1970.0900–2
People's Movement of Ukraine7,4880.05000
Meritocratic Party of Ukraine3,0320.02000
Patriotic Party of Ukraine2,2680.01000
Social Christian Party4500.00000
Independents7,282,81448.039797+54
Vacant2727
Total15,753,801100.0022515,161,490100.002254500
Valid votes15,753,80198.14
Invalid/blank votes298,4021.86
Total votes16,052,203100.00
Registered voters/turnout30,921,21851.91
Source: CLEA

By single-member constituency Edit

Government formation Edit

By-elections Edit

2015 Edit

On 26 July 2015 mid-term election were held in constituency 205 located in Chernihiv.[46] These were necessary after 2014 winner Valeriy Kulich had left parliament because of his appointment as Governor of Chernihiv Oblast.[46] 91 candidates took part in the elections; eight of them for political parties, the others were self-nominated candidates.[46] On election day the ballot paper stretched to about 1 meter.[46] 36 candidates had withdrawn from participation in the elections.[46] During the election campaign top candidates Hennadiy Korban and Serhiy Berezenko were repeatedly accused of bribing voters, the use of black PR and other violations (of the electoral legislation).[47]

The election was won by Berezenko of Petro Poroshenko Bloc with 35.90% of the vote.[45] Second most votes were won by Korban of UKROP who received 14.76%.[45] The official voter turnout was set at 35.3%.[48]

2016 Edit

On 17 July 2016 mid-term election were held in 7 single-member districts (constituency 23, 27, 85, 114, 151, 183 and 206) because their representatives had been elected to executive political positions and the death of Ihor Yeremeyev.[49] Turnout varied from about 50% until less than 20%.[50] The elections were monitored by 57 international official observers.[51]

Vote counting in constituency 114 (situated in Stanytsia Luhanska) was disrupted after several members of the election commission refused to count votes.[52] In the same constituency 14 criminal cases for violating the election were opened.[53] Constituency 151 was last in announcing its final results when it did so on 21 July 2016.[54]

Notes Edit

  1. ^ 27 seats were in occupied areas where elections could not take place.
  2. ^ In a Research & Branding Group opinion poll held from 26 July until 5 August 72% of respondents supported the call for early elections.[10]
  3. ^ Although not a member of any political party, Tetyana Rychkova joined the Petro Poroshenko Bloc faction in parliament.[55]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b Poroshenko hopes for early parliamentary elections in Ukraine this fall - presidential envoy, Interfax-Ukraine (19 June 2014)
  2. ^ a b Ukraine President Poroshenko Calls Snap General Election, Bloomberg News (25 August 2014)
  3. ^ a b Parliamentary elections not to be held at nine constituencies in Donetsk region and six constituencies in Luhansk region - CEC, Interfax-Ukraine (25 October 2014)
  4. ^ "Parliament to form leadership and coalition on November 27", UNIAN (26 November 2014)
  5. ^ "Five factions form Verkhovna Rada coalition".
  6. ^ "Rada supports coalition-proposed government lineup".
  7. ^ a b "Parliament passes law on parliamentary elections". Kyiv Post. Interfax-Ukraine. 17 November 2011. Retrieved 9 August 2015.
  8. ^ (in Ukrainian) Law of Ukraine "On Elections of People's Deputies of Ukraine " dated 17 November 2011, Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine
  9. ^ Poroshenko hopes early parliamentary elections in Ukraine will take place in October, Interfax-Ukraine (26 June 2014)
  10. ^ (in Ukrainian) Більше 70% українців - за переобрання Ради (Over 70% of Ukrainians for the re-election of the Rada), Ukrainska Pravda (15 August 2014)
  11. ^ a b "Rada speaker announces dissolution of parliamentary coalition", Interfax-Ukraine (24 July 2014)
  12. ^ "Rada registers bill setting early parliamentary elections date for September 28, 2014", Interfax-Ukraine (24 July 2014)
  13. ^ a b "Poroshenko frustrated by Rada refusing to recognize self-proclaimed republics as terrorist organizations", Interfax-Ukraine (14 August 2014)
  14. ^ . BBC News. Archived from the original on 27 May 2014. Retrieved 29 May 2014.
  15. ^ "Ukraine crisis: President calls snap vote amid fighting", BBC News (25 August 2014)
  16. ^ a b c "Ukrainian President dissolves Parliament, announces early elections", United Press International (25 August 2014)
    Ukraine's Petro Poroshenko Dissolves Parliament, Sets Election Date, The Moscow Times (26 August 2014)
    "President's address on the occasion of early parliamentary elections of October 26", Presidential Administration of Ukraine (25 August 2014)
  17. ^ IFES
  18. ^ Rada fails to put on today's agenda three bills on elections of MPs, Interfax-Ukraine (14 August 2014)
  19. ^ На выборах не смогут проголосовать почти 5 млн украинцев Подробности читайте на УНИАН: http://www.unian.net/politics/1000335-na-vyiborah-ne-smogut-progolosovat-pochti-5-mln-ukraintsev.html, Ukrainian Independent Information Agency (24 October 2014)
  20. ^ (in Ukrainian) The CEC explained how to vote to inhabitants of Russian-occupied territories, 5 Kanal (2 September 2014)
  21. ^ "Russia calls for talks with Kiev after separatist elections". The Guardian. 3 November 2014. Retrieved 3 November 2014.
  22. ^ a b Basic electoral statistics 2014 extraordinary parliamentary election 29 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine, Central Election Commission of Ukraine
  23. ^ Registration of candidates to run in early parliamentary elections in Ukraine ended, Interfax Ukraine (01.10.2014)
  24. ^ a b c d e f g Olszański, Tadeusz A. (17 September 2014), Ukraine's political parties at the start of the election campaign, OSW—Centre for Eastern Studies
  25. ^ ЦИК завершила регистрацию партий на внеочередных выборах в парламент, Ukrainian Independent Information Agency (26 September 2014)
  26. ^ ЦИК определила порядковые номера партий на выборах в Раду, Ukrainian Independent Information Agency (27 September 2014)
  27. ^ (in Russian) Pilots, combatants, and journalists. Who goes to the new Verkhovna Rada , Korrespondent.net (15 September 2014)
    Klitschko: I lead my team to Parliament 24 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine, UDAR official website (14 September 2014)
    Deadline for nomination of candidates running in early election to Rada expires, ITAR-TASS (15 September 2014)
  28. ^ Klitschko has no plans to leave post of Kyiv mayor, Interfax-Ukraine (27 October 2014)
  29. ^ (in Ukrainian) The party decided Gritsenko, who will go to Council, Ukrainska Pravda (7 September 2014)
  30. ^ (in Ukrainian)Yatsenyuk became a leader of the "People's Front" political council, while Turchynov is a head of its headquarters. Ukrainska Pravda. 10 September 2014
    Ukrainian PM, Parliament Speaker to Head Newly Formed Popular Front Party, RIA Novosti (10 September 2014)
  31. ^ Ukraine's Party of Regions Refuses to Participate in Rada Elections, RIA Novosti (23 September 2014)
  32. ^ a b Opposition Bloc chooses top ten candidates for parliamentary elections, Interfax Ukraine (23 September 2014)
    Allies of Yanukovych trying for parliament, Kyiv Post (21 September 2014)
    Party Of Regions Will Not Contest Snap Parliamentary Elections Independently 24 September 2014 at the Wayback Machine, Ukrainian News Agency (14 September 2014)
  33. ^ a b Almost 2,500 foreign observers to watch Ukrainian elections – CEC, Interfax-Ukraine (21 October 2014)
  34. ^ a b c d e f g Ukrainian Rada elections generally without incident – OPORA, Interfax-Ukraine (27 October 2014)
    CVU to ask CEC to declare invalid elections at constituencies Nos. 45 and 102, Interfax-Ukraine (27 October 2014)
    OSCE claims elections in Ukraine held up to democratic standards, Interfax-Ukraine (27 October 2014)
    Voting, tabulation in Rada elections organized properly - OSCE observers, Interfax-Ukraine (27 October 2014)
    OSCE: Ukraine elections a step forward, Interfax-Ukraine (27 October 2014)
    Barroso, Van Rompuy call Ukraine elections a victory of democracy, Interfax-Ukraine (27 October 2014)
    PABSEC speaks positively of Verkhovna Rada elections, Interfax-Ukraine (27 October 2014)
    International Republican Institute congratulates Ukraine on elections that meet international standards, Interfax-Ukraine (28 October 2014)
    John Kerry: Ukraine's parliamentary elections, Kyiv Post (28 October 2014)
  35. ^ a b c d e f Moscow acknowledges Ukrainian election as valid, Interfax-Ukraine (27 October 2014)
    Ukraine elections: Pro-Western parties set for victory, BBC News (27 October 2014)
    Russia to Recognize Ukraine Election Results, Says Lavrov, The Moscow Times (27 October 2014)
    Russia's Lavrov hopes for 'constructive' Ukrainian government: Tass, Reuters (27 October 2014)
    Russian senators prepared to cooperate with new Verkhovna Rada, Kyiv Post (28 October 2014)
  36. ^ People's Front 0.33% ahead of Poroshenko Bloc with all ballots counted in Ukraine elections – CEC, Interfax-Ukraine (10 November 2014)
  37. ^ (in Ukrainian) In the 38th district of Dnipropetrovsk stop recount, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (17 November 2014)
  38. ^ a b (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 December 2014. Retrieved 20 March 2017.
  39. ^ CEC data about turnout in Donetsk region
    CEC data about turnout in Luhansk region
  40. ^ Olszański, Tadeusz A. (29 October 2014), A strong vote for reform: Ukraine after the parliamentary elections, OSW—Centre for Eastern Studies
  41. ^ . Archived from the original on 19 October 2017. Retrieved 20 March 2017.
  42. ^ a b 2012 Parliamentary Elections Boundary Delimitation Summary and Analysis 4 September 2014 at the Wayback Machine, International Foundation for Electoral Systems (May 2012)
  43. ^ a b c Data on vote counting at percincts within single-mandate districts Extraordinary parliamentary election on 26.10.2014 29 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine, Central Election Commission of Ukraine
    (in Ukrainian) Candidates and winners for the seat of the constituencies in the 2014 Ukrainian parliamentary election 5 February 2015 at the Wayback Machine, RBK Ukraine
  44. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v (in Ukrainian)Data on vote counting at percincts within single-mandate districts Extraordinary parliamentary election on 17.06.2016 18 July 2016 at the Wayback Machine, Central Election Commission of Ukraine
  45. ^ a b c d e With 100% of ballots counted in Rada by-election, Berezenko gets 35.90% of votes, Korban 14.76% – CEC, Interfax-Ukraine (28 July 2015)
  46. ^ a b c d e Mid-term elections start in Chernihiv (constituency No.205), UNIAN (26 July 2015)
  47. ^ Корбан: Я потерял моральное право возглавлять политсовет партии "Укроп" "Гордон", .07.2015
    This crazy Ukrainian election shows the country has a ways to go toward reform, Global Post (28 July 2015)
  48. ^ Additional Rada election in Chernihiv: 87.95% of protocols processed, UNIAN (27 July 2015)
  49. ^ (in Ukrainian) CEC appointed elections in four constituencies, Ukrainska Pravda (10 May 2016)
    (in Ukrainian) Довибори до ВР: У Дніпрі 51 кандидат, є представник КПУ (By-election to the Verkhovna Rada: in Dnipro 51, a candidate is a representative of the Communist Party), Ukrainska Pravda (19 June 2016)
    (in Russian)/(website has automatic Google Translate option) Short bio of Ihor Yeremeyev, LIGA
  50. ^ (in Ukrainian) CEC: Voter turnout for midterm elections nearly 33%. No data Luhansk, Ukrainska Pravda (17 July 2016)
  51. ^ (in Ukrainian) CEC registered 43 observers to the Rada by-election, Ukrainska Pravda (12 July 2016)
  52. ^ (in Ukrainian) Problem county in the Luhansk region resumed counting votes, Ukrainska Pravda (18 July 2016)
  53. ^ (in Ukrainian) In Luhansk opened 14 cases for violating the election, Ukrainska Pravda (18 July 2016)
  54. ^ (in Ukrainian) Became known the results of the vote in the last of the 7 districts, Ukrainska Pravda (21 July 2016)
  55. ^ (in Ukrainian) Tetyana Rychkova profile on the Verkhovna Rada website

External links Edit

2014, ukrainian, parliamentary, election, snap, parliamentary, elections, were, held, ukraine, october, 2014, elect, members, verkhovna, rada, president, petro, poroshenko, pressed, early, parliamentary, elections, since, victory, presidential, elections, july. Snap parliamentary elections were held in Ukraine on 26 October 2014 to elect members of the Verkhovna Rada President Petro Poroshenko had pressed for early parliamentary elections since his victory in the presidential elections in May 1 The July breakup of the ruling coalition gave him the right to dissolve the parliament so on 25 August 2014 he announced the early election 2 2014 Ukrainian parliamentary election 2012 26 October 2014 2019 423 of the 450 seats in the Verkhovna Rada a 226 seats needed for a majorityTurnout51 91 Party Leader Seats People s Front Arseniy Yatsenyuk 22 14 82 NewPetro Poroshenko Bloc Yuriy Lutsenko 21 82 131 NewSelf Reliance Andriy Sadovyi 10 98 33 NewOpposition Bloc Yuriy Boyko 9 43 29 NewRPOL Oleh Liashko 7 45 22 21Batkivshchyna Yulia Tymoshenko 5 68 20 81Svoboda Oleh Tyahnybok 4 71 6 31Strong Ukraine Serhiy Tihipko 3 12 1 NewZastup Vira Ulianchenko 2 66 1 NewRight Sector Dmytro Yarosh 1 81 1 1Independents 97 54Party list resultsConstituency resultsPrime Minister before Prime Minister afterArseniy YatsenyukPeople s Front Arseniy YatsenyukPeople s FrontVoting did not take place in the Russian occupied Autonomous Republic of Crimea and Sevastopol nor in large parts of Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts because of the ongoing war in Donbas 3 Because of this 27 of the 450 seats remained unfilled The elections were seen as a realignment Ruling from 2010 to 2014 and taking one of the top two spots in elections since 2006 the Party of Regions did not participate in the 2014 elections while its informal successor Opposition Bloc received only 9 of the vote For the first time since Ukrainian independence the Communist Party of Ukraine failed to win a seat Four newly created parties received the highest vote shares the Petro Poroshenko Bloc formed in July 2014 by Poroshenko s supporters People s Front split from Fatherland in August 2014 Self Reliance registered in 2012 and Opposition Bloc formed in September 2014 by a group of the former Party of Regions members The work of the new parliament started on 27 November 2014 4 On the same day five factions formed the European Ukraine coalition Petro Poroshenko Bloc People s Front Self Reliance Radical Party and Fatherland 5 On 2 December the second Yatsenyuk government was approved 6 Contents 1 Background 2 Electoral system 2 1 Non voting areas 2 1 1 Crimea 2 1 2 Donbas 3 Campaign 3 1 Registered parties and candidates 3 1 1 Nationwide party lists 3 1 1 1 Forming of political coalitions 4 Opinion polls 5 Conduct 6 Results 6 1 By single member constituency 7 Government formation 8 By elections 8 1 2015 8 2 2016 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksBackground EditAccording to the election law of November 2011 elections to the Verkhovna Rada must take place at least every five years 7 8 That law came into effect with the 2012 Ukrainian parliamentary election If the Rada had sat for the maximum allotted time the next parliamentary election would have occurred on 29 October 2017 7 Despite this the president elect Petro Poroshenko said that he wanted to hold early parliamentary elections following his victory in the presidential election on 25 May 2014 1 At 26 June session of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe Poroshenko said that he hoped to hold parliamentary elections in October 2014 portraying this as the most democratic way 9 b The parliamentary coalition that supported the Yatsenyuk Government formed in the aftermath of the 2014 Ukrainian revolution and of the Euromaidan movement was dissolved on 24 July 11 If no new coalition formed within thirty days President Poroshenko would become entitled to dissolve the Rada and to call early parliamentary elections 11 On the same day as the dissolution the Sovereign European Ukraine faction submitted a bill to the Rada that called for elections to take place on 28 September 2014 12 In an interview with Ukrainian television channels on 14 August Poroshenko justified early elections because the Rada refused to recognise the self proclaimed breakaway Donetsk and Luhansk People s Republics as terrorist organisations 13 The two republics situated in the eastern Ukrainian region of the Donbas originated in the Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts of Ukraine respectively and have been fighting Ukrainian government forces in the war in Donbas 14 President Poroshenko said I don t know how to work with a parliament in which a huge number of deputies whole factions make up the fifth column controlled from abroad referring to Russia And this danger is only increasing 13 He also said that new elections are the best and the most efficient form of lustration of not only the parliament but also the political forces Poroshenko announced on 25 August that he had called for elections to the Rada to take place on 26 October 2014 2 15 In his accompanying television address he portrayed the elections as necessary to purify the Rada of the mainstay of former president Viktor Yanukovych These deputies Poroshenko said clearly do not represent the people who elected them 16 Poroshenko also painted these Rada deputies as responsible for the January 2014 Dictatorship laws that took the lives of the Heavenly Hundred 16 Poroshenko also stated that many of the then current MPs were direct sponsors and accomplices or at least sympathizers of the militants separatists 16 Electoral system EditThe Verkhovna Rada has 450 members elected to a five year term in parallel voting with 225 members elected in single member constituencies using FPTP system and 225 members elected by proportional representation closed list in a single nationwide constituency using the largest remainder method with 5 threshold 17 Parties are not allowed to form electoral blocs in contrast to 1998 2007 elections Attempts to return to proportional representation with open party lists and electoral blocs were failed 18 The division into 225 electoral districts was the same as at the 2012 election The voting was organized only in 198 of them nbsp Electoral districtsNon voting areas Edit The voting was impossible to provide on the territories that was not under government control Particularly because of Russian occupation of Crimea there was no voting in all 10 districts in Autonomous Republic of Crimea and 2 in Sevastopol The voting in Donbas was provided partially The democratic watchdog OPORA estimated that 4 6 million Ukrainians were unable to vote 1 8 million in Crimea and the city of Sevastopol 1 6 million in Donetsk Oblast and 1 2 million in Luhansk Oblast 19 nbsp Light green coloured parts of the Donetsk Oblast took part in the Ukrainian parliamentary election purple coloured parts in the 2 November Donetsk People s Republic elections and yellow parts took part in neither Crimea Edit About 1 8 million of eligible voters live in Autonomous Republic of Crimea and the city of Sevastopol that is 5 of the whole number of voters in Ukraine Ukrainian government lost control over the region in March 2014 during the Crimean crisis Since that time no legitimate elections are provided there In the 2014 legislative election Crimean voters had ability to vote in any other region for party lists in the single nationwide constituency but they were unable to vote for candidates in single member constituencies 20 Donbas Edit Donbas is an unofficial name of 2 the most eastern Ukrainian oblasts Donetsk and Luhansk About 5 million of eligible voters live there that is 14 of the whole number of voters in Ukraine After an active phase of war in Donbas in the summer 2014 and September ceasefire roughly a half of the region remained to be controlled by separatists loyal to Yanukovych On the day before the election the CEC stated that there was no ability to provide voting in the captured areas 3 Thus full fledged voting was provided only in 8 districts of 32 Other 9 districts were split by the front line for controlled and not controlled areas so voting was provided there only partly In 2 of them only slight number of polling station was opened in 53rd district only 9 of voters were able to vote and in 45th district only 2 In spite of this the elections in these single member constituencies were recognized as successful and the winners Oleh Nedava and Yukhym Zvyahilsky got mandates To the other 15 districts ballots were not transferred at all Donetsk Oblast Luhansk Oblast TotalDistricts with full fledged voting 7 1 8Districts with partial voting 5 4 9Districts with no voting 9 6 15Instead of this election on the captured territories separatists organized so called Donbas general elections on 2 November that were a violation of Minsk agreement and were not recognized by the world community 21 Campaign EditIn the 225 electoral districts some 3 321 candidates participated out of which 2 018 were independent candidates 22 52 political parties nominated candidates 22 147 candidates withdrew after the 1 October candidate registration deadline 23 In the election campaign the parties positions on foreign relations and the war in Donbas could be roughly divided into two groups 24 The first group consisted of pro European parties that advocated to end the war in Donbas by use of force and consisted of Fatherland Party Civic Position Radical Party and People s Front this party was ambiguous about use of force 24 Svoboda also wanted to end the war in Donbas by use of force 24 The party Petro Poroshenko Bloc was the only pro European party that wanted to end the war in Donbas by a peaceful solution 24 The second group was Strong Ukraine and Opposition Bloc who were considered pro Russian and they advocated to end the war in Donbas by a peaceful solution 24 The Communist Party of Ukraine according to political scientist Tadeusz A Olszanski effectively supports the separatist rebellion 24 According to Olszanski Radical Party and the Communists were the only left wing parties 24 Registered parties and candidates Edit Nationwide party lists Edit On 26 September 2014 the Central Election Commission of Ukraine finished registering the nationwide party lists A total of 29 parties participated in the election 25 Parties appeared on the ballot in the following order 26 Radical Party of Oleh Lyashko Solidarity of Ukrainian Women Internet Party of Ukraine Opposition Bloc People s Front 5 10 All Ukrainian Agrarian Union ZASTUP Revival New Politics United Country People s Power Svoboda National Democratic Party of Ukraine Communist Party of Ukraine Self Reliance Party Ukraine is United Right Sector Ukraine of the Future Liberal Party of Ukraine Party of Greens of Ukraine Green Planet Petro Poroshenko Bloc Strength and Honour Congress of Ukrainian Nationalists Strong Ukraine Fatherland Civil Position Bloc of Ukrainian Left Forces Ukrainian Civil MovementForming of political coalitions Edit On 2 September Vitaliy Kovalchuk the parliamentary leader of UDAR stated that since his party and Petro Poroshenko Bloc had agreed to joint participation in parliamentary elections on 29 March 2014 the two parties were in discussion about the format for how to do so in these elections On 15 September it became clear that 30 of the Petro Poroshenko Bloc election list would be filled by members of UDAR and that UDAR leader Vitali Klitschko is at the top of this list Klitschko vowed not to resign as incumbent Mayor of Kyiv 27 28 7 September party congress of Civil Position decided that the party would participate in the election on a partly list with members of Democratic Alliance 29 On 10 September the Fatherland Party split because party leaders Yatsenyuk and Turchynov became founding members of the new party People s Front 30 The biggest party in the previous 2012 parliamentary elections Party of Regions chose not to participate in the election because of a perceived lack of legitimacy of the election because not every resident of the Donbas could vote 31 Individual members of the Party of Regions would take part in the election as candidates of the party Opposition Bloc 32 According to Yuriy Boyko who is heading the party s election list Opposition Bloc does not represent parties but consists only of individual politicians 32 Opinion polls EditMain article Opinion polling for the 2014 Ukrainian parliamentary electionConduct EditThe elections were monitored by 2 321 accredited foreign observers 33 304 of them on behalf of 21 states and 2 017 from 20 international organisations 33 The Ukrainian democratic watchdog OPORA stated about the elections that they were legitimate but that the election campaign cannot be called fully free within the limits of the country because of the fighting in the Donbas region 34 The NGO Committee of Voters of Ukraine asked the Central Election Commission of Ukraine to declare invalid the results of constituencies 45 and 102 because there significant irregularities were numerous 34 The OSCE stated about the elections that they were in line with international commitments and were characterized by many positive aspects including an impartial and efficient Central Election Commission competitive contests that offered voters real choice and general respect for fundamental freedoms 34 European Council President Herman Van Rompuy and European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso called the elections a victory of the people of Ukraine and of democracy 34 US President Barack Obama and his Secretary of State John Kerry also congratulated Ukraine on successful parliamentary elections 34 The day after the election Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov stated I think we will recognize this election because it is very important for us that Ukraine will finally have authorities that do not fight one another do not drag Ukraine to the West or to the East but that will deal with the real problems facing the country 35 He also hoped that the new Ukrainian government will be constructive will not seek to continue escalating confrontational tendencies in society in ties with Russia 35 Lavrov s Deputy Foreign Minister Grigory Karasin stated the election is valid in spite of the rather harsh and dirty election campaign 35 Karasin also welcomed the success of parties supporting a peaceful resolution of the conflict in eastern Ukraine and warned that nationalistic and chauvinistic forces in parliament could undermine peace efforts and were extremely dangerous 35 Senator Vladimir Dzhabarov acting chairman of the Russian Federation Council s International Affairs Committee stated that The contacts earlier established between the State Duma and the Federation Council on the one hand and the Verkhovna Rada on the other will hopefully be re launched in some format although he stated he could not imagine how these contacts would be developed since he believed The new Ukrainian parliament has become more radical minded 35 Dzhabarov claimed about the elections that If such elections had been held in some other country in Russia for instance the West would have never recognized them as legitimate Nevertheless the West and Europe have recognized the Ukrainian elections as valid 35 Observers of the Organization of the Black Sea Economic Cooperation were positive about the elections and in particular welcomed that administrative resources were not used in the elections 34 Observers of the International Republican Institute also expressed this opinion and stated that its observers had witnessed only minor non systemic irregularities that could not have affected the outcome of the election 34 Results EditThe counting of votes was significantly delayed Central Electoral Commission announced that all ballots were counted on 10 November only 36 The announcement of the result for 38th electoral district was delayed until mid November due to the results being challenged in court 37 nbsp Voter turnout throughout Ukraine Voter turnout was much reduced from 2012 16 052 228 down from 20 797 206 38 The main reason of this decrease was the impossibility to organize voting in some regions Because of this the official turnout was calculated by division by the number of people who live in areas where voting was provided only according to the CEC it was 30 921 218 38 So the official voter turnout was 51 91 In any case this percent is smaller than in 2012 when the turnout was 57 43 The turnout level had obvious geographical differences The highest turnout 60 70 was registered in western regions except Zakarpattia and Chernivtsi Oblast the level of turnout in central regions was average 54 58 and in southern and eastern regions it was quite low 40 48 The turnout in two oblasts of Donbas or more exactly in the parts of these oblasts where the voting was provided was 32 the lowest in the country 39 Previously the Donbas region displayed high turnout for every election According to Tadeusz Olszanski of Centre for Eastern Studies The Party of Regions that had plenitude of the power over this region until the 2014 Ukrainian revolution artificially increased voter turnout there The 2014 election was the end of this artificial increase One more reason of low turnout in Donbas as well as in other south eastern regions was a feeling among a significant part of the local population that no party represented their interests 40 nbsp PartyProportionalConstituencyTotalseats Votes SeatsVotes SeatsPeople s Front3 488 11422 14641 461 8709 641882NewPetro Poroshenko Bloc3 437 52121 82632 896 64019 1168131NewSelf Reliance1 729 27110 9832161 1751 06133NewOpposition Bloc1 486 2039 4327223 6491 48229NewRadical Party of Oleh Liashko1 173 1317 4522601 0223 96022 21Batkivshchyna894 8375 6817960 2856 33320 81Svoboda742 0224 710358 0612 3666 31Communist Party of Ukraine611 9233 880226 1761 4900 32Strong Ukraine491 4713 120259 6761 7111NewCivil Position489 5233 11051 7310 34000Spade418 3012 660134 4180 8911NewRight Sector284 9431 810156 7631 0311 1Solidarity of Women of Ukraine105 0940 6708 6490 060005 1067 1240 4304 3240 0300NewInternet Party of Ukraine58 1970 3708 7090 06000Party of Greens of Ukraine39 6360 2504 6120 03000Green Planet37 7260 24019 2380 13000Revival31 2010 20000United Country28 1450 1800NewUkraine United Country19 8380 1300NewNew Politics19 2220 1207 4810 05000Power of the People17 8170 11044 1610 2900NewUkraine of the Future14 1680 0900NewStrength and Honor13 5490 0900NewCivil Movement of Ukraine13 0000 0800NewBloc of Left Forces of Ukraine12 4990 08037 8000 2500NewNational Democratic Party of Ukraine11 8260 0807 2430 0500NewCongress of Ukrainian Nationalists8 9760 06031 8890 21000Liberal Party of Ukraine8 5230 05036 4210 24000Ukrainian Platform Sobor 38 2570 25000Democratic Alliance31 7960 2100NewUkrainian Republican Party24 8450 1600NewPublic Power21 7230 1400NewJoint Action19 3430 1300NewJustice14 2840 0900NewPeople s Party13 1970 0900 2People s Movement of Ukraine7 4880 05000Meritocratic Party of Ukraine3 0320 02000Patriotic Party of Ukraine2 2680 01000Social Christian Party4500 00000Independents7 282 81448 039797 54Vacant2727 Total15 753 801100 0022515 161 490100 002254500Valid votes15 753 80198 14Invalid blank votes298 4021 86Total votes16 052 203100 00Registered voters turnout30 921 21851 91Source CLEABy single member constituency Edit Winners in single member constituencies 41 Region District District 42 Candidate 43 Votes 43 Party member 43 No Name No of mandates Geographical reference and name No 1 AR Crimea 10 South East Simferopol Tsentralny 0011 AR Crimea 10 South East Simferopol Kyivsky 0021 AR Crimea 10 South East Dzhankoi 0031 AR Crimea 10 South East Yevpatoriia 0041 AR Crimea 10 South East Kerch 0051 AR Crimea 10 South East Feodosiia 0061 AR Crimea 10 South East Yalta 0071 AR Crimea 10 South East Sudak 0081 AR Crimea 10 South East Krasnoperekopsk 0091 AR Crimea 10 South East Bakhchysarai 0102 Vinnytsia 8 Central Vinnytsia Vyshenka 011 Oleksandr Dombrovsky 51 37 Petro Poroshenko Bloc2 Vinnytsia 8 Central Vinnytsia Zamosttia 012 Oleksiy Poroshenko 64 04 Petro Poroshenko Bloc2 Vinnytsia 8 Central Kalynivka 013 Petro Yurchyshyn 44 792 Vinnytsia 8 Central Zhmerynka 014 Ivan Melnychuk 42 37 Petro Poroshenko Bloc2 Vinnytsia 8 Central Sharhorod 015 Ivan Sporysh 34 04 Petro Poroshenko Bloc2 Vinnytsia 8 Central Yampil 016 Roman Stadniychuk 21 762 Vinnytsia 8 Central Ladyzhyn 017 Mykola Kucher 47 632 Vinnytsia 8 Central Illintsi 018 Ruslan Demchak 51 68 Petro Poroshenko Bloc3 Volyn 5 West Volodymyr Volynskyi 019 Ihor Huz 30 69 People s Front3 Volyn 5 West Horokhiv 020 Serhiy Matrynyak 35 243 Volyn 5 West Kovel 021 Stepan Ivakhiv 63 493 Volyn 5 West Lutsk 022 Ihor Lapin 24 24 People s Front3 Volyn 5 West Manevychi 023 Ihor Yeremeyev Iryna Konstankevych after by elections in July 2016 44 40 43 57 42 44 Independent UKROP 44 4 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South East Dnipropetrovsk Industrialny 024 Yakiv Bezbakh 30 904 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South East Dnipropetrovsk Krasnohvardiysky 025 Maksym Kuryachyy 27 90 Petro Poroshenko Bloc4 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South East Dnipropetrovsk Babushkinsky 026 Andriy Denysenko 36 18 Petro Poroshenko Bloc4 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South East Dnipropetrovsk Zhovtnevy 027 Borys Filatov Tetyana Rychkova after by elections in July 2016 44 56 66 44 57 44 4 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South East Dnipropetrovsk Lyeninsky 028 Ivan Kulichenko 33 50 Petro Poroshenko Bloc4 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South East Dnipropetrovsk Yuvileine 029 Vitaliy Kupriy 29 71 Petro Poroshenko Bloc4 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South East Dniprodzerzhynsk 030 Oleksandr Dubinin 26 08 Petro Poroshenko Bloc4 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South East Kryvyi Rih Ternivsky 031 Kostyantyn Pavlov 33 364 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South East Kryvyi Rih Dovhynetsky 032 Andriy Halchenko 24 754 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South East Kryvyi Rih Tsentralnomisky 033 Kostiantyn Usov 28 43 Petro Poroshenko Bloc4 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South East Tsarychanka 034 Oleh Kryshyn 24 164 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South East Nikopol 035 Andriy Shypko 33 004 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South East Pavlohrad 036 Artur Martovytsky 50 404 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South East Kryvyi Rih 037 Dnytro Shpenov 39 024 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South East Novomoskovsk 038 Vadym Nesterenko 31 354 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South East Vasylkivka 039 Dmytro Yarosh 29 76 Right Sector4 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South East Marhanets 040 Valentyn Didych 27 55 Petro Poroshenko Bloc5 Donetsk 21 South East Donetsk Budyonnivsky 0415 Donetsk 21 South East Donetsk Voroshilovsky 0425 Donetsk 21 South East Donetsk Lyeninsky 0435 Donetsk 21 South East Donetsk Kirovsky 0445 Donetsk 21 South East Donetsk Kyivsky 045 Yukhym Zvyahilsky 72 735 Donetsk 21 South East Artemivsk 046 Serhiy Klyuyev 47 475 Donetsk 21 South East Sloviansk 047 Yuriy Solod 34 17 Opposition Bloc5 Donetsk 21 South East Kramatorsk 048 Maksym Yefimov 34 125 Donetsk 21 South East Kostiantynivka 049 Denys Omelyanovych 27 355 Donetsk 21 South East Krasnoarmiysk 050 Yevhen Heller 39 545 Donetsk 21 South East Horlivka 0515 Donetsk 21 South East Dzerzhynsk 052 Ihor Shkirya 41 715 Donetsk 21 South East Yenakiieve 053 Oleh Nedava 63 635 Donetsk 21 South East Shakhtarsk 0545 Donetsk 21 South East Makiivka Hirnytsky 0555 Donetsk 21 South East Makiivka Tsentralnomisky 0565 Donetsk 21 South East Mariupol Ilyichivsky 057 Serhiy Matviyenkov 64 165 Donetsk 21 South East Mariupol Zhovtnevy 058 Serhiy Taruta 60 005 Donetsk 21 South East Marinka 0595 Donetsk 21 South East Volnovakha 060 Dmytro Lubinets 48 18 Petro Poroshenko Bloc5 Donetsk 21 South East Starobesheve 0616 Zhytomyr 6 Central Zhytomyr 062 Boryslav Rosenblat 20 81 Petro Poroshenko Bloc6 Zhytomyr 6 Central Berdychiv 063 Oleksandr Reveha 29 406 Zhytomyr 6 Central Korosten 064 Volodymyr Areshonkov 41 03 Petro Poroshenko Bloc6 Zhytomyr 6 Central Novohrad Volynskyi 065 Volodymyr Lytvyn 41 486 Zhytomyr 6 Central Malyn 066 Pavlo Dzyublyk 19 10 People s Front6 Zhytomyr 6 Central Chudniv 067 Viktor Razvadovsky 37 197 Zakarpattia 6 West Uzhhorod 068 Robert Horvat 21 58 Petro Poroshenko Bloc7 Zakarpattia 6 West Mukacheve 069 Viktor Baloha 61 917 Zakarpattia 6 West Svaliava 070 Mykhailo Lanyo 38 757 Zakarpattia 6 West Khust 071 Pavlo Baloha 44 627 Zakarpattia 6 West Tiachiv 072 Vasyl Petyovka 68 047 Zakarpattia 6 West Vynohradiv 073 Ivan Baloha 44 868 Zaporizhzhia 9 South East Zaporizhzhia Kommunarsky 074 Petro Sabashuk 27 76 Petro Poroshenko Bloc8 Zaporizhzhia 9 South East Zaporizhzhia Lyeninsky 075 Ihor Artyushenko 29 91 Petro Poroshenko Bloc8 Zaporizhzhia 9 South East Zaporizhzhia Ordzhonikidzevsky 076 Mykola Frolov 21 75 Petro Poroshenko Bloc8 Zaporizhzhia 9 South East Zaporizhzhia Shevchenkivsky 077 Vyacheslav Bohuslayev 53 748 Zaporizhzhia 9 South East Berdiansk 078 Oleksandr Ponomaryov 48 518 Zaporizhzhia 9 South East Vasylivka 079 Oleksandr Hryhorchuk 21 948 Zaporizhzhia 9 South East Melitopol 080 Yevhen Balytsky 47 408 Zaporizhzhia 9 South East Tokmak 081 Serhiy Valentyrov 24 518 Zaporizhzhia 9 South East Polohy 082 Vadym Kryvokhatko 36 00 Petro Poroshenko Bloc9 Ivano Frankivsk 7 West Ivano Frankivsk 083 Oleksandr Shevchenko 40 69 Petro Poroshenko Bloc9 Ivano Frankivsk 7 West Tysmenytsia 084 Mykhailo Dovbenko 18 26 Petro Poroshenko Bloc9 Ivano Frankivsk 7 West Kalush 085 Ihor Nasalyk Viktor Shevchenko after by elections in July 2016 44 52 05 21 19 44 Petro Poroshenko Bloc UKROP 44 9 Ivano Frankivsk 7 West Dolyna 086 Anatoliy Dyriv 22 30 People s Front9 Ivano Frankivsk 7 West Nadvirna 087 Yuriy Derevianko 69 67 Volia9 Ivano Frankivsk 7 West Kolomyia 088 Yuriy Tymoshenko 29 32 People s Front9 Ivano Frankivsk 7 West Sniatyn 089 Yuriy Solovei 23 07 Petro Poroshenko Bloc10 Kyiv Oblast 9 Central Bila Tserkva 090 Oleksandr Marchenko 23 66 Svoboda10 Kyiv Oblast 9 Central Makariv 091 Ruslan Solvar 50 96 Petro Poroshenko Bloc10 Kyiv Oblast 9 Central Uzyn 092 Vitaliy Hudzenko 27 03 Petro Poroshenko Bloc10 Kyiv Oblast 9 Central Myronivka 093 Oleksandr Onyshchenko 35 7710 Kyiv Oblast 9 Central Obukhiv 094 Viktor Romanyuk 32 00 People s Front10 Kyiv Oblast 9 Central Irpin 095 Mykhailo Havrylyuk 19 43 People s Front10 Kyiv Oblast 9 Central Vyshhorod 096 Yaroslav Moskalenko 26 2810 Kyiv Oblast 9 Central Brovary 097 Pavlo Rizanenko 34 11 Petro Poroshenko Bloc10 Kyiv Oblast 9 Central Yahotyn 098 Serhiy Mishchenko 40 4111 Kirovohrad 5 Central Kirovohrad 099 Kostiantyn Yarynich 37 99 Petro Poroshenko Bloc11 Kirovohrad 5 Central Bobrynets 100 Stanislav Berezkin 28 0211 Kirovohrad 5 Central Holovanivsk 101 Mykhailo Poplavsky 31 4411 Kirovohrad 5 Central Znamianka 102 Oles Dovhyi 29 9011 Kirovohrad 5 Central Oleksandriia 103 Anatoliy Kuzmenko 35 52 Petro Poroshenko Bloc12 Luhansk 11 South East Luhansk Artemivsky 10412 Luhansk 11 South East Luhansk Zhovtnevy 10512 Luhansk 11 South East Severodonetsk 106 Yevhen Bakulin 43 01 Opposition Bloc12 Luhansk 11 South East Lysychansk 107 Serhiy Dunayev 37 7612 Luhansk 11 South East Krasnyi Luch 10812 Luhansk 11 South East Krasnodon 10912 Luhansk 11 South East Alchevsk 11012 Luhansk 11 South East Sverdlovsk 11112 Luhansk 11 South East Rubizhne 112 Yuliy Ioffe 48 6212 Luhansk 11 South East Svatove 113 Vitaliy Kurylo 21 4012 Luhansk 11 South East Stanytsia Luhanska 114 Yuriy Harbuz Serhiy Shahov after by elections in July 2016 44 25 56 37 62 44 Independent Our Land 44 13 Lviv 12 West Lviv Sykhivsky 115 Dmytro Dobrodomov 42 1013 Lviv 12 West Lviv Zaliznychny 116 Iryna Podolyak 41 20 Self Reliance13 Lviv 12 West Lviv Frankivsky 117 Oksana Yurynets 42 55 Petro Poroshenko Bloc13 Lviv 12 West Lviv Lychakivsky 118 Bohdan Dubnevych 43 11 Petro Poroshenko Bloc13 Lviv 12 West Brody 119 Mykhailo Bondar 26 36 People s Front13 Lviv 12 West Horodok 120 Yaroslav Dubnevych 60 01 Petro Poroshenko Bloc13 Lviv 12 West Drohobych 121 Bohdan Matkivsky 23 6213 Lviv 12 West Yavoriv 122 Volodymyr Parasyuk 56 5613 Lviv 12 West Peremyshliany 123 Taras Batenko 50 89 Petro Poroshenko Bloc13 Lviv 12 West Sokal 124 Oleh Musiy 29 8613 Lviv 12 West Staryi Sambir 125 Andriy Lopushanskyy 32 1213 Lviv 12 West Stryy 126 Andriy Kit 30 64 Petro Poroshenko Bloc14 Mykolaiv 6 South East Mykolaiv Zavodsky 127 Borys Kozyr 33 17 Petro Poroshenko Bloc14 Mykolaiv 6 South East Mykolaiv Lyeninsky 128 Artem Iliuk 33 4114 Mykolaiv 6 South East Mykolaiv Tsentralny 129 Oleksandr Zholobetsky 39 63 Petro Poroshenko Bloc14 Mykolaiv 6 South East Bashtanka 130 Andriy Vadatursky 43 75 Petro Poroshenko Bloc14 Mykolaiv 6 South East Voznesensk 131 Oleksandr Livik 20 37 Petro Poroshenko Bloc14 Mykolaiv 6 South East Pervomaisk 132 Arkadiy Kornatskyy 34 82 Petro Poroshenko Bloc15 Odesa 11 South East Odesa Kyivsky 133 Eduard Matviychuk 24 2015 Odesa 11 South East Odesa Malynovsky 134 Hennadiy Chekita 38 34 Petro Poroshenko Bloc15 Odesa 11 South East Odesa Prymorsky 135 Serhiy Kivalov 28 8015 Odesa 11 South East Odesa Suvorovsky 136 Dmytro Holubov 30 31 Petro Poroshenko Bloc15 Odesa 11 South East Kotovsk 137 Leonid Klimov 30 8815 Odesa 11 South East Shyriaieve 138 Ivan Fursin 35 0115 Odesa 11 South East Rozdilna 139 Oleksandr Presman 42 5415 Odesa 11 South East Biliaivka 140 Vasyl Hulyaev 29 2815 Odesa 11 South East Tatarbunary 141 Vitaliy Barvinenko 26 6615 Odesa 11 South East Artsyz 142 Anton Kisse 52 9615 Odesa 11 South East Izmail 143 Oleksandr Urbansky 23 76 Strong Ukraine16 Poltava 8 Central Poltava Oktyabrsky 144 Serhiy Kaplin 46 30 Petro Poroshenko Bloc16 Poltava 8 Central Poltava Kyivsky 145 Yuriy Bublyk 22 60 Svoboda16 Poltava 8 Central Kremenchuk 146 Yuriy Shapovalov 22 6716 Poltava 8 Central Myrhorod 147 Oleh Kulinich 21 1916 Poltava 8 Central Lubny 148 Kostiantyn Ishcheikin 22 75 Petro Poroshenko Bloc16 Poltava 8 Central Karlivka 149 Andriy Reka 25 19 People s Front16 Poltava 8 Central Komsomolsk 150 Kostyantyn Zhevaho 43 8116 Poltava 8 Central Lokhvytsia 151 Taras Kutovy Ruslan Bogdan after by elections in July 2016 44 62 86 21 64 44 Petro Poroshenko Bloc Fatherland 44 17 Rivne 5 West Rivne 152 Oleh Osukhovsky 24 51 Svoboda17 Rivne 5 West Ostroh 153 Yuriy Voznyuk 35 66 People s Front17 Rivne 5 West Dubno 154 Oleksandr Dekhtyarchuk 21 01 Petro Poroshenko Bloc17 Rivne 5 West Dubrovytsia 155 Vasyl Yanitsky 28 68 Petro Poroshenko Bloc17 Rivne 5 West Sarny 156 Serhiy Yevtushok 27 63 Fatherland18 Sumy 6 Central Sumy 157 Oleh Medunytsia 31 02 People s Front18 Sumy 6 Central Bilopillia 158 Oleksandr Suhonyako 28 08 Petro Poroshenko Bloc18 Sumy 6 Central Hlukhiv 159 Andriy Derkach 61 8418 Sumy 6 Central Shostka 160 Ihor Molotok 46 1518 Sumy 6 Central Romny 161 Mykola Lavryk 21 50 Petro Poroshenko Bloc18 Sumy 6 Central Okhtyrka 162 Vladyslav Bukharyev 20 26 Fatherland19 Ternopil 5 West Ternopil 163 Taras Pastukh 35 4519 Ternopil 5 West Zbarazh 164 Mykhailo Holovko 35 58 Svoboda19 Ternopil 5 West Zboriv 165 Taras Yuryk 52 96 Petro Poroshenko Bloc19 Ternopil 5 West Terebovlya 166 Mykola Lyushnyak 40 48 Petro Poroshenko Bloc19 Ternopil 5 West Chortkiv 167 Oleh Barna 28 53 Petro Poroshenko Bloc20 Kharkiv 14 South East Kharkiv Dzerzhynsky 168 Valeriy Pysarenko 30 9820 Kharkiv 14 South East Kharkiv Kyivsky 169 Oleksandr Kirsh 24 71 People s Front20 Kharkiv 14 South East Kharkiv Moskovsky 170 Dmytro Svyatash 34 0120 Kharkiv 14 South East Kharkiv Frunzensky 171 Vitaliy Khomutynnik 29 7920 Kharkiv 14 South East Kharkiv Ordzhonikidzevsky 172 Volodymyr Mysyk 54 3420 Kharkiv 14 South East Kharkiv Kominternivsky 173 Anatoliy Denysenko 42 0520 Kharkiv 14 South East Kharkiv Lyeninsky 174 Oleksandr Feldman 64 9420 Kharkiv 14 South East Derhachi 175 Volodymyr Katsuba 35 1720 Kharkiv 14 South East Chuhuiv 176 Dmytro Shentsev 54 8020 Kharkiv 14 South East Kupiansk 177 Viktor Ostapchuk 47 7020 Kharkiv 14 South East Balakliia 178 Dmytro Dobkin 33 0520 Kharkiv 14 South East Krasnohrad 179 Anatoliy Hirshfeld 24 2320 Kharkiv 14 South East Zolochiv 180 Oleksandr Bilovol 53 0320 Kharkiv 14 South East Zmiiv 181 Yevhen Murayev 48 9521 Kherson 5 South East Kherson Suvorovsky 182 Oleksandr Spivakovskyy 21 60 Petro Poroshenko Bloc21 Kherson 5 South East Kherson Komsomolsky 183 Andriy Hordeyev Yuriy Odarchenko after by elections in July 2016 44 27 28 25 44 Petro Poroshenko Bloc Fatherland 44 21 Kherson 5 South East Nova Kakhovka 184 Ivan Vinnyk 18 13 Petro Poroshenko Bloc21 Kherson 5 South East Kakhovka 185 Serhiy Khlan 39 04 Petro Poroshenko Bloc21 Kherson 5 South East Tsyurupinsk 186 Fedir Nehoi 27 4722 Khmelnytskyi 7 Central Khmelnytskyi 187 Serhiy Melnyk 33 3722 Khmelnytskyi 7 Central Khmelnytskyi and vicinity 188 Serhiy Labazyuk 35 8122 Khmelnytskyi 7 Central Krasyliv 189 Andriy Shynkovych 17 9922 Khmelnytskyi 7 Central Shepetivka 190 Roman Matsola 30 18 Petro Poroshenko Bloc22 Khmelnytskyi 7 Central Starokostiantyniv 191 Viktor Bondar 18 6122 Khmelnytskyi 7 Central Dunaivtsi 192 Oleksandr Hereha 73 7722 Khmelnytskyi 7 Central Kamianets Podilskyi 193 Volodymyr Melnychenko 33 7023 Cherkasy 7 Central Cherkasy Prydniprovsky 194 Oleh Petrenko 41 15 Petro Poroshenko Bloc23 Cherkasy 7 Central Cherkasy Sosnivsky 195 Volodymyr Zubyk 31 2623 Cherkasy 7 Central Korsun Shevchenkivskyi 196 Hennadiy Bobov 30 0423 Cherkasy 7 Central Kaniv 197 Vladyslav Holub 34 16 Petro Poroshenko Bloc23 Cherkasy 7 Central Smila 198 Serhiy Rudyk 21 4523 Cherkasy 7 Central Zhashkiv 199 Valentyn Nychyporenko 44 3023 Cherkasy 7 Central Uman 200 Anton Yatsenko 57 4124 Chernivtsi 4 West Chernivtsi 201 Mykola Fedoruk 34 47 People s Front24 Chernivtsi 4 West Storozhynets 202 Ivan Rybak 21 28 Petro Poroshenko Bloc24 Chernivtsi 4 West Novoselytsia 203 Hryhoriy Tymish 28 74 Petro Poroshenko Bloc24 Chernivtsi 4 West Khotyn 204 Maksym Burbak 24 22 People s Front25 Chernihiv 6 Central Chernihiv Desnyansky 205 Valeriy Kulich Serhiy Berezenko after by elections in July 2015 45 27 98 35 90 45 Petro Poroshenko Bloc both winners 45 25 Chernihiv 6 Central Chernihiv Novozavodsky 206 Vladyslav Atroshenko Maksym Mykytas after by elections in July 2016 44 51 34 31 45 44 Petro Poroshenko Bloc Independent25 Chernihiv 6 Central Koriukivka 207 Anatoliy Yevlakhov 37 59 Petro Poroshenko Bloc25 Chernihiv 6 Central Bakhmach 208 Valeriy Davydenko 38 86 Zastup25 Chernihiv 6 Central Nizhyn 209 Oleksandr Kodola 26 88 People s Front25 Chernihiv 6 Central Pryluky 210 Oleh Dmytrenko 27 58 Petro Poroshenko Bloc26 Kyiv City 13 Central Kyiv Holosiyivsky 211 Yevhen Rybchynsky 34 39 Petro Poroshenko Bloc26 Kyiv City 13 Central Kyiv Darnytsky 212 Vitaliy Stashuk 36 75 People s Front26 Kyiv City 13 Central Kyiv Desnyansky 213 Boryslav Bereza 29 4426 Kyiv City 13 Central Kyiv Dniprovsky 214 Viktor Chumak 51 52 Petro Poroshenko Bloc26 Kyiv City 13 Central Kyiv Desnyansky minor Dniprovsky 215 Andriy Illyenko 39 55 Svoboda26 Kyiv City 13 Central Kyiv Dniprovsky minor Darnytsky 216 Oleksandr Suprunenko 24 4626 Kyiv City 13 Central Kyiv Obolonsky 217 Andriy Biletsky 33 7526 Kyiv City 13 Central Kyiv Svyatoshynsky minor Obolonsky 218 Volodymyr Ariev 63 46 Petro Poroshenko Bloc26 Kyiv City 13 Central Kyiv Svyatoshynsky 219 Oleksandr Tretiakov 44 91 Petro Poroshenko Bloc26 Kyiv City 13 Central Kyiv Podilsky 220 Vyacheslav Konstantinovsky 32 47 People s Front26 Kyiv City 13 Central Kyiv Pechersky 221 Leonid Yemets 37 70 People s Front26 Kyiv City 13 Central Kyiv Solomyansky 222 Dmytro Andriyevsky 57 29 Petro Poroshenko Bloc26 Kyiv City 13 Central Kyiv Shevchenkivsky 223 Yuriy Levchenko 37 30 Svoboda27 Sevastopol 2 South East Sevastopol Gagarinsky 22427 Sevastopol 2 South East Sevastopol Leninsky 225Notes District Electoral districts are not part of the administrative territorial system and may include several territorial units of the Ukrainian regions raions cities of regional significance and others Government formation EditFurther information Second Yatsenyuk GovernmentBy elections Edit2015 Edit On 26 July 2015 mid term election were held in constituency 205 located in Chernihiv 46 These were necessary after 2014 winner Valeriy Kulich had left parliament because of his appointment as Governor of Chernihiv Oblast 46 91 candidates took part in the elections eight of them for political parties the others were self nominated candidates 46 On election day the ballot paper stretched to about 1 meter 46 36 candidates had withdrawn from participation in the elections 46 During the election campaign top candidates Hennadiy Korban and Serhiy Berezenko were repeatedly accused of bribing voters the use of black PR and other violations of the electoral legislation 47 The election was won by Berezenko of Petro Poroshenko Bloc with 35 90 of the vote 45 Second most votes were won by Korban of UKROP who received 14 76 45 The official voter turnout was set at 35 3 48 2016 Edit On 17 July 2016 mid term election were held in 7 single member districts constituency 23 27 85 114 151 183 and 206 because their representatives had been elected to executive political positions and the death of Ihor Yeremeyev 49 Turnout varied from about 50 until less than 20 50 The elections were monitored by 57 international official observers 51 Vote counting in constituency 114 situated in Stanytsia Luhanska was disrupted after several members of the election commission refused to count votes 52 In the same constituency 14 criminal cases for violating the election were opened 53 Constituency 151 was last in announcing its final results when it did so on 21 July 2016 54 17 July 2016 single mandate winnersRegion District District 42 Candidate 44 Votes 44 Party member 44 No Name No of mandates Geographical reference and name No 3 Volyn 5 West Manevychi 023 Iryna Konstankevych 57 42 UKROP4 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South East Dnipropetrovsk Zhovtnevy 027 Tetyana Rychkova 44 57 BPP c 9 Ivano Frankivsk 7 West Kalush 085 Victor Shevchenko 21 19 UKROP12 Luhansk 11 South East Stanytsia Luhanska 114 Serhiy Shahov 37 62 Our Land16 Poltava 8 Central Lokhvytsia 151 Ruslan Bogdan 21 64 Fatherland21 Kherson 5 South East Kherson Komsomolsky 183 Yuriy Odarchenko 25 Fatherland25 Chernihiv 6 Central Chernihiv Novozavodsky 206 Maksym Mykytas 31 45Notes Edit 27 seats were in occupied areas where elections could not take place In a Research amp Branding Group opinion poll held from 26 July until 5 August 72 of respondents supported the call for early elections 10 Although not a member of any political party Tetyana Rychkova joined the Petro Poroshenko Bloc faction in parliament 55 References Edit a b Poroshenko hopes for early parliamentary elections in Ukraine this fall presidential envoy Interfax Ukraine 19 June 2014 a b Ukraine President Poroshenko Calls Snap General Election Bloomberg News 25 August 2014 a b Parliamentary elections not to be held at nine constituencies in Donetsk region and six constituencies in Luhansk region CEC Interfax Ukraine 25 October 2014 Parliament to form leadership and coalition on November 27 UNIAN 26 November 2014 Five factions form Verkhovna Rada coalition Rada supports coalition proposed government lineup a b Parliament passes law on parliamentary elections Kyiv Post Interfax Ukraine 17 November 2011 Retrieved 9 August 2015 in Ukrainian Law of Ukraine On Elections of People s Deputies of Ukraine dated 17 November 2011 Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine Poroshenko hopes early parliamentary elections in Ukraine will take place in October Interfax Ukraine 26 June 2014 in Ukrainian Bilshe 70 ukrayinciv za pereobrannya Radi Over 70 of Ukrainians for the re election of the Rada Ukrainska Pravda 15 August 2014 a b Rada speaker announces dissolution of parliamentary coalition Interfax Ukraine 24 July 2014 Rada registers bill setting early parliamentary elections date for September 28 2014 Interfax Ukraine 24 July 2014 a b Poroshenko frustrated by Rada refusing to recognize self proclaimed republics as terrorist organizations Interfax Ukraine 14 August 2014 Ukraine crisis timeline BBC News Archived from the original on 27 May 2014 Retrieved 29 May 2014 Ukraine crisis President calls snap vote amid fighting BBC News 25 August 2014 a b c Ukrainian President dissolves Parliament announces early elections United Press International 25 August 2014 Ukraine s Petro Poroshenko Dissolves Parliament Sets Election Date The Moscow Times 26 August 2014 President s address on the occasion of early parliamentary elections of October 26 Presidential Administration of Ukraine 25 August 2014 IFES Rada fails to put on today s agenda three bills on elections of MPs Interfax Ukraine 14 August 2014 Na vyborah ne smogut progolosovat pochti 5 mln ukraincev Podrobnosti chitajte na UNIAN http www unian net politics 1000335 na vyiborah ne smogut progolosovat pochti 5 mln ukraintsev html Ukrainian Independent Information Agency 24 October 2014 in Ukrainian The CEC explained how to vote to inhabitants of Russian occupied territories 5 Kanal 2 September 2014 Russia calls for talks with Kiev after separatist elections The Guardian 3 November 2014 Retrieved 3 November 2014 a b Basic electoral statistics 2014 extraordinary parliamentary election Archived 29 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine Central Election Commission of Ukraine Registration of candidates to run in early parliamentary elections in Ukraine ended Interfax Ukraine 01 10 2014 a b c d e f g Olszanski Tadeusz A 17 September 2014 Ukraine s political parties at the start of the election campaign OSW Centre for Eastern Studies CIK zavershila registraciyu partij na vneocherednyh vyborah v parlament Ukrainian Independent Information Agency 26 September 2014 CIK opredelila poryadkovye nomera partij na vyborah v Radu Ukrainian Independent Information Agency 27 September 2014 in Russian Pilots combatants and journalists Who goes to the new Verkhovna Rada Korrespondent net 15 September 2014 Klitschko I lead my team to Parliament Archived 24 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine UDAR official website 14 September 2014 Deadline for nomination of candidates running in early election to Rada expires ITAR TASS 15 September 2014 Klitschko has no plans to leave post of Kyiv mayor Interfax Ukraine 27 October 2014 in Ukrainian The party decided Gritsenko who will go to Council Ukrainska Pravda 7 September 2014 in Ukrainian Yatsenyuk became a leader of the People s Front political council while Turchynov is a head of its headquarters Ukrainska Pravda 10 September 2014Ukrainian PM Parliament Speaker to Head Newly Formed Popular Front Party RIA Novosti 10 September 2014 Ukraine s Party of Regions Refuses to Participate in Rada Elections RIA Novosti 23 September 2014 a b Opposition Bloc chooses top ten candidates for parliamentary elections Interfax Ukraine 23 September 2014 Allies of Yanukovych trying for parliament Kyiv Post 21 September 2014 Party Of Regions Will Not Contest Snap Parliamentary Elections Independently Archived 24 September 2014 at the Wayback Machine Ukrainian News Agency 14 September 2014 a b Almost 2 500 foreign observers to watch Ukrainian elections CEC Interfax Ukraine 21 October 2014 a b c d e f g Ukrainian Rada elections generally without incident OPORA Interfax Ukraine 27 October 2014 CVU to ask CEC to declare invalid elections at constituencies Nos 45 and 102 Interfax Ukraine 27 October 2014 OSCE claims elections in Ukraine held up to democratic standards Interfax Ukraine 27 October 2014 Voting tabulation in Rada elections organized properly OSCE observers Interfax Ukraine 27 October 2014 OSCE Ukraine elections a step forward Interfax Ukraine 27 October 2014 Barroso Van Rompuy call Ukraine elections a victory of democracy Interfax Ukraine 27 October 2014 PABSEC speaks positively of Verkhovna Rada elections Interfax Ukraine 27 October 2014 International Republican Institute congratulates Ukraine on elections that meet international standards Interfax Ukraine 28 October 2014 John Kerry Ukraine s parliamentary elections Kyiv Post 28 October 2014 a b c d e f Moscow acknowledges Ukrainian election as valid Interfax Ukraine 27 October 2014 Ukraine elections Pro Western parties set for victory BBC News 27 October 2014 Russia to Recognize Ukraine Election Results Says Lavrov The Moscow Times 27 October 2014 Russia s Lavrov hopes for constructive Ukrainian government Tass Reuters 27 October 2014 Russian senators prepared to cooperate with new Verkhovna Rada Kyiv Post 28 October 2014 People s Front 0 33 ahead of Poroshenko Bloc with all ballots counted in Ukraine elections CEC Interfax Ukraine 10 November 2014 in Ukrainian In the 38th district of Dnipropetrovsk stop recount Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty 17 November 2014 a b CEC report PDF Archived from the original PDF on 10 December 2014 Retrieved 20 March 2017 CEC data about turnout in Donetsk regionCEC data about turnout in Luhansk region Olszanski Tadeusz A 29 October 2014 A strong vote for reform Ukraine after the parliamentary elections OSW Centre for Eastern Studies Central electoral commission Archived from the original on 19 October 2017 Retrieved 20 March 2017 a b 2012 Parliamentary Elections Boundary Delimitation Summary and Analysis Archived 4 September 2014 at the Wayback Machine International Foundation for Electoral Systems May 2012 a b c Data on vote counting at percincts within single mandate districts Extraordinary parliamentary election on 26 10 2014 Archived 29 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine Central Election Commission of Ukraine in Ukrainian Candidates and winners for the seat of the constituencies in the 2014 Ukrainian parliamentary election Archived 5 February 2015 at the Wayback Machine RBK Ukraine a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v in Ukrainian Data on vote counting at percincts within single mandate districts Extraordinary parliamentary election on 17 06 2016 Archived 18 July 2016 at the Wayback Machine Central Election Commission of Ukraine a b c d e With 100 of ballots counted in Rada by election Berezenko gets 35 90 of votes Korban 14 76 CEC Interfax Ukraine 28 July 2015 a b c d e Mid term elections start in Chernihiv constituency No 205 UNIAN 26 July 2015 Korban Ya poteryal moralnoe pravo vozglavlyat politsovet partii Ukrop Gordon 07 2015This crazy Ukrainian election shows the country has a ways to go toward reform Global Post 28 July 2015 Additional Rada election in Chernihiv 87 95 of protocols processed UNIAN 27 July 2015 in Ukrainian CEC appointed elections in four constituencies Ukrainska Pravda 10 May 2016 in Ukrainian Dovibori do VR U Dnipri 51 kandidat ye predstavnik KPU By election to the Verkhovna Rada in Dnipro 51 a candidate is a representative of the Communist Party Ukrainska Pravda 19 June 2016 in Russian website has automatic Google Translate option Short bio of Ihor Yeremeyev LIGA in Ukrainian CEC Voter turnout for midterm elections nearly 33 No data Luhansk Ukrainska Pravda 17 July 2016 in Ukrainian CEC registered 43 observers to the Rada by election Ukrainska Pravda 12 July 2016 in Ukrainian Problem county in the Luhansk region resumed counting votes Ukrainska Pravda 18 July 2016 in Ukrainian In Luhansk opened 14 cases for violating the election Ukrainska Pravda 18 July 2016 in Ukrainian Became known the results of the vote in the last of the 7 districts Ukrainska Pravda 21 July 2016 in Ukrainian Tetyana Rychkova profile on the Verkhovna Rada websiteExternal links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ukrainian parliamentary election 2014 Homepage Central Election Commission of Ukraine in Ukrainian Interactive map with election results Archived 9 January 2015 at the Wayback Machine by OPORA in Ukrainian Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2014 Ukrainian parliamentary election amp oldid 1172531774, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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