Yanukovych's
First 100 Days Explodes Six Myths
By Taras Kuzio
Viktor Yanukovych was elected on February 7
and inaugurated as
Yanukovych won the 2010
Ukrainian Presidential Elections by the lowest margin in Ukrainian history (3.5
percent, compared to the traditional 8 to 16 percent) and is the first
President to be elected with less than fifty percent of the vote. He won the
same number of regions (ten out of 27) but with fewer votes than he received in
December 2004, despite four out of five years in opposition and a severe
financial and economic crisis.
As leader of the Party of
Regions, Yanukovych promised to pursue three policies after his election.
First, forming a government composed of “professionals” and implementing a
reform program, building political stability, and taking steps towards national
integration.
During Yanukovych’s first
100 days in office, none of these three policies have emerged. The government
is led by former Kuchma era officials mainly in their late 50s or early 60s and
therefore their careers began in the Leonid Brezhnev “era of stagnation.” No
reform program has been put forward. Political instability is far more likely
as a consequence of the counter revolution underway. Meanwhile,
Yanukovych’s election was
accompanied by six myths that fell apart after the counter revolution was
unfurled. Unfortunately, these served to disorientate Western policymakers and
analysts during his first 100 days in office:
1. Yanukovych was more
likely to bring stability than Yulia Tymoshenko. Yanukovych’s counter
revolution in
2. Yanukovych learnt the
lessons of election fraud in 2004 and recast himself as a democrat. This claim
never quite stood up to scrutiny as Yanukovych did not accept the 2004 election
results, arguing that there was no fraud involved and claimed that he was the
object of a planned “US-backed conspiracy” (Orange Revolution). His views on
2004 only hardened over the past five years as no criminal charges were ever
instituted against the organizers of the fraud.
The April 23 congress that
launched Yanukovych’s candidacy and passed the leadership back to Prime
Minister, Nikolai Azarov (the Party of Regions first leader in 2001-2003) was a
“party congress from the Soviet era” with the leadership question taking place
“according to the best canons of a CPSU congress”.
3. Tymoshenko, not
Yanukovych, if elected would become the main threat to Ukrainian democracy. The
first 100 days of the Yanukovych Presidency has shown that his authoritarian
tendencies were always greater. As its governor from 1997-2002,
Media censorship has
re-appeared leading to the formation of the Stop Censorship! NGO, with 500
journalists amongst its members throughout
4. Yanukovych’s pro-Russian
program was dismissed as unlikely to be implemented if elected. Yanukovych
would become a “Kuchma-2,” pragmatic, working with centrists and national
democrats, and return
This myth misconstrued
Yanukovych and the Party of Regions as “pragmatists” when they had evolved in
the post-Kuchma era into an ideological political force that defended and
represented the Eastern Slavic, Russophone and neo-Soviet political culture of
Eastern-Southern Ukraine. Yanukovych and the Party of Regions receive support
from ex-communist voters and have twice entered coalitions with the communist
party. In the Crimean parliament, the Party of Regions has formed coalitions
with Russian nationalists and the national-Bolshevik Progressive Socialists.
5.
6. The oligarchs are ready
to become taxpaying, bona fide businessmen and support tackling
corruption. This view, echoed by Western analysts such as Anders Aslund and
Adrian Karatnycky, has proven to be unfounded. The oligarchs are interested in
subsidized gas, provided by the gas lobby that controls
Yanukovych’s first 100 days
in office has not fulfilled his election promise of reforms, stability and
national integration. Meanwhile, he has introduced policies (such as on
Taras Kuzio is a senior fellow of Ukrainian
studies at the