New Elections For Old
Contenders In
By Jan Maksymiuk
(RFE/RL Newsline) On August 2,
The main contenders in this
year’s preterm elections are the same as those in the regular parliamentary
elections in March 2006: the Party of Regions, the Yulia Tymoshenko Bloc, the
Our Ukraine-People’s Self-Defence bloc, the Socialist Party, and the Communist
Party. The only difference is that the Our Ukraine-People’s Self-Defence bloc
was just Our Ukraine last year, without the People’s Self-Defence component
later created by former Interior Minister Yuriy Lutsenko.
The Party of Regions led by
Prime Minister Victor Yanukovych -- which held its showy, Western-style
election convention in Kyiv on August 4 -- declared that it will focus on
economic and social issues in the ongoing campaign, thus hushing up its former
concerns about giving the Russian language official status and fostering the
electorate’s anti-NATO sentiments in
Yanukovych has apparently
decided to capitalize on a fairly strong economic performance of his two
cabinets, the current one and that in 2002-04. Warding off President Victor
Yushchenko’s recent criticism of the economic situation, Yanukovych’s press
service reminded Ukrainians that the economy grew by 9.6 percent in 2003 and by
12 percent in 2004, adding that in 2005, when the Orange Revolution government
took over, economic growth fell to 2.7 percent. Since August 2006, when
Yanukovych became Prime Minister for the second time, average economic growth
has stood at 8 percent, the press service stressed.
Moreover, Yanukovych has
outstripped Yushchenko in pledges to overcome
Yanukovych surprised his
adherents and opponents with two more election devices. He used a teleprompter
to read his speech at the election convention, a hitherto unheard-of practice
in Ukrainian politics. And he referred to God in his concluding words, which
was also a first for him: “We are heading straight for the victory with firm
steps! The Lord God help us!”
The top 10 candidates of the
Party of Regions are exclusively former lawmakers. The Party of Regions
election ticket includes five current deputy prime ministers and 11 ministers.
A convention of the Yulia
Tymoshenko Bloc on August 5, even if less pompous and less technologically
advanced than that of the Party of Regions, was also eye-catching. The bloc’s
leader, former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko, had all delegates to the
convention put on white T-shirts with a red heart and the inscription “Yulya”
on them. In general, the initial letter of her first name -- the Cyrillic “Yu”
-- has seemingly become a new graphic symbol of the bloc, since it was utilized
in many slogans and inscriptions visible at the convention, including the
phrase “I love Yu.” Tymoshenko, who in the past frequently appeared in trendy
and costly outfits from
The convention adopted an
election manifesto called “Ukrainian Breakthrough,” which has so far not been
revealed to the public, including the bloc’s ordinary members and supporters.
But Tymoshenko provided a glimpse into the program at the convention when she
proposed that corrupt officials be punished with imprisonment for life and that
judges be elected by popular vote.
The top 10 candidates of the
Yulia Tymoshenko Bloc are exclusively former legislators.
The Our Ukraine-People’s
Self-Defence bloc held its election convention on August 7. The forum was
attended by President Yushchenko, who blessed what he described as the
unification of Ukrainian democratic forces into a single bloc for the early
polls. And he seemed to indicate a spiritual direction for the bloc when he
stated that, “Our ideal is a powerful state, a single people, a single official
language, a single Christian Orthodox Church, and a single nation.”
The pro-presidential bloc
adopted an election manifest titled “For People, Not for Politicians,” which
calls for abolishing parliamentary immunity, cancelling privileges for
lawmakers, setting up a national anticorruption bureau, and forming an
independent body to vet all judges.
Yuriy Lutsenko, one of the
leaders of the bloc, claimed in a passionate speech at the August 7 convention
that the Our Ukraine-People’s Self-Defence election list does not include
people who “went whoring” in the past or betrayed the 2004 Orange Revolution.
He specifically mentioned Party of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs leader
Anatoliy Kinakh and Socialist Party leader Oleksandr Moroz in this regard,
branding them “Judases” for their alliance with the Party of Regions.
The top 10 candidates of the
bloc include only one new name, that of television journalist Volodymyr Aryev.
The remaining nine are either former lawmakers or people already known in
politics, such as Foreign Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk and Defence Minister
Anatoliy Hrytsenko.
The least conspicuous of
recent election gatherings in
Moroz on August 4 condemned
the upcoming elections as an “adventurous” and “illegitimate” event, claiming
that their main objectives are to remove the Socialists from Parliament, “draw”
Ukraine into NATO, and “cause a quarrel” between Ukraine and Russia.
Public-opinion polls
conducted in
The Yulia Tymoshenko Bloc
has definitely ruled out any post-election coalition with the Party of Regions.
Yanukovych at the August 4 convention expressed his preference for a “grand”
coalition, but mentioned no specific forces. Lutsenko on August 7 admitted that
it is possible for his bloc to cooperate with Yanukovych’s people in Parliament
but excluded any governing alliance with them. In short, the starting political
preferences of