Ukraine votes in snap
election amid concerns over corruption
A lsdy casts her ballot in a mobile ballot box during parliamentary election (ANSA) |
Voters in Ukraine are participating in the early parliamentary
election which is expected to be won by the party of the recently elected
President Volodymyr Zelenskiy. The president hopes the new Parliament will
tackle the endemic corruption in the former Soviet nation.
By Stefan J. Bos
Zelenskiy cast his ballot amid ongoing political and social
turmoil.
Sunday's parliamentary election was overshadowed by mounting
concerns about financial wrongdoing by influential figures ranging from
powerfull business leaders to politicians, the police and even judges.
President Zelenskiy, who took office in May, called the
election three months ahead of schedule because the Parliament was dominated by
his opponents.
He seeks a majority that would support his promised fight
against Ukraine's endemic corruption and for other reforms.
After voting, the comedian-turned-president seemed pleased
with the media attention. He briefly spoke with reporters and made clear that
the new Parliament's first tasks should be to "consider lifting parliament
members' immunity from prosecution."
Difficult task
But introducing reforms won't be easy.
Analyst Olexyi Haran suggests that the recently elected
president will have to learn to deal with a complicated political system.
"We need to understand that Ukraine is not a presidential republic. It has
a mixed system. And the government is formed according to parliamentary
elections," he told Turkey's TRT World television.
"The president is not powerful. It is not a Russian
model. The government is responsible to the Parliament, not to the
president."
President Zelenskyi's newly-created party is expected to win as much as 52 percent of the vote. But the complicated voting system could see
his party is falling short of an absolute majority in the 424 seats-strong Verkhovna Rada parliament.
President Zelenskyi's newly-created party is expected to win as much as 52 percent of the vote. But the complicated voting system could see
his party is falling short of an absolute majority in the 424 seats-strong Verkhovna Rada parliament.
Ironically his "Servant of the People" party was
named after the television comedy in which he played a teacher who unexpectedly
becomes president.
Joining NATO
Besides tackling corruption, it wants Ukraine to join the
NATO military alliance and the European Union.
A party led by one of Russian President Vladimir Putin's closest
associates, tycoon Viktor Medvedchuk, was polling in second place with about 10
percent. It wants Ukraine to focus on improving relations with Russia.
Those ties plummeted after Russia's annexation of Ukraine's
Crimea Peninsula in 2014. Also, tensions rose because of Moscow's support for
pro-
Russian separatists fighting government troops in a war that killed more than 13,000 people.
Russian separatists fighting government troops in a war that killed more than 13,000 people.
At third place is the European Solidarity party of
pro-Western former President Petro Poroshenko. Zelenskiy defeated Poroshenko in
the country's spring presidential election at a time of growing public
dissatisfaction with the political establishment.
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