2019 Ukrainian parliamentary election

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2019 Ukrainian parliamentary election
Ukraine
← 2014 21 July 2019 Next →

424 of the 450 seats in the Verkhovna Rada[a]
226 seats needed for a majority
Turnout49.24%
Party Leader % Seats +/–
SN Dmytro Razumkov 43.16 254 New
OPZZh Yuriy Boyko 13.06 43 New
Batkivshchyna Yulia Tymoshenko 8.19 26 +6
YeS Petro Poroshenko 8.11 25 −106
Holos Svyatoslav Vakarchuk 5.83 20 New
Opposition Bloc Evgeny Murayev 3.03 6 New
Svoboda Oleh Tyahnybok 2.16 1 −5
Self Reliance Andriy Sadovyi 0.63 1 −32
United Centre Viktor Baloha 1 New
Bila Tserkva Mykola Babenko 1 New
Independents 46 −51
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Party-list results
Constituency results
Prime Minister before Prime Minister after
Volodymyr Groysman
USH
Oleksiy Honcharuk
Independent

Parliamentary elections were held in Ukraine on 21 July 2019.[1] Originally scheduled to be held at the end of October, the elections were brought forward after newly inaugurated President Volodymyr Zelenskyy dissolved parliament on 21 May 2019, during his inauguration.[2] The elections resulted in an outright majority, a novelty in Ukraine, for Zelenskyy's Servant of the People party, which won 254 seats.[3]

About 80 percent of the elected candidates were new to parliament, while 83 deputies were re-elected from the previous parliament and 13 deputies from earlier convocations.[3] All deputies from Servant of the People were political newcomers.[3] 61 percent of the new MPs had never before been engaged in politics.[3]

The elections were suspended in 26 of the 225 constituencies due to the March 2014 annexation of Crimea by Russia and the ongoing occupation of parts of Donetsk Oblast and Luhansk Oblast by separatist forces of the self-declared Donetsk People's Republic and Luhansk People's Republic (since April 2014).

Background

Originally scheduled to be held at the end of October 2019, the 2019 Ukrainian parliamentary elections were brought forward after newly inaugurated President Volodymyr Zelenskyy dissolved parliament early on 21 May 2019 (a day after his inauguration), despite claims that he did not have the legal grounds to do this. After Zelenskyy issued the decree (calling early elections), a lawsuit was filed to the Constitutional Court of Ukraine, which sought to declare the decree unconstitutional and therefore illegal.[4][5] The court declared the decree to be legal on 20 June 2019.[2][6] The official reason why Zelenskyy dissolved parliament was "a lack of a government coalition".[7]

Following the 2014 parliamentary elections, the Petro Poroshenko Bloc (PPB) party became the largest party, after securing 132 seats. On 21 November 2014, the Petro Poroshenko Bloc, People's Front, Self Reliance, Fatherland and the Radical Party all signed a coalition agreement.[8] Arseniy Yatsenyuk became Prime Minister on 2 December 2014. The Radical Party left the coalition on 1 September 2015 in protest over a vote in parliament involving a change to the Ukrainian Constitution that would lead to decentralization and greater powers for areas held by separatists.[9] February 2016 saw the start of the fall of the Yatsenyuk cabinet after the economy minister Aivaras Abromavičius announced his resignation claiming the government did not have real commitment to fight corruption.[10] On 17 and 18 February 2016, the Fatherland and Self Reliance parties left the coalition; meaning that the coalition became 5 deputies short of the 226 needed.[11] On 14 April 2016, Volodymyr Groysman became the new Prime Minister and the Groysman government began with a new cabinet of ministers.[12] Due to the short period of time available to organize the 2019 parliamentary election, current Ukrainian public procurement laws were not followed and to bypass this, local election commissions will work under deferred payment.[4]

Electoral system

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy dissolved the Verkhovna Rada shortly after his inauguration, May 2019.

Under current law 225 members of the Verkhovna Rada are elected by nationwide closed party-list proportional representation with 5% electoral election threshold and the other 225 seats elected in constituencies with a first-past-the-post electoral system in one round (candidate with the highest vote total wins).[13][14][15][16] 21 parties take part in the election in the nationwide party-list.[17] For the elections there was established a state financing for all political parties that received 2% support, but on 2 October 2019 that law was canceled.[18]

Out of 225 constituencies, 26 were suspended due to the March 2014 annexation of Crimea by Russia and the occupation of parts of Donetsk Oblast and Luhansk Oblast by separatists (since April 2014).

Candidates had until 20 June to submit documents to the Central Election Commission of Ukraine to register as candidates for the position of deputy of the Verkhovna Rada.[19] On 25 June 2019, the Central Election Commission ended its registration process.[17] It registered 5,845 candidates for the elections:[17] 3,171 candidates in the single-member constituencies and 2,674 candidates in the single nationwide constituency with 22 parties.[17][20]

Since 2014, various politicians have proposed to reform the electoral system to 100% party-list proportional representation with open lists.[13] President Zelenskyy is the main proponent.[21] The proposal is opposed by Yulia Tymoshenko.[22] A vote on the proposal (authored by the president) was supposed to take place on 22 May 2019, but members of parliament voted against including it in the agenda.[21][23]

Contesting parties

2019 Ukrainian parliamentary electoral list
Electoral ballot of the 2019 Ukrainian parliamentary election, featuring 22 parties

List of registered parties[24][25]

Opinion polls

2019 Ukrainian parliamentary elections ratings
Opinion polls prior to the Ukrainian parliamentary election

Results

Turnout in electoral districts
Turnout in regions
Results of party-list voting by electoral districts
Results of single-mandate constituencies
PartyProportionalConstituencyTotal
seats
+/–
Votes%SeatsVotes%Seats
Servant of the People6,307,79343.161244,630,88032.87130254New
Opposition Platform — For Life1,908,11113.0637987,8327.01643New
Batkivshchyna1,196,3038.1924686,7344.87226+6
European Solidarity1,184,6208.1123589,9184.19225–106
Holos851,7225.8317401,9032.85320New
Radical Party of Oleh Liashko586,3844.010152,1911.0800–22
Strength and Honor558,6523.820175,3971.24000
Opposition Bloc443,1953.030377,1912.6866New
Ukrainian Strategy of Groysman352,9342.4200New
Party of Shariy327,1522.24012,0540.0900New
Svoboda315,5682.160452,3733.2111–6
Civil Position153,2251.050103,0440.73000
Party of Greens of Ukraine96,6590.66000
Self Reliance91,5960.630135,2970.9611–32
Agrarian Party of Ukraine75,5090.52096,1390.6800New
Movement of New Forces67,7400.4607,6830.0500New
Power of the People27,9840.19049,1170.35000
Power of Law20,3400.1400New
Patriot16,1230.11018,0150.1300New
Social Justice15,9670.1102,6150.0200New
Independence7,9700.0500New
Torch7,7390.0500New
United Centre44,4850.3211New
People's Movement of Ukraine41,4820.29000
Ukrainian Democratic Alliance for Reform22,2790.1600
Bila Tserkva Together20,2770.1411New
Democratic Axis13,6130.1000New
Civil Movement of Ukraine12,0370.09000
Joint Action7,0710.05000
Ukrainian Unity Party6,3550.0500New
Congress of Ukrainian Nationalists5,3180.04000
Right Sector5,0930.0400–1
Our Land4,7090.0300New
All-Ukrainian Union "Cherkashchany"4,2830.0300New
Social and Political Platform of Nadiya Savchenko3,9490.0300New
Party of Free Democrats3,5990.0300New
Ukrainian Party3,2680.0200New
Party of Pensioners of Ukraine3,2620.02000
Ukraine the Glorious3,0640.02000
Native City2,3760.02000
Socialist Party of Ukraine1,9900.01000
Liberty1,8020.01000
Community and Law1,5270.0100New
Darth Vader Bloc1,1640.0100New
Development9030.0100New
Republican Christian Party9020.0100New
Aware Nation7660.0100New
Real Action7640.0100New
Party of Local Self-Governance5200.0000New
Meritocratic Party of Ukraine5170.00000
Trust the Deeds4280.0000New
Gypsy Party of Ukraine3880.0000New
Internet Party of Ukraine3700.00000
Bdzhola2220.0000New
People's Truth2060.0000New
Student Party of Ukraine1380.0000New
Pirate Party of Ukraine1330.0000New
Independents4,992,51435.434646–51
Vacant2626
Total14,613,286100.0022514,090,157100.002254500
Valid votes14,613,28699.01
Invalid/blank votes146,2620.99
Total votes14,759,548100.00
Registered voters/turnout29,973,73949.24
Source: CLEA, CVK

The 46 independents included four members of Our Land, three members of UKROP, one member of Agrarian Party of Ukraine and one member of the For Specific Cases party, who had not been nominated by their parties.

Electoral support for parties

  • Servant of the People
    Servant of the People
  • Opposition Platform — For Life
    Opposition Platform — For Life
  • Batkivshchyna
    Batkivshchyna
  • European Solidarity
    European Solidarity
  • Voice
    Voice

Single-mandate constituency results

Winners in single-member constituencies
Region District[District][26] Candidate[27] Votes %[27] Party[27]
No. Name No. of mandates Geographical reference and name No.
1 AR Crimea 10 South-East Simferopol-Tsentralny 001
1 AR Crimea 10 South-East Simferopol-Kyivsky 002
1 AR Crimea 10 South-East Dzhankoi 003
1 AR Crimea 10 South-East Yevpatoriia 004
1 AR Crimea 10 South-East Kerch 005
1 AR Crimea 10 South-East Feodosiia 006
1 AR Crimea 10 South-East Yalta 007
1 AR Crimea 10 South-East Sudak 008
1 AR Crimea 10 South-East Krasnoperekopsk 009
1 AR Crimea 10 South-East Bakhchysarai 010
2 Vinnytsia 8 Central Vinnytsia (Vyshenka) 011 Maksym Pashkovskyi[28] Servant of the People
2 Vinnytsia 8 Central Vinnytsia (Zamosttia) 012 Anatoliy Drabovskyi[28] Servant of the People
2 Vinnytsia 8 Central Kalynivka 013 Petro Yurchyshyn[29] Independent
2 Vinnytsia 8 Central Zhmerynka 014 Iryna Borzova[28] Servant of the People
2 Vinnytsia 8 Central Sharhorod 015 Larysa Bilozir[28] Independent
2 Vinnytsia 8 Central Yampil 016 Hennadiy Vatsak[28] Independent
2 Vinnytsia 8 Central Ladyzhyn 017 Mykola Kucher[28] Independent
2 Vinnytsia 8 Central Illintsi 018 Oleh Meidych[28] Fatherland
3 Volyn 5 West Volodymyr-Volynskyi 019 Ihor Huz[28] Independent
3 Volyn 5 West Horokhiv 020 Vyacheslav Rublyov[28] Servant of the People
3 Volyn 5 West Kovel 021 Stepan Ivakhiv[28] Independent
3 Volyn 5 West Lutsk 022 Ihor Palytsia[28] Independent
3 Volyn 5 West Manevychi 023 Iryna Kostankevych[28] Independent
4 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South-East Dnipro-Industrialnyi 024 Dmytro Kysylevskyi[28] Servant of the People
4 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South-East Dnipro-Chechelivsk 025 Maksym Buzhanskyi[28] Servant of the People
4 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South-East Dnipro-Shevchenkivskyi 026 Kyrylo Nesterenko[28] Servant of the People
4 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South-East Dnipro-Sobornyi 027 Vyacheslav Medyanyk[28] Servant of the People
4 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South-East Dnipro-Novokodatskyi 028 Yuriy Mysyahin[28] Servant of the People
4 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South-East Dnipro (Yuvileine) 029 Serhiy Demchenko[28] Servant of the People
4 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South-East Kamianske 030 Hanna Lichman[28] Servant of the People
4 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South-East Kryvyi Rih-Ternivsky 031 Volodymyr Zakharchenko[28] Servant of the People
4 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South-East Kryvyi Rih-Dovhynetsky 032 Elena Krivoruchkina[29] Servant of the People
4 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South-East Kryvyi Rih-Tsentralnomisky 033 Yuriy Koryavchenkov[28] Servant of the People
4 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South-East Tsarychanka 034 Dmytro Chornyi[28] Servant of the People
4 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South-East Nikopol 035 Denys Herman[28] Servant of the People
4 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South-East Pavlohrad 036 Roman Kaptyelov[28] Servant of the People
4 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South-East Kryvyi Rih 037 Dmytro Shpenov[28] Independent
4 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South-East Novomoskovsk 038 Vladyslav Borodin[28] Servant of the People
4 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South-East Vasylkivka 039 Serhiy Severyn[28] Servant of the People
4 Dnipropetrovsk 17 South-East Marhanets 040 Oleksandr Trukhin[28] Servant of the People
5 Donetsk 21 South-East Donetsk-Budyonnivsky 041
5 Donetsk 21 South-East Donetsk-Voroshilovsky 042
5 Donetsk 21 South-East Donetsk-Lyeninsky 043
5 Donetsk 21 South-East Donetsk-Kirovsky 044
5 Donetsk 21 South-East Donetsk-Kyivsky 045 Musa Magomedov[28] Opposition Bloc
5 Donetsk 21 South-East Bakhmut 046 Fyodor Khristenko[28] Opposition Platform — For Life
5 Donetsk 21 South-East Sloviansk 047 Yuriy Solod[28] Opposition Platform — For Life
5 Donetsk 21 South-East Kramatorsk 048 Maksym Yefimov[28] Independent
5 Donetsk 21 South-East Kostiantynivka 049 Valeriy Gnatenko[28] Opposition Platform — For Life
5 Donetsk 21 South-East Pokrovsk 050 Ruslav Trebushkin[28] Opposition Bloc
5 Donetsk 21 South-East Horlivka 051 Oleksandr Kovalyov[28] Independent
5 Donetsk 21 South-East Toretsk 052 Yevhen Yakovenko[28] Fatherland
5 Donetsk 21 South-East Yenakiieve 053
5 Donetsk 21 South-East Shakhtarsk 054
5 Donetsk 21 South-East Makiivka-Hirnytsky 055
5 Donetsk 21 South-East Makiivka-Tsentralnomisky 056
5 Donetsk 21 South-East Mariupol-Kalmiuskyi 057 Vadim Novinskiy[29] Opposition Bloc
5 Donetsk 21 South-East Mariupol-Tsentralnyi 058 Sergei Magera[28] Opposition Bloc
5 Donetsk 21 South-East Marinka 059 Vladimir Moroz[28] Opposition Platform — For Life
5 Donetsk 21 South-East Volnovakha 060 Dmytro Lubinets[28] Independent
5 Donetsk 21 South-East Starobesheve 061
6 Zhytomyr 6 Central Zhytomyr 062 Ihor Herasymenko[28] Servant of the People
6 Zhytomyr 6 Central Berdychiv 063 Bohdan Kytsak[28] Servant of the People
6 Zhytomyr 6 Central Korosten 064 Volodymyr Areshonkov[28] Independent
6 Zhytomyr 6 Central Novohrad-Volynskyi 065 Dmytro Kostiuk[28] Servant of the People
6 Zhytomyr 6 Central Malyn 066 Tetiana Hryshchenko[28] Servant of the People
6 Zhytomyr 6 Central Chudniv 067 Serhiy Kuzminykh[28] Servant of the People
7 Zakarpattia 6 West Uzhhorod 068 Robert Horvat[28] Independent
7 Zakarpattia 6 West Mukacheve 069 Viktor Baloha[28] United Centre
7 Zakarpattia 6 West Svaliava 070 Mykhailo Laba[28] Servant of the People
7 Zakarpattia 6 West Khust 071 Valeriy Lunchenko[28] Independent
7 Zakarpattia 6 West Tiachiv 072 Vasyl Petyovka[28] Independent
7 Zakarpattia 6 West Vynohradiv 073 Vladislav Poliak[28] Independent
8 Zaporizhzhia 9 South-East Zaporizhzhia-Komunarskyi 074 Hennadiy Kasai[28] Servant of the People
8 Zaporizhzhia 9 South-East Zaporizhzhia-Dniprovskyi 075 Roman Sokha[28] Servant of the People
8 Zaporizhzhia 9 South-East Zaporizhzhia-Voznesenivskyi 076 Yevgeniy Shevchenko[28] Servant of the People
8 Zaporizhzhia 9 South-East Zaporizhzhia-Shevchenkivsky 077 Serhiy Shtepa[28] Servant of the People
8 Zaporizhzhia 9 South-East Berdiansk 078 Oleksandr Ponomariov[28] 48.51 Opposition Platform – For Life
8 Zaporizhzhia 9 South-East Vasylivka 079 Yulia Yatsyk[28] Servant of the People
8 Zaporizhzhia 9 South-East Melitopol 080 Serhiy Minko[28] 47.40 Independent
8 Zaporizhzhia 9 South-East Tokmak 081 Pavlo Melnyk[28] Servant of the People
8 Zaporizhzhia 9 South-East Polohy 082 Maryna Nikitina[28] Servant of the People
9 Ivano-Frankivsk 7 West Ivano-Frankivsk 083 Oksana Savchuk[28] Freedom
9 Ivano-Frankivsk 7 West Tysmenytsia 084 Ihor Fris[28] Servant of the People
9 Ivano-Frankivsk 7 West Kalush 085 Eduard Proshchuk[28] Servant of the People
9 Ivano-Frankivsk 7 West Dolyna 086 Oleksandr Matusevych[28] Servant of the People
9 Ivano-Frankivsk 7 West Nadvirna 087 Zinoviy Andriyovych[28] Servant of the People
9 Ivano-Frankivsk 7 West Kolomyia 088 Andriy Ivanchuk[28] Independent
9 Ivano-Frankivsk 7 West Sniatyn 089 Volodymyr Tymofiychuk[28] Servant of the People
10 Kyiv Oblast 9 Central Bila Tserkva 090 Mykola Babenko[28] Bila Tserkva United
10 Kyiv Oblast 9 Central Makariv 091 Oleh Dunda[28] Servant of the People
10 Kyiv Oblast 9 Central Uzyn 092 Valeriy Koliukh[28] Servant of the People
10 Kyiv Oblast 9 Central Myronivka 093 Anna Skorokhod[28] Servant of the People
10 Kyiv Oblast 9 Central Obukhiv 094 Oleksandr Dubinsky[28] Servant of the People
10 Kyiv Oblast 9 Central Irpin 095 Oleksandr Horobets[28] Servant of the People
10 Kyiv Oblast 9 Central Vyshhorod 096 Olha Vasylevska-Smahliuk[28] Servant of the People
10 Kyiv Oblast 9 Central Brovary 097 Mykola Halushko[28] Servant of the People
10 Kyiv Oblast 9 Central Yahotyn 098 Serhiy Bunin[28] Servant of the People
11 Kirovohrad 5 Central Kropyvnytskyi 099 Oleksandr Danutsa[28] Servant of the People
11 Kirovohrad 5 Central Bobrynets 100 Ihor Murdiy[28] Servant of the People
11 Kirovohrad 5 Central Holovanivsk 101 Yuriy Kuzbyt[28] Servant of the People
11 Kirovohrad 5 Central Znamianka 102 Oles Dovhyi[28] Independent
11 Kirovohrad 5 Central Oleksandriia 103 Oleh Voronko[28] Servant of the People
12 Luhansk 11 South-East Luhansk-Artemivsky 104
12 Luhansk 11 South-East Luhansk-Zhovtnevy 105 Viktoria Grib[28] Opposition Bloc
12 Luhansk 11 South-East Severodonetsk 106 Oleksiy Kuznyetsov[28] Servant of the People
12 Luhansk 11 South-East Lysychansk 107 Oleksandr Sukhov[28] Independent
12 Luhansk 11 South-East Krasnyi Luch 108
12 Luhansk 11 South-East Krasnodon 109
12 Luhansk 11 South-East Alchevsk 110
12 Luhansk 11 South-East Sverdlovsk 111
12 Luhansk 11 South-East Rubizhne 112 Serhiy Velmozhnyi[28] Independent
12 Luhansk 11 South-East Svatove 113 Aleksandr Lukashev[28] Opposition Platform – For Life
12 Luhansk 11 South-East Stanytsia Luhanska 114 Serhiy Shakhov[28] Independent
13 Lviv 12 West Lviv-Sykhivsky 115 Natalia Pipa[28] Holos
13 Lviv 12 West Lviv-Zaliznychny 116 Mykola Kniazhytskyi[28] European Solidarity
13 Lviv 12 West Lviv-Frankivsky 117 Yaroslav Rushchyshyn[28] Holos
13 Lviv 12 West Lviv-Lychakivsky 118 Halyna Vasylchenko[28] Holos
13 Lviv 12 West Brody 119 Mykhailo Bondar[28] European Solidarity
13 Lviv 12 West Horodok 120 Yaroslav Dubnevych[28] Independent
13 Lviv 12 West Drohobych 121 Orest Salamakha[28] Servant of the People
13 Lviv 12 West Yavoriv 122 Pavlo Bakunets[28] Self Reliance
13 Lviv 12 West Peremyshliany 123 Taras Batenko[28] Independent
13 Lviv 12 West Sokal 124 Yuriy Kamelchuk[28] Servant of the People
13 Lviv 12 West Staryi Sambir 125 Andriy Lopushanskyi[28] Independent
13 Lviv 12 West Stryy 126 Andriy Kit[28] Independent
14 Mykolaiv 6 South-East Mykolaiv-Zavodsky 127 Oleksandr Pasichnyi[28] Servant of the People
14 Mykolaiv 6 South-East Mykolaiv-Inhulskyi 128 Oleksandr Haidu[28] Servant of the People
14 Mykolaiv 6 South-East Mykolaiv-Tsentralny 129 Ihor Kopytin[28] Servant of the People
14 Mykolaiv 6 South-East Bashtanka 130 Ihor Nehulevskyi[28] Servant of the People
14 Mykolaiv 6 South-East Voznesensk 131 Artem Chornomorov[28] Servant of the People
14 Mykolaiv 6 South-East Pervomaisk 132 Maksym Dyrdin[28] Servant of the People
15 Odesa 11 South-East Odesa-Kyivsky 133 Artem Dmytruk[28] Servant of the People
15 Odesa 11 South-East Odesa-Malynovsky 134 Oleh Koliev[28] Servant of the People
15 Odesa 11 South-East Odesa-Prymorsky 135 Oleksiy Leonov[28] Servant of the People
15 Odesa 11 South-East Odesa-Suvorovsky 136 Oleksandr Horeniuk[28] Servant of the People
15 Odesa 11 South-East Podilsk 137 Oleksiy Honcharenko[28] Independent
15 Odesa 11 South-East Shyriaieve 138 Stepan Cherniavskyi[28] Servant of the People
15 Odesa 11 South-East Rozdilna 139 Ihor Vasylkovskyi[28] Servant of the People
15 Odesa 11 South-East Biliaivka 140 Serhiy Koleboshyn[28] Servant of the People
15 Odesa 11 South-East Tatarbunary 141 Oleksandr Tkachenko (uk)[28] Servant of the People
15 Odesa 11 South-East Artsyz 142 Anton Kisse[28] Independent
15 Odesa 11 South-East Izmail 143 Anatoliy Urbanskyi[28] Independent
16 Poltava 8 Central Poltava-Shevchenkivskyi 144 Dmytro Naliotov[28] Servant of the People
16 Poltava 8 Central Poltava-Kyivsky 145 Andriy Bobliakh[28] Servant of the People
16 Poltava 8 Central Kremenchuk 146 Yuriy Shapovalov[28] Independent
16 Poltava 8 Central Myrhorod 147 Oleh Kulinich[28] Independent
16 Poltava 8 Central Lubny 148 Anastasia Liasheno[28] Servant of the People
16 Poltava 8 Central Karlivka 149 Kostiantyn Kasai[28] Servant of the People
16 Poltava 8 Central Horishni Plavni 150 Oleksiy Movchan[28] Servant of the People
16 Poltava 8 Central Lokhvytsia 151 Maksym Berezin[28] Servant of the People
17 Rivne 5 West Rivne 152 Oleksandr Kovalchuk[28] Servant of the People
17 Rivne 5 West Ostroh 153 Roman Ivanisov[28] Servant of the People
17 Rivne 5 West Dubno 154 Oleksandr Aliksiychuk[28] Servant of the People
17 Rivne 5 West Dubrovytsia 155 Viktor Mialyk[28] Independent
17 Rivne 5 West Sarny 156 Serhiy Lytvynenko[28] Servant of the People
18 Sumy 6 Central Sumy 157 Tetiana Riabukha[28] Servant of the People
18 Sumy 6 Central Bilopillia 158 Ihor Vasyliev[28] Servant of the People
18 Sumy 6 Central Hlukhiv 159 Andriy Derkach[28] Independent
18 Sumy 6 Central Shostka 160 Ihor Molotok[28] Independent
18 Sumy 6 Central Romny 161 Maksym Huzenko[28] Servant of the People
18 Sumy 6 Central Okhtyrka 162 Mykola Zadorozhniy[28] Servant of the People
19 Ternopil 5 West Ternopil 163 Andriy Bohdanets[28] Servant of the People
19 Ternopil 5 West Zbarazh 164 Ihor Vasyliv[28] Servant of the People
19 Ternopil 5 West Zboriv 165 Ivan Chaikivskyi[28] Independent
19 Ternopil 5 West Terebovlya 166 Mykola Liushniak[28] Independent
19 Ternopil 5 West Chortkiv 167 Volodymyr Hevko[29] Servant of the People
20 Kharkiv 14 South-East Kharkiv-Shevchenkivskyi 168 Maria Mezentseva[28] Servant of the People
20 Kharkiv 14 South-East Kharkiv-Kyivsky 169 Oleksandr Kunytskyi[28] Servant of the People
20 Kharkiv 14 South-East Kharkiv-Moskovsky 170 Andriy Odarchenko[28] Servant of the People
20 Kharkiv 14 South-East Kharkiv-Nemyshlyanskyi 171 Viktoria Kinzburska[28] Servant of the People
20 Kharkiv 14 South-East Kharkiv-Industrialnyi 172 Yuriy Zdebskyi[28] Servant of the People
20 Kharkiv 14 South-East Kharkiv-Slobidskyi 173 Oleksandr Bakumov[28] Servant of the People
20 Kharkiv 14 South-East Kharkiv-Kholodnohirskyi 174 Oleksandr Feldman[28] Independent
20 Kharkiv 14 South-East Derhachi 175 Yevhen Pyvovarov[28] Servant of the People
20 Kharkiv 14 South-East Chuhuiv 176 Dmitriy Shentsev[28] Opposition Block
20 Kharkiv 14 South-East Kupiansk 177 Dmytro Liubota[28] Servant of the People
20 Kharkiv 14 South-East Balakliia 178 Oleksandr Litvinov[28] Servant of the People
20 Kharkiv 14 South-East Krasnohrad 179 Oleksiy Kucher[28]/
Yuliya Svitlychna (15 March 2020 by-election)[30]
77.54%
(Svitlychna)
Servant of the People/
Independent (Svitlychna)
20 Kharkiv 14 South-East Zolochiv 180 Oleksiy Krasov[28] Servant of the People
20 Kharkiv 14 South-East Zmiiv 181 Dmytro Mykysha[28] Servant of the People
21 Kherson 5 South-East Kherson-Suvorovsky 182 Pavlo Pavlish[28] Servant of the People
21 Kherson 5 South-East Kherson-Korabelnyi 183 Viktoria Vahnier[28] Servant of the People
21 Kherson 5 South-East Nova Kakhovka 184 Viktor Kolykhayev[28] Independent
21 Kherson 5 South-East Kakhovka 185 Volodymyr Ivanov (uk)[28] Servant of the People
21 Kherson 5 South-East Oleshky 186 Oleksiy Kovaliov[28] Servant of the People
22 Khmelnytskyi 7 Central Khmelnytskyi 187 Mykola Stefanchuk[28] Servant of the People
22 Khmelnytskyi 7 Central Khmelnytskyi (and vicinity) 188 Serhiy Labaziuk[28] Independent
22 Khmelnytskyi 7 Central Krasyliv 189 Olena Kopanchuk[28] Servant of the People
22 Khmelnytskyi 7 Central Shepetivka 190 Oleksii Zhmerenetskyi[28] Servant of the People
22 Khmelnytskyi 7 Central Starokostiantyniv 191 Viktor Bondar[28] Independent
22 Khmelnytskyi 7 Central Dunaivtsi 192 Oleksandr Hereha[28] Independent
22 Khmelnytskyi 7 Central Kamianets-Podilskyi 193 Ihor Marchuk[28] Servant of the People
23 Cherkasy 7 Central Cherkasy-Prydniprovsky 194 Liubov Shpak[28] Servant of the People
23 Cherkasy 7 Central Cherkasy-Sosnivsky 195 Oleh Arseniuk[28] Servant of the People
23 Cherkasy 7 Central Korsun-Shevchenkivskyi 196 Andriy Strikharskyi[28] Servant of the People
23 Cherkasy 7 Central Kaniv 197 Oleksandr Skichko[28] Servant of the People
23 Cherkasy 7 Central Smila 198 Serhiy Rudyk[28] Independent
23 Cherkasy 7 Central Zhashkiv 199 Serhiy Nahorniak (uk)[28] Servant of the People
23 Cherkasy 7 Central Uman 200 Anton Yatsenko[28] Independent
24 Chernivtsi 4 West Chernivtsi 201 Olena Lys[28] Servant of the People
24 Chernivtsi 4 West Storozhynets 202 Maksym Zaremskyi[28] Servant of the People
24 Chernivtsi 4 West Novoselytsia 203 Heorhiy Mazurashu[28] Servant of the People
24 Chernivtsi 4 West Khotyn 204 Valeriy Bozhyk[28] Servant of the People
25 Chernihiv 6 Central Chernihiv-Desnyansky 205 Oleh Seminskyi[28] Servant of the People
25 Chernihiv 6 Central Chernihiv-Novozavodsky 206 Anton Poliakov[28] Servant of the People
25 Chernihiv 6 Central Koriukivka 207 Maksym Zuyev[28] Servant of the People
25 Chernihiv 6 Central Bakhmach 208 Valeriy Davydenko[28] Independent
25 Chernihiv 6 Central Nizhyn 209 Valeriy Zub[28] Servant of the People
25 Chernihiv 6 Central Pryluky 210 Serhiy Korovchenko[28] Independent
26 Kyiv City 13 Central Kyiv-Holosiyivsky 211 Oleksandr Yurchenko[28] Servant of the People
26 Kyiv City 13 Central Kyiv-Darnytsky 212 Maksym Perebyinis[28] Servant of the People
26 Kyiv City 13 Central Kyiv-Desnyansky 213 Artem Dubnov[28] Servant of the People
26 Kyiv City 13 Central Kyiv-Dniprovsky 214 Serhiy Shvets[28] Servant of the People
26 Kyiv City 13 Central Kyiv-Desnyansky (minor Dniprovsky) 215 Bohdan Yaremenko[28] Servant of the People
26 Kyiv City 13 Central Kyiv-Dniprovsky (minor Darnytsky) 216 Lesia Zaburanna[28] Servant of the People
26 Kyiv City 13 Central Kyiv-Obolonsky 217 Mariana Bezuhla[28] Servant of the People
26 Kyiv City 13 Central Kyiv-Svyatoshynsky (minor Obolonsky) 218 Dmytro Hurin[28] Servant of the People
26 Kyiv City 13 Central Kyiv-Svyatoshynsky 219 Mykola Tyshchenko[28] Servant of the People
26 Kyiv City 13 Central Kyiv-Podilsky 220 Hanna Bondar[28] Servant of the People
26 Kyiv City 13 Central Kyiv-Pechersky 221 Anna Purtova[29] Servant of the People
26 Kyiv City 13 Central Kyiv-Solomyansky 222 Roman Hryshchuk[28] Servant of the People
26 Kyiv City 13 Central Kyiv-Shevchenkivsky 223 Liudmila Buymister[28] Servant of the People
27 Sevastopol 2 South-East Sevastopol-Gagarinsky 224
27 Sevastopol 2 South-East Sevastopol-Leninsky 225

Notes: 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).

About 80 percent of the elected candidates had never been elected to parliament; 83 deputies managed to get reelected from the previous parliament and 13 deputies from earlier convocations.[3] All deputies from Servant of the People were political newcomers.[3] 61 percent of the new MPs had never before been engaged in politics.[3]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ 26 seats were in occupied areas where elections could not take place.

References

  1. ^ Указ Президента України №303/2019 [Decree of the President of Ukraine No. 303/2019]. Official internet site of the President of Ukraine (in Ukrainian). 21 May 2019. Archived from the original on 21 May 2019. Retrieved 6 July 2019.
  2. ^ a b "Ukrainian Constitutional Court OKs Parliament's Dissolution, Early Elections". Radio Free Europe. 20 June 2019. Archived from the original on 25 November 2021. Retrieved 6 July 2019.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Who Is Who in the Ukrainian Parliament? Archived 25 April 2021 at the Wayback Machine, Carnegie Europe (24 September 2019)
  4. ^ a b Vuyets, Pavlo (11 June 2019). Виборів не буде? Над чим чаклує Конституційний суд [There will be no elections? What the Constitutional Court is conjuring]. glavcom.ua (in Ukrainian). Archived from the original on 13 July 2019. Retrieved 13 July 2019.
  5. ^ Sazonov, Kyrylo (5 June 2019). Конституційний суд до кінця червня вирішить чи був законним указ Зеленського про розпуск Ради [By the end of June, the Constitutional Court will decide whether Zelensky's decree on the dissolution of the Council was lawful]. glavcom.ua (in Ukrainian). Archived from the original on 13 July 2019. Retrieved 13 July 2019.
  6. ^ КСУ визнав конституційним указ Зеленського про розпуск Ради [The Constitutional Court recognised Zelensky's constitutional decree to dissolve the Council] (in Ukrainian). www.unian.ua. 20 June 2019. Archived from the original on 21 June 2019. Retrieved 14 July 2019.
  7. ^ "Presidential Administration in Ukraine says move to dissolve Rada legally correct". UNIAN. 16 June 2019. Archived from the original on 15 March 2022. Retrieved 14 July 2019.
  8. ^ "Five political forces sign coalition agreement". Interfax-Ukraine. 21 November 2014. Archived from the original on 14 July 2019. Retrieved 14 July 2019.
    "Ukraine's parliamentary parties initial coalition agreement". Interfax-Ukraine. 21 November 2014. Archived from the original on 15 March 2022. Retrieved 14 July 2019.
  9. ^ Krasnolutska, Daryna; Verbyany, Volodymyr (1 September 2015). "Ukraine Radical Party Quits Ruling Coalition After Deadly Clash". Bloomberg News. Archived from the original on 7 January 2016. Retrieved 14 July 2019.
  10. ^ "Ukraine Economy Minister decides to resign". UNIAN. 3 February 2016. Archived from the original on 14 July 2019. Retrieved 14 July 2019.
  11. ^ "Samopomich pulls out from ruling coalition in parliament". Interfax-Ukraine. 18 February 2016. Archived from the original on 25 February 2016. Retrieved 14 July 2019.
    "Самопоміч" виходить із коаліції ["Self-help" emerges from the coalition] (in Ukrainian). Ukrainska Pravda. 18 February 2016. Archived from the original on 25 February 2016. Retrieved 14 July 2019.
    "Batkivschyna faction pulls out of coalition". UNIAN. 17 February 2016. Archived from the original on 22 April 2019. Retrieved 14 July 2019.
    Goncharova, Olena (17 February 2016). "Batkivshchyna faction leaves ruling coalition". Kyiv Post. Archived from the original on 17 February 2016. Retrieved 14 July 2019.
  12. ^ "Ukraine MPs approve Volodymyr Groysman as new PM". BBC News. 14 April 2016. Archived from the original on 15 March 2022. Retrieved 14 April 2016.
  13. ^ a b Pryshliak, Nadia (29 September 2016). "Electoral dead-end for Rada". UNIAN. Archived from the original on 8 November 2020. Retrieved 6 July 2019.
  14. ^ "Parliament passes law on parliamentary elections". Kyiv Post. Interfax-Ukraine. 17 November 2011. Archived from the original on 9 August 2012. Retrieved 6 July 2019.
  15. ^ The Law of Ukraine No. 4061-VI, Enacted November 17, 2011: On Election of the People's Deputies [Unofficial translation by the International Foundation for Electoral Systems (IFES) Ukraine Electoral Law Reform Program) (PDF) (Report). 17 November 2011. Archived from the original on 16 November 2018. Retrieved 7 July 2019.
  16. ^ Kramar, Oleksandr (5 November 2012). "The Distorted Will of the People". The Ukrainian Week. Archived from the original on 7 July 2019. Retrieved 7 July 2019.
  17. ^ a b c d До Верховної Ради балотуються 5845 кандидатів [5845 candidates are running for the Verkhovna Rada]. glavcom.ua (in Ukrainian). 26 June 2019. Archived from the original on 7 June 2020. Retrieved 7 July 2019.
  18. ^ The Rada canceled the state financing of political parties that lost elections (Рада скасувала держфінансування партій, які програли вибори) Archived 31 December 2019 at the Wayback Machine. RBC-Ukraine. 2 October 2019
  19. ^ Fesenko, Volodymyr (11 June 2019). Дневник парламентских выборов-2019 (30 мая – 10 июня 2019 г.) [Diary of the parliamentary elections-2019 (30 May – 10 June 2019)] (in Russian). Ukrainska Pravda. Archived from the original on 17 July 2019. Retrieved 14 July 2019.
  20. ^ Выборы в Верховную Раду 2019 [Elections to Verkhovna Rada]. fakty.com.ua (in Ukrainian). 12 July 2019. Archived from the original on 7 June 2020. Retrieved 12 July 2019.
  21. ^ a b Зеленский экстренно собирает Раду 22 мая [Zelensky urgently assembles Rada on 22 May] (in Russian). hromadske.ua. 22 May 2019. Archived from the original on 22 May 2019. Retrieved 14 July 2019.
  22. ^ Тимошенко выступила против выборов с открытыми списками [Tymoshenko has opposed open-list elections]. focus.ua (in Ukrainian). 7 April 2014. Archived from the original on 14 July 2019. Retrieved 14 July 2019.
  23. ^ "Ukraine's Rada fails to vote for election law amendments". www.unian.info. 22 May 2019. Archived from the original on 8 November 2020. Retrieved 14 July 2019.
  24. ^ Хто йде на вибори в Раду: список партій [Who is in the Rada elections: the list of parties] (in Ukrainian). rbc.ua. 26 June 2019. Archived from the original on 19 July 2019. Retrieved 19 July 2019.
  25. ^ Партія Саакашвілі братиме участь у виборах до Ради: вже відомо під яким номером [The Saakashvili party will take part in the elections to the Rada: their number is already known] (in Ukrainian). 24tv.ua. 1 July 2019. Archived from the original on 5 July 2019. Retrieved 19 July 2019.
  26. ^ "2012 Parliamentary Elections Boundary Delimitation Summary and Analysis" (PDF). International Foundation for Electoral Systems. May 2012. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 September 2014.
  27. ^ a b c "Extraordinary parliamentary election on 26.10.2014". Central Election Commission (Ukraine). 2014. Archived from the original on 29 October 2014. Retrieved 21 July 2019.
    Парламентські вибори - Результати - Кандидати на мажоритарних округах [Parliamentary Elections - Results - Candidates in Majority Districts] (in Ukrainian). RBK Ukraine. Archived from the original on 5 February 2015.
  28. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci cj ck cl cm cn co cp cq cr cs ct cu cv cw cx cy cz da db dc dd de df dg dh di dj dk dl dm dn do dp dq dr ds dt du dv dw dx dy dz ea eb ec ed ee ef eg eh ei ej ek el em en eo ep eq er es et eu ev ew ex ey ez fa fb fc fd fe ff fg fh fi fj fk fl fm fn fo fp fq fr fs ft fu fv fw fx fy fz ga gb gc gd ge gf gg gh gi gj gk gl Results Archived 14 August 2019 at the Wayback Machine. Ukrainska Pravda.
  29. ^ a b c d e ЦИК начал публиковать первые результаты выборов [The CEC has begun to publish the first election results] (in Russian). ura-inform.com. 21 July 2019. Archived from the original on 22 July 2019. Retrieved 23 July 2019.
  30. ^ "Вибори на 179 окрузі: попередньо Світлична перемагає". Archived from the original on 25 April 2020. Retrieved 21 March 2020.

External links

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