September 30, 2007
Ukraine: Playing The Populist Card In Parliamentary Elections
by Jan Maksymiuk
Prime Minister and Party of Regions leader Viktor Yanukovych voting today in Kyiv (AFP)
If Ukrainians are to believe the promises made by the parties participating in early parliamentary elections on September 30, their lives should improve regardless of who wins. The major players in the polls all made generous pledges to the electorate. The question is how they plan to overcome the mathematical impossibility of paying for all that was promised.
September 30, 2007 (RFE/RL) -- There were three clear front-runners among the 20 parties and blocs registered for the balloting. They are the ruling Party of Regions led by Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych, as well as the pro-presidential Our Ukraine-People's Self-Defense bloc and the Yulia Tymoshenko Bloc -- two former allies in the 2004 Orange Revolution.
Opinion polls suggested that none of the three forces was set to win an outright majority in the 450-seat Verkhovna Rada. They also indicated that, as in the March 2006 elections, the Party of Regions' performance will likely be matched by Our Ukraine-People's Self Defense and the Yulia Tymoshenko Bloc combined.
Difference Makers
If such predictions turn out to be true, the fate of a future ruling coalition might hinge on the performance of two other parties that pollsters envisioned being in the next parliament: the Communist Party and the Lytvyn Bloc. Most polls forecast that the Socialist Party, which won 5.7 percent of the vote in 2006, would not overcome the 3-percent threshold for parliamentary representation this time around.
In contrast to the 2004 presidential and 2006 parliamentary elections, traditionally divisive foreign-policy thorns like Ukraine's potential NATO membership or domestic irritants like making Russian the second state language were conspicuously muted or even eliminated as campaign issues.
Instead, the election front-runners focused on outdistancing one another in promises of socioeconomic windfalls.
Four expenditure items are present in the election manifestos of each of the three front-runners: substantial payments to families bringing new Ukrainians into the world and monthly child support as a way to reverse the country's demographic decline; an increase in student allowances and stipends; the development of rural areas; and a considerable increase in military spending as part of the effort to develop a professional army.
Unfulfillable Promises?
In addition, each party added its own unique promises to the mix. For example, the Our Ukraine-People's Self-Defense wants to increase the minimum wage and the average monthly wage by some 60 percent in 2008.
The Yulia Tymoshenko Bloc vows to return, within two years, more than $25 billion of savings lost by Ukrainians as a result of the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. A somewhat more realistic -- and no less populist -- goal is the solemn vow of both the current parliamentary opposition and the ruling coalition to cancel parliamentary immunity from prosecution, which is widely seen in Ukraine as a shield for corrupt politicians.
But even on this tricky constitutional issue, the Ukrainian political class could not avoid inflating the situation in an effort to garner cheap applause.
President Yushchenko, flanked by his wife and daughter, votes today in Kyiv (AFP)
The proposal to strip lawmakers of immunity initially came from President Viktor Yushchenko and the Our Ukraine-People's Self-Defense. But this sound idea was subsequently blunted by the ruling coalition through their calls for the abolition of immunity not just for legislators, but also for the president, the prime minister, and other high-ranking officials, including judges.