The People's Deputies of Ukraine of the 6th convocation were elected in the snap parliamentary elections on September 30, 2007. The elections were held under the proportional system according to electoral lists of political parties and electoral blocks of political parties in Ukraine. [1]
According to the results of early elections the following political forces got in the Verkhovna Rada:
Together, these political forces gathered around 88.58% of the votes. All other political parties and blocks do not pass the electoral threshold of 3%. 2,73% of electors voted "against all".
The Party of Regions was allocated 175 seats in the parliament.
Members that replaced the initially elected deputies who were dismissed from the position of People's Deputy of Ukraine.
List Number | Full Name | Party affiliation at elections | Party affiliation afterwards | Time in parliament | Other |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
176 | Serhiy Ryzhuk | Party of Regions | Party of Regions | 11/2007-04/2010 | |
177 | Oleksiy Fedun | not affiliated | 05/2008–present | ||
178 | Hennadiy Samofalov | Party of Regions | 02/2009–present | ||
179 | Tamara Yehorenko | Party of Regions | 02/2010–present | ||
180 | Petro Melnyk | Party of Regions | 03/2010–present | ||
181 | Yuriy Boldyryev | Party of Regions | 03/2010–present | ||
182 | Maksym Lutsky | Party of Regions | 03/2010–present | ||
183 | Oleh Nadosha | Party of Regions | 03/2010–present | ||
184 | Valeriy Kelestyn | not affiliated | 03/2010–present | ||
185 | Volodymyr Oliynyk | Party of Regions | 03/2010–present | ||
186 | Volodymyr Tolstenko | Party of Regions | 03/2010–present | ||
187 | Oleksiy Boyarchuk | Party of Regions | 03/2010-02/2011 | ||
188 | Oleksandr Kozub | Party of Regions | 03/2010–present | ||
189 | Serhiy Maiboroda | Party of Regions | 03/2010–present | ||
190 | Hryhoriy Kaletnik | Party of Regions | 03/2010–present | ||
192 | Vasyl Stelmashenko | Party of Regions | 03/2010–present | Deputy General director of "TEKh PROM" | |
193 | Oleksandr Zats | Party of Regions | 03/2010–present | ||
195 | Volodymyr Lychuk | Party of Regions | 03/2010–present | ||
196 | Vladyslav Zabarsky | Party of Regions | 03/2010–present | ||
198 | Andriy Pinchuk | Party of Regions | 03/2010–present | ||
199 | Anatoiy Horbatyuk | Party of Regions | 03/2010–present | ||
200 | Vitaliy Zablotsky | Party of Regions | 03/2010–present | ||
201 | Vasyl Chudnov | Party of Regions | 03/2010–present | Deputy director of "Halychynabud" | |
202 | Yuriy Chmyr | Party of Regions | 03/2010-04/2010 | ||
203 | Oleksiy Kunchenko | Party of Regions | 03/2010–present | ||
204 | Denys Omelianovych | Party of Regions | 03/2010–present | General director of "APK-INVEST" | |
205 | Vasyl Demchyshyn | Party of Regions | 04/2010–present | ||
206 | Orest Muts | Party of Regions | 04/2010–present | ||
207 | Mykola Romanyuk | Party of Regions | 04/2010–present | ||
208 | Petro Tsyurko | Party of Regions | 04/2010–present | ||
209 | Serhiy Husarov | Party of Regions | 04/2010–present | ||
210 | Serhiy Vasyutin | not affiliated | 04/2010–present | Chief governor of "Ukrtransleasing" | |
211 | Oleksandr Yehorov | Party of Regions | 04/2010–present | Chairman of Board of Supervisors of "Aktyv-Bank" | |
212 | Vadym Stolar | not affiliated | 04/2010–present | Director of Trade House "Revival" | |
214 | Yulia Kovalevska | Party of Regions | 04/2010–present | ||
215 | Oleksandr Kasyanyuk | Party of Regions | 04/2010–present | ||
216 | Volodymyr Zubanov | Party of Regions | 04/2010–present | ||
217 | Oleksandr Kyrychok | Party of Regions | 05/2010–present | Chairman of Board of Supervisors of "Eurocomplex" | |
218 | Leonid Isayev | Party of Regions | 05/2010–present | ||
219 | Serhiy Andros | Party of Regions | 02/2011–present | ||
220 | Anatoliy Stepanenko | Party of Regions | 02/2011–present | ||
221 | Volodymyr Litvinov | Party of Regions | 02/2011–present | ||
222 | Vasyl Yevtukhov | Party of Regions | 02/2011–present | ||
223 | Pavlo Soltus | Party of Regions | 02/2011–present | ||
224 | Ihor Zvarych | Party of Regions | 02/2011–present | ||
226 | Olena Netetska | Party of Regions | 02/2011–present | ||
227 | Serhiy Pachesyuk | Party of Regions | 05/2011–present | ||
228 | Serhiy Baranov-Mokhort | Party of Regions | 05/2011–present | Deputy director of "Pro-Line Group" | |
229 | Borys Bilash | Party of Regions | 02/2012–present | ||
230 | Vitaliy Zhuravsky | not affiliated | 04/2012–present |
The Our Ukraine–People's Self-Defense Bloc was an electoral alliance active in Ukraine from 2001 until 2012, associated with former President Viktor Yushchenko. Since 2005, the bloc had been dominated by a core consisting of the People's Union "Our Ukraine" party and five smaller partner parties. On 17 November 2011, the Ukrainian Parliament approved an election law that banned the participation of blocs of political parties in parliamentary elections. Since then several members of the Bloc have since merged with other parties.
The Yulia Tymoshenko Bloc was the name of the bloc of political parties in Ukraine led by Yulia Tymoshenko since 2001. In November 2011, the participation of blocs of political parties in parliamentary elections was banned. The core party of the alliance, Batkivshchyna, remained a major force in Ukrainian politics.
Elections in Ukraine are held to choose the president, Verkhovna Rada (legislature), and local governments. Referendums may be held on special occasions. Ukraine has a multi-party system, with numerous parties in which often not a single party has a chance of gaining power alone, and parties must work with each other to form coalition governments.
The Party of Regions is a banned pro-Russian political party in Ukraine formed in late 1997 that became the largest party in Ukraine between 2006 and 2014.
The Congress of Ukrainian Nationalists is a far-right political party in Ukraine. It was founded on October 18, 1992, and registered with the Ministry of Justice on January 26, 1993. The party leader from its formation until her death in 2003 was Yaroslava Stetsko.
European Solidarity is a political party in Ukraine. It has its roots in a parliamentary group called Solidarity dating from 2000 and has existed since in various forms as a political outlet for Petro Poroshenko. The party with its then name Petro Poroshenko Bloc won 132 of the 423 contested seats in the 2014 Ukrainian parliamentary election, more than any other party.
Strong Ukraine ; formerly the Labour Party Ukraine, is a political party in Ukraine that was re-established in April 2014. It was originally registered in August 1999 and dissolved in March 2012 after it had merged with the Party of Regions on 17 March 2012. Since late 2009 the party was and is the main vehicle of billionaire Serhiy Tihipko. After the parties merger Tihipko became a member of the Party of Regions. On 7 April 2014 the political council of this party expelled Tihipko from the Party of Regions.
Republican Platform is a political party in Ukraine. It was the first registered political party in Ukraine, created on November 5, 1990 by the Ministry of Justice of UkrSSR. RP was founded earlier that year in place of the Ukrainian Helsinki Group in April 1990.
Parliamentary elections were held in Ukraine on 26 March 2006. Election campaigning officially began on 7 July 2005. Between November 26 and 31 December 2005 party lists of candidates were formed.
The Lytvyn Bloc, formerly Lytvyn's People's Bloc, was a centrist political alliance in Ukraine from 2006 till 2012 led by Volodymyr Lytvyn. It is one of successors of the previous political alliance For United Ukraine which fell apart after Party of Regions left it. In 2007, the bloc surprisingly managed to return to parliament as a union of the People's Party and the Labour Party. According to Lytvyn the party had 400,000 members in October 2009.
The Opposition Bloc "Ne Tak", is a former pro-Russian political alliance in Ukraine. One of the leaders of the alliance was Viktor Medvedchuk.
Early parliamentary elections were held in Ukraine on 30 September 2007. The election date was determined following agreement between the President Viktor Yushchenko, the Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych and the Chairman of the Verkhovna Rada Oleksandr Moroz on 27 May 2007, in an attempt to resolve the political crisis in Ukraine triggered by the 2 April 2007 presidential decree on dissolution of Ukraine's parliament.
The European Party of Ukraine is a Ukrainian political party registered by the Ministry of Justice on August 3, 2006. Its ideology is social-liberalism, when the state should maintain harmonious social relations: create appropriate conditions for free competition, to prevent the formation of market monopolies and protect the vulnerable population strata. They advocate reforms that they claim will increase social standards of life of Ukrainians to the European level. They support integration of Ukraine into the European Union. Initially, the party was headed by Mykola Moskalenko. In August 2013 the party had more than 5,000 members. The party did not take part in national elections since 2012.
The Ukrainian Democratic Alliance for Reform of Vitali Klitschko is a political party in Ukraine headed by retired Ukrainian professional heavyweight boxer and the WBC world heavyweight champion emeritus Vitali Klitschko. The party has been an observer member of the European People's Party (EPP) since 2013.
The Information Ukraine is a political party in Ukraine registered in March 2005.
Snap parliamentary elections were held in Ukraine on 26 October 2014 to elect members of the Verkhovna Rada. President Petro Poroshenko had pressed for early parliamentary elections since his victory in the presidential elections in May. The July breakup of the ruling coalition gave him the right to dissolve the parliament, so on 25 August 2014 he announced the early election.
The Opposition Bloc was a pro-Russian political party in Ukraine that was founded in 2014 by the merger of six parties that did not endorse Euromaidan. Legally, the party was created by renaming the lesser-known party "Leading Force". The party was perceived as the successor of the disbanded Party of Regions.
Opposition Bloc, formerly called Opposition Bloc — Party for Peace and Development until June 2019, was a Ukrainian political party that was founded in 2019. On 8 June 2022, the party was banned in court. The party officially ceased to exist on 25 July, due to not appealing the ban.