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All 450 (possibly 300) [1] seats in the Verkhovna Rada 226 (possibly 151) [1] seats needed for a majority | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The next Ukrainian parliamentary election will be a general countrywide election of members of the Ukrainian parliament that will take place after the end of the Russo-Ukrainian War. [2] According to the Ukrainian electoral code, [3] the electoral process should start within a month from the cancellation of the state of martial law that was introduced in 2022 following the Russian invasion. The previous parliamentary election in Ukraine was held on 21 July 2019. [4]
The previous parliamentary elections in 2019 were snap ones, called in July instead of the regular constitutionally-prescribed late October date. The first meeting of the elected deputies took place on 29 August 2019. [5] According to Article 77 of the Constitution, regular elections to the Verkhovna Rada (the parliament of Ukraine) take place on the last Sunday of October of the fifth year of parliamentary powers. Thus, if not for the war, the regular parliamentary elections would have taken place on 29 October 2023. [6] [7]
Ukrainian martial law does not allow the holding of elections while the state of martial law is in effect. [8] This provision is stated in Article 19 of the law adopted in 2015; [9] the same provision was stated in Article 19 of the previous law adopted in 2000. [10] Martial law in Ukraine has been in effect since 24 February 2022, in response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine. [11] Electoral rights are not listed in Article 64 of the Constitution among the rights and freedoms that cannot be withheld in the state of martial law. [12]
According to Article 83 of the Constitution, if the five-year authority of the Verkhovna Rada expires while martial law is in effect, its authority is extended until the first meeting of Verkhovna Rada of next convocation elected after the cancellation of the state of martial law. [12]
A survey conducted by Razumkov Centre in September 2023 showed that only 15% of those surveyed supported holding elections during wartime, while 64% were against. [13] In a survey conducted by Rating for the International Republican Institute, 62% replied that considering the war, if a decision about the necessity of elections is to be made, the elections should begin to be held only after the war, even if this means waiting even longer [than March 2025]. [14]
In 2021, there were rumors that President Volodymyr Zelenskyy would call for snap elections in 2021, but also that he could use a provision to "collide" parliament's term with the 2024 Ukrainian presidential election. [15]
On 22 June 2023, President Zelenskyy announced that the elections will not be held as scheduled in 2023 due to ongoing martial law, and will be held in 2024 only if martial law is ended by then. [16] On 17 August 2023, martial law was extended for a further 90 days until 15 November 2023, which means the election could not take place on 29 October 2023 as originally planned. [17] In November 2023 all political parties represented in the Verkhovna Rada signed a memorandum in which they agreed to postpone holding elections until after martial law has ended. [18]
On 1 January 2020 the latest revision of the electoral code of Ukraine took effect. It states that all deputies are elected on a party list in one nationwide constituency with a 5% election threshold with open regional lists of candidates for deputies. [19] The new election law abolishes the single-member constituency system used since the 2012 parliamentary election. [lower-alpha 1] Under the previous system, the 450 members of the Verkhovna Rada were elected by two methods; 225 by closed list proportional representation in a nationwide constituency with a 5% threshold, and 225 in single-member constituencies by first-past-the-post voting. [21]
On 4 February 2020, the parliament approved in the first reading (with 236 votes) a presidential bill to reduce the number of parliamentary deputies from 450 to 300. [1] To do so, the Ukrainian Constitution needs to be altered, and this will require at least 300 parliamentary votes. [1]
The table below lists parties currently represented in the Verkhovna Rada. [22]
Parties | Leader(s) | Parliamentary leader(s) | Ideology | Position | Seats | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Last election | Before election | ||||||
Servant of the People | Olena Shuliak | Davyd Arakhamia | Centrism | Centre | 254 / 450 | 235 / 450 | |
European Solidarity | Petro Poroshenko | Iryna Herashchenko Artur Herasymov | Liberal conservatism | Centre-right | 25 / 450 | 27 / 450 | |
Batkivshchyna | Yulia Tymoshenko | Conservatism | Centre-right | 26 / 450 | 24 / 450 | ||
Platform for Life and Peace | Yuriy Boyko | Social democracy [23] | Centre-left | Did not exist | 22 / 450 | ||
Holos | Kira Rudyk | Oleksandra Ustinova | Liberalism | Centre-right | 20 / 450 | 20 / 450 | |
Dovira | Olena Kyivets | Oleh Kulinich | Regionalism | Centre | Did not exist | 19 / 450 | |
For the Future | Ihor Palytsia | Taras Batenko | Populism | Centre-right | Did not exist | 17 / 450 | |
Restoration of Ukraine | Antonina Slavytska | Did not exist | 16 / 450 |
Parties | Leader(s) | Parliamentary leader(s) | Ideology | Position | Seats | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Last election | Before election | ||||||
Opposition Platform — For Life | Yuriy Boyko Vadim Rabinovich | Russophilia | Centre | 43 / 450 | Banned |
Martial law in Ukraine was declared on 24 February 2022. On 15 March 2022, the Verkhovna Rada deprived opposition MP Illia Kyva of his mandate. [24]
On 20 March 2022, the activities of several political parties were suspended by the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine for the period of martial law: [25] [26]
The Socialist Party of Ukraine was a social democratic and democratic socialist political party in Ukraine. It was one of the oldest parties in Ukraine and was created by former members of the Soviet-era Communist Party of Ukraine in late 1991, when the Communist Party was banned. The party was represented in the Verkhovna Rada, Ukraine's parliament, from 1994 to 2007 and was the third and fourth largest party during that period. From 2007 onwards the party's electoral results became increasingly marginal, failing to win any seats in subsequent elections despite historically strong support in the central regions of the country. Oleksandr Moroz had led the party for more than twenty years before his resignation in 2012.
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