Home
/
News
/

Oppositions has 40%, ruling parties 49% seats in parliament - 99% votes count

Oppositions has 40%, ruling parties 49% seats in parliament - 99% votes count

1 November 2012

Ukraine’s Central Election Commission completed counting 99.4% of votes from Sunday’s parliamentary election as of this morning. The two parties that currently form a parliamentary majority (Party of Regions and Communists) have a combined 219 seats in the new parliament (49% of the total 450 seats) while parties in opposition (Fatherland, Udar and Svoboda) aggregately collected 180 of seats (40%). Other parties and independent candidates were voted into 51 seats from constituencies.

 Ukraine Parliamentary Election Results (with 99.4% of votes counted)
————————————————
                 Party list Constituencies Total
————————————————
Party of Regions        73            114   187
Fatherland                61             42   103
Udar                        34              6    40
Communists             32              0    32
Svoboda                  25             12    37
Independents           0               51    51
————————————————
Total pro-presidential  105            114   219
Total opposition          120            60   180
Total independents      0               51    51
————————————————
Note: Totals for pro-presidential includes Party of Regions and Communists; for opposition includes Fatherland, Udar and Svoboda).
Source: Central Election Commission

Brad Wells: The preliminary results suggest parties close to the president will be able to accumulate at least 233 seats in the new parliament (with 226 votes needed for a simple majority): of the 51 individually elected MPs, at least 14 are close to the ruling party (i.e. relatives of current ministers, members of Party of Regions who were not officially nominated by the party, or current MPs that are in the pro-presidential coalition in the outgoing parliament). Though there is no requirement for any changes in the Cabinet of Ministers, there has been much speculation about turnover, including the replacement of Prime Minister Mykola Azarov. We note that the appointment of a presidential loyalist or family friend would have a strongly negative effect on the overall perception of the government and plurality of power in Ukraine.

 

Latest News

News

23

02/2022

Separatists may claim entire territories of two Ukrainian regions

Russia has recognized “all fundamental documents” of the self-proclaimed Donetsk and Luhansk People’s Republics (DNR...

News

23

02/2022

U.K. to provide USD 500 mln loan guarantee for Ukraine as IMF mission starts

The British government is going to provide up to USD 500 mln in loan guarantees...

News

23

02/2022

MinFin bond auction receipts jump to UAH 3.5 bln

Ukraine’s Finance Ministry raised UAH 3.3 bln and EUR 7.2 mln (the total equivalent of...