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Eurasia Daily Monitor
Volume 4, Number 87
May 3, 2007
YUSHCHENKO SETS NEW DATE FOR PARLIAMENTARY POLL
By Pavel Korduban
Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko has re-scheduled the snap parliamentary
election from May 27 to June 24. His opponents initially reacted as they had to
his April 2 decree, which called for the election. The parliamentary coalition
that backs Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych said that Yushchenko had violated
the constitution and again refused to obey. Yanukovych, however, within several
days signaled his readiness to compromise. He told a briefing on April 28 that
his party would agree to a snap election if Yushchenko is ready for political
talks. An early presidential election may be one of Yanukovych’s conditions.
In an unscheduled TV address to the nation on April 25, Yushchenko announced
that he was signing a decree re-scheduling the parliamentary ballot. Yushchenko
made it clear that this decision had been prompted by pragmatic considerations,
and that it was in no way a concession to his opponents. Explaining the need to
re-schedule the election from May 27 to June 24 in the text of his April 26
decree, Yushchenko said that the refusal by Yanukovych’s Cabinet to fund the
election scheduled for May 27 and the inaction of the Central Electoral
Commission (several of its members simultaneously called in sick) made it
impossible to hold the election in May.
Commenting on the decree on April 26, Yanukovych accused Yushchenko of
breaching all agreements reached earlier and of disrupting the talks between the
two camps that had started on April 25. Yanukovych complained that he was
“surprised,” as Yushchenko had not consulted with him before taking this new
decision. Yanukovych said that Yushchenko had re-scheduled the election because
he was afraid that the Constitutional Court’s decree on the early election,
disputed by Yanukovych’s coalition, would not be in Yushchenko’s favor. The
court, according to Yanukovych, was going to deliver its verdict on April 26, so
Yushchenko acted just in time to forestall his own political fiasco.
The parliament disbanded by Yushchenko on April 26 passed a resolution
condemning Yushchenko’s new decree as unconstitutional, as was the case with his
April 2 decree, and accusing Yushchenko of deepening the political crisis.
Speaker of Parliament Oleksandr Moroz said that the new decree was “legal
nonsense.” The majority coalition urged Yushchenko to withdraw his decree, and
several parliamentarians drafted a bill calling for Yushchenko’s impeachment. On
April 27, Moroz instructed the parliamentary committee to discuss the
possibility of launching impeachment procedures.
The discussion of impeachment was probably meant only to scare Yushchenko, as
the procedure is legally very complicated and is hardly a realistic option.
Parliament eventually chose the standard procedure of appealing the presidential
decree to the Constitutional Court, and on April 27 Moroz announced that the
court had begun to discuss this new appeal, although it has not yet delivered a
verdict on the April 2 decree.
Yanukovych, addressing a rally of his supporters on Kyiv on April 27,
repeated his old thesis that his coalition was not afraid of an early election,
but that Yushchenko was not authorized by the constitution to call early
elections at will. Yanukovych suggested that Yushchenko should agree to
simultaneous elections for both president and parliament. “As he keeps saying
that politicians should pass through the purgatory of the Ukrainian people, let
him show an example himself,” Yanukovych said.
Speaking at a briefing the following day, Yanukovych made the sensational
announcement that his coalition may agree to a snap parliamentary election after
all. Yanukovych insisted that there were no constitutional grounds for calling
an early election, but he said that such an election could be the result of a
political agreement reached at a negotiating table. “If we come to a conclusion
that an election is needed, there will be an election,” he said. Asked by
journalists whether he would still like to hold a presidential election
simultaneously with a parliamentary one, Yanukovych said that a political
agreement on this might also be reached.
On April 30, parliament passed a resolution urging simultaneous early
presidential and parliamentary elections. According to the resolution, a legal
basis for this should be prepared by the fall, and the elections should be held
no later than December 9, 2007. Moroz specified that respective amendments to
the constitution should be passed in September, and the simultaneous early
elections in that case should be held in late November or early December. Moroz
explained that laws, rather than political agreements, should serve as the basis
for early elections. Otherwise, he warned, “We are opening dangerous prospects,
and whenever the president does not like parliament he will force an early
election.”
The April 30 resolution is probably a sign that the pro-Yanukovych coalition
is finally psychologically ready for a snap election. The call for a
simultaneous presidential election may be used as an element of pressure, a
bargaining chip in negotiations with Yushchenko.
(Channel 5, April 25, 27; Ukrayinska pravda, April 26, 30; Interfax-Ukraine,
April 26, 27; Inter TV, April 26, 29; UT1, April 28).
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