{"id":765,"date":"2000-01-20T14:42:12","date_gmt":"2000-01-20T21:42:12","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/political-studies.com\/?p=765"},"modified":"2022-01-22T11:47:47","modified_gmt":"2022-01-22T13:47:47","slug":"765","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/political-studies.com\/?p=765","title":{"rendered":"The Presidential Election in Ukraine: Mirror of Society In Transition."},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Ukraine has remained politically stable in spite of continuous economic decline  and widespread impoverishment. The various branches of the political elite have  been prepared to compromise and halt political clashes before they reached  crisis point.<\/p>\n<p>President Leonid Kuchma has played a major role in preserving stability. He has  shown himself to be if not a convinced democrat, then at least a moderate,  sober-minded, and flexible politician. His main achieve\u00adments as an architect  of compromise have been the Constitutional Agreement of 1995 and the adoption  of the new constitution in 1996. It was also in 1996 that the national currency  (gryvna) was introduced.<\/p>\n<p>The mid-1990s saw the rise of economic &#8216;clans&#8217; and &#8216;oligarchs&#8217; in Ukraine, who  have undermined the real power and influence of the new political parties. The  victory that the clans won over the parties in this invisible struggle was reflected in the results of the 1998 and 1999 elections.<\/p>\n<p>What we see on the surface in 1999 is that Kuchma won the &#8216;great battle&#8217;  against the &#8216;red menace&#8217; &#8212; a menace that he and his team had created  themselves, both intentionally (through the mass media) and unintentionally (by aggravating the economic situation and impoverishing the  people). This victory was not unexpected, especially after the failure of the  four left-center candidates to unite behind a single candidate who might have mounted an effective challenge to both Kuchma and the communists. <\/p>\n<p>All the same, many people, especially abroad, wonder how it can be that a  majority of Ukrainians have again supported Kuchma &#8212; the man whose promises to  launch vigorous reforms and combat organized crime have been exposed as mere words. By voting for him, Ukrainians have  doomed themselves to another five years of leadership that &#8216;The Times&#8217; has  described as &#8216;the worst in Europe.&#8217; <\/p>\n<p>Why did Kuchma win? What does his victory mean for Ukraine? To what extent does  it confirm or contradict commonly accepted ideas about the socio-political  situation in Ukraine, such as regional differences and\u00a0 authoritarian tendencies? What problems did  it reveal and how can they be solved?<\/p>\n<h3>The candidates<\/h3>\n<p>Sixteen candidates stood for president of Ukraine this year. It is convenient  to divide them into four groups:<\/p>\n<p>First of all, the three frontrunners: <br \/>   &#8212; Leonid Kuchma, the incumbent president of Ukraine. <br \/>   &#8212; Petro Symonenko, leader of the Communist Party of Ukraine. <br \/>   &#8212; Natalia Vitrenko, leader of the Progressive Socialist Party.<\/p>\n<p>Secondly, the left-center politicians known as the &#8216;Kaniv  four&#8217;: <br \/>   &#8212; Olexander Tkachenko, the current chairman of the parliament. <br \/>   &#8212; Olexander Moroz, the former chairman of the parliament and a leader of the  Socialist Party of Ukraine. <br \/>   &#8212; Yevhen Marchuk, the first head of the Security Service of Ukraine, a former  prime minister of Ukraine, and a parliamentary deputy elected from the  Socialist Democratic Party (United).<br \/>   &#8212; Volodymyr Oliynyk, a little-known local official from the central agrarian  Cherkasy Province, of uncertain ideological orientation.<\/p>\n<p>Two more candidates came from Rukh, the right-centrist &#8216;national democratic&#8217;  movement that played an important role in winning independence:<br \/>   &#8212; Henadiy Udovenko, a former minister of foreign affairs who headed the more  conservative part of Rukh, concerned mainly with statehood and cultural  concerns.<br \/>   &#8212; Yuriy Kostenko, leader of the younger and more pragmatic part of Rukh. <\/p>\n<p>Finally, there were seven minor figures standing, none of  whom won more than 0.5% of the votes.<\/p>\n<h3>The candidates&#8217; assets<\/h3>\n<p>Kuchma was supported by over two dozen political parties and civic  organizations. Some of these represented wealthy new oligarchs or powerful  local officials, while others backed Kuchma because they knew they had no political future without governmental support. Kuchma had the  support of part of the former &#8216;party of power,&#8217; the People&#8217;s Democratic Party,  which split on the eve of the election, and of the Socialist Democratic Party (United), headed by Victor Medvedchuk, deputy  chairman of the parliament and one of the richest people in Ukraine.<\/p>\n<p>Symonenko could hope to retain the support of the 25% of the electorate,  including a majority of pensioners and the unemployed, who had voted for the  Communist Party in the 1998 parliamentary election.<\/p>\n<p>Vitrenko had attracted much attention as a demagogue. In some unreliable polls  she came second or even first in popularity.<\/p>\n<p>The &#8216;Kaniv Four&#8217; had agreed to cooperate and choose one of their number as a  common candidate. Such a candidate would have posed a real challenge to Kuchma,  who according to the polls could have been defeated only by a centrist politician. But the plan failed, because the &#8216;Kaniv  four&#8217; were too ambitious to stand down in one another&#8217;s favor and also had  different ideological orientations: Tkachenko resembles Belorussian President  Lukashenka; Moroz calls himself a left centrist, but has never refused to stand  under a red flag alongside Symonenko; and Marchuk, while ostensibly a social  democrat, is in fact an establishment politician like Kuchma. (After his defeat  in the first round, he accepted Kuchma&#8217;s offer of the position of Secretary of  the Defense Council.)<\/p>\n<h3>The election results<\/h3>\n<p>The results of the first round of the election on October 31  were as follows: <\/p>\n<table cellpadding=\"0\" cellspacing=\"0\" border=\"0\">\n<tr>\n<th>Candidate<\/th>\n<th>Votes &quot;FOR&quot;<\/th>\n<th>% of votes &quot;FOR&quot;<\/th>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Kuchma<\/td>\n<td>9,598,672<\/td>\n<td>36.5<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Symonenko<\/td>\n<td>5,849,077<\/td>\n<td>22.2<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Moroz<\/td>\n<td>2,969,896<\/td>\n<td>11.3<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Vitrenko<\/td>\n<td>2,886,972<\/td>\n<td>11.0<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Marchuk<\/td>\n<td>2,138,356<\/td>\n<td> 8.1<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Kostenko<\/td>\n<td> 570,623<\/td>\n<td> 2.2<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Udovenko<\/td>\n<td>319,778<\/td>\n<td>1.2<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Minor figures<\/td>\n<td>288,396<\/td>\n<td>1.5<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Against all candidates<\/td>\n<td>477,019<\/td>\n<td>1.8<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/table>\n<h3>Why Kuchma and Symonenko?<\/h3>\n<p>Thus Kuchma came first, with the Communist Party candidate Symonenko his  leading rival. Why did the electors choose these two politicians?<\/p>\n<p>The first and simplest explanation, of course, may be that Ukrainians are  conservative and submissive people. They just do not evaluate the situation  critically and do not want reforms at all. But this assertion is rather superficial and does not correspond to the findings of sociological  surveys. These show that during the first term of Kuchma&#8217;s presidency people  were very critical of him. The proportion of respondents who thought that &#8216;things are going in the right direction in this country&#8217; was 13%  in December 1994, 14% in December 1996, and a mere 6% in December 1998  (SOCIS-GALLUP). And when asked on the eve of the electoral campaign &#8216;Who in your view is able to lead the country out of the  crisis?&#8217;, only 6% named Kuchma.<\/p>\n<p>True, the public trusted the other branches of state power even less. If the  level of trust in the president fell from 33% to 17% between 1995 and 1997,  that in the government fell in the same period from 15% to 9%, and that in the parliament from 9% to 7%. Trust in public institutions in  Ukraine (as in other post-communist countries) is very low. About 35% of the  public do not approve of the multiparty system, and do not believe that any  existing party or politician is able to lead the country out of the crisis or  govern it effectively.<\/p>\n<p>It is striking that in 1997 there were 45% who agreed, and only 16% who  disagreed, with the statement that &#8216;a few powerful rulers may do more for the  country than all laws and discussions.&#8217; Some analysts saw these figures as a sign of the authoritarian inclinations of the Ukrainian  people. But comparing this survey with others (including my own survey in Lviv  and Kharkiv), I came to the conclusion that people only seek a strong and  charismatic figure able to lead the country out of the pit into which it has  fallen. They want &#8216;delegative democracy&#8217; rather than an authoritarian regime.  The main characteristic of this underdeveloped kind of democracy is that people  want to transfer responsibility for the successes and failures of govern\u00adment  in the transitional period from themselves to the president, who is expected to  govern as he sees fit.<\/p>\n<p>As for the Constitution with its hybrid parliamentary-presidential form of  government, multiparty system, and other checks and balances, it was devised by  a political elite over the heads of the people, who were just trying to  survive. Of all the new political institutions, only the presidency is really  understood and valued highly by ordinary people. When asked in 1997 what powers  the president should have, 60% of respondents chose the answer: &#8216;The president  should be the head of the government, fully responsible for domestic and  foreign policy.&#8217; Only 7% chose an answer corresponding to the existing mixed  form of government; 7% thought it sufficient for the president to act as head  of state and be the &#8216;symbol&#8217; of the nation; and 5% said there was no need for a president. This helps explain  why so many people turned out for the presidential election and voted for  Kuchma, in spite of their disappointment with the results of his first term.<\/p>\n<p>There were, of course, other reasons for Kuchma&#8217;s success. As international  observers confirmed, the mass media were not allowed to provide non-partisan  and objective coverage of electoral campaign. Kuchma shamelessly promoted himself on state television, while agitation against him  was discouraged by the authorities at all levels. Local officials were  mobilized in support of Kuchma&#8217;s campaign. Many other procedural violations  were noted by OSCE observers.<\/p>\n<p>Media bias worked especially to the detriment of those candidates who were less  well known to the public. It did less harm to Symonenko, the communist  candidate, who was able to rely on his party&#8217;s extensive network of propaganda outlets and personal contacts. The main hope of the  communists, of course, was that people would vote for their party because they  were tired of living in poverty. But almost all experts agreed that Symonenko had  no chance of winning against Kuchma. <\/p>\n<p>Permanent economic crisis naturally strengthens left-wing critics of the  &#8216;anti-people&#8217;s regime.&#8217; Voters&#8217; preferences have moved leftward during the last  five years. It is no coincidence that all three of the candidates who came next after Kuchma in the first round were representatives  of leftist parties. So there is a tendency for the &#8216;red electorate&#8217; to expand,  but it has its limits. But in general, as one reader of the Ukrainian weekly  &#8216;The Day&#8217; concluded, &#8216;the commonsense of the majority of electors overweighed  their desire to protest, and of the two evils offered them the electors chose  the lesser.&#8217; Kuchma was also right when he remarked after his victory that in those regions where Symonenko gained  a majority people voted against their poor life, not for the communists.<\/p>\n<p>It came as a surprise to many observers that the leftist parties did better in  central-western Vinnitsa Province than in the industrial east (with the  exception of Luhansk Province). In Ukraine as in Russia, the main territorial  stronghold of the communists is now not in the industrial areas, but in some of  the less economically developed, predominantly agricultural regions.<\/p>\n<h3>Parties, clans, and oligarchs<\/h3>\n<p>Another common explanation of the election results focuses on the inadequacies  of the Ukrainian political elite: the weakness of the parties, especially on  the right side of the political spectrum; the shortage of   political leaders free of communist-bureaucratic stereotypes in their thinking  and behavior; and the domination of real politics by the &#8216;oligarchs&#8217; (in the  sense that it is they who are accumulating real as distinct from formal power). <\/p>\n<p>The present state of the multiparty system is indeed dull. In 1996-98 it was  hoped that the mixed (half proportional representation) electoral system would  strengthen the party system and structure the parliament politically. Those  hopes have been dashed. There are 75 parties in Ukraine now, but they have  little impact on real politics. There is no explicit ruling party or bloc, and  no explicit opposition either. The eight party fractions and the non-party  deputy groups are continually being reorganized. In 1998, the left parties  managed to make a temporary coalition with the centrist Party &#8216;Hromada&#8217; and elected  a left-wing chair and deputy chair of the parliament, but they did not have a  stable majority. The party system reminds one of a bird with a body (the &#8216;party  of power&#8217;) and one wing (leftist forces). The communists remain the only  effective opposition to the &#8216;party of power.&#8217; It is a dangerous situation, for  it gives the ideologically neutral &#8216;party of power&#8217; a pretext to introduce  dictatorial rule. The forces in power have a deliberate policy of impeding the  rise of strong new opposition parties. During the 1998 electoral campaign, they  created pocket parties in order to divert or deceive the electors, and the same  practice was repeated, with individual pocket candidates, in the presidential  race.<\/p>\n<p>Long before the presidential campaign a series of steps were taken to get rid  of any serious right-wing claimant for the presidency and to destroy organized  forces that could have given him support. But if rightist politicians and  parties were strong enough (in terms of program, strategy, and popular appeal)  it would be impossible for the ruling elite to damage them so badly.<\/p>\n<p>The internal crisis of Rukh and other right parties has made it easy to destroy  them. Especially important for the &#8216;party of power&#8217; and painful for the  opposition was the breakdown of the most active and influential party &#8212; Rukh (Peoples Movement of Ukraine). One part of it \u2013 romantics and  idealists who followed the former minister of foreign affairs Udovenko &#8212; were  regarded by the broad public as a satellite of the presidential forces.\u00a0 The other part, led by Yuriy Kostenko, has  little influence because it was blamed for the schism.<\/p>\n<p>There is an urgent need to unite reform-oriented political forces into one, or  at most two, political parties. Only then can rightist parties countervail the  power of the communist bloc and of the rising Ukrainian &#8216;oligarchy&#8217; of rich  men, who try to combine in their hands economic and political power.<\/p>\n<h3>The regional factor<\/h3>\n<p>   Let us now look at the results of the second round of the election (November  14) in regional breakdown. Ukraine&#8217;s provinces fall into four groups:<\/p>\n<p>   &#8212; Seven western provinces in which Kuchma won an overwhelming majority of  votes: Ivano-Frankivsk, Ternopil, Lviv, Transcarpathia, Volyn, Chernivtsi, and  Rivne.<\/p>\n<p>   &#8212; Seven southern, eastern, and central provinces, in which Kuchma won rather  convincingly: Kyiv-city, Kyiv-province, Khmelnytskiy, Odessa, Dnipropetrovsk,  and Sevastopol.<br \/>   &#8212; Nine provinces in which the communists won: Vinnitsa, Chernihiv, Poltava,  Cherkasy, Kirovograd, Kherson, Luhansk, and the Autonomous Republic of Crimea.<br \/>   &#8212; Five provinces in which no candidate captured 50% of the votes: Zhytomyr,  Sumy, Kharkiv, Zaporizhzhia, and Mykolaiv.<\/p>\n<p>Many commentators have argued that Kuchma won because the voters in western  Ukraine gave a lower priority to economic concerns than to the preservation of  state independence, threatened by the communists&#8217; intentions to integrate Ukraine with Russia. The reality is a little more  complicated. First of all, western Ukraine accounts for only about 20% of the  country&#8217;s population, and is therefore unlikely to play a decisive role.  Secondly, Kuchma did very well in many provinces outside western Ukraine.  Thirdly, while regionalism is a significant factor in Ukrainian politics, it is  not all-important. Thus numerous public opinion surveys conducted in recent  years show many similarities as well as differences between eastern and western  Ukraine. And lastly, to understand fully regional differences, one must make  finer distinctions than a crude division into east and west.<\/p>\n<p>In 1991, west Ukrainian electors supported a Rukh candidate, but failed to  bring him to power. Kravchuk was elected president thanks to the support of  voters in southern and eastern Ukraine. But the west Ukrainians found Kravchuk  to be sufficiently pro-independence, and in 1994 they supported him against  Kuchma, who also won on south and east Ukrainian votes. Kuchma also, against  expectations, did nothing to threaten Ukraine&#8217;s independence (if one leaves  economic stagnation out of account), and this year the west Ukrainians gave him  their support. There is a joke in Ukraine: easterners elect presidents for the  country, and westerners love them.<\/p>\n<p>In western Ukraine, the communists are regarded as socially and nationally  alien, an occupation force. Unlike in the rest of the country, here people are  still alive who remember the suffering associated with absorption into the  USSR. This makes anticommunist aspirations firm and definite.<\/p>\n<p>So it is no surprise that in Galicia, the most nationally conscious province of  the western region, the communist candidate won only 4-5% of votes, while in  the other four western provinces he won no more than 20%. <\/p>\n<p>People throughout the country saw no real alternative to Kuchma on the one hand  and the communists on the other, and they preferred Kuchma. And they were quite  right. It was not their fault that they were offered such a miserable choice.  It was the fault of the Ukrainian political elite, especially of the rightist  and left-centrist politicians. Their ineptitude and inability to combine forces  behind a single candidate was so obvious that it was natural for the electors  not to rely on them.<\/p>\n<p>The 1994 presidential election split Ukraine into eastern (left-bank) and  western (right-bank) halves, separated by the Dniper River. This year&#8217;s  election, by contrast, did NOT polarize the electorate between west and east,  unless one defines &#8216;west&#8217; as consisting of Galicia alone. The most salient  division in 1999 was that between agrarian areas, oriented toward the communists,  and urban areas, which on the whole supported Kuchma.<\/p>\n<p>Provinces with an anti-Kuchma majority were situated on both sides of the  Dniper, reflecting not so much cultural as economic factors, above all the  desperate situation in Ukrainian villages. If in the cities people have not  been paid their wages for months, in some villages they have seen no money for  years. They feel: &#8216;We don&#8217;t care if the communists return to power. We lived  somehow under the communists. We just want to be paid our wages. Symonenko  promised to do that. Why not give him a try? It cannot be worse than it is  already.&#8217;<\/p>\n<p>The &#8216;red belt&#8217; extends across the country from the Belorussian border near  Chernobyl in the north to Mykolayiv and Kherson on the Black Sea coast. The  Ukrainian peasantry is as conservative as that of any other country. In  post-communist countries, &#8216;conservative&#8217; means pro-communist.<\/p>\n<p>In industrial regions of both east and west, where workers constitute the  majority of voters, concerns were also predominantly economic, rather than  nationalistic or political. Nevertheless, workers seem to be more politically sophisticated than peasants. Many of them were aware that if the  communists returned to power they might stop progress altogether, leading to  even worse poverty and misfortune.<\/p>\n<p>Public opinion surveys conduced in Lviv (west) and Donetsk (east) provinces in  1991 and 1998 show differences on such issues as revival of the Ukrainian  nation and language, and also ecology, but close similarity on economic issues. It is these commonalities that make the  consolidation of the Ukrainian state feasible. In 1994, the two main candidates  for president, Kravchuk and Kuchma, happened to differ only on those issues that divide east from west. In 1999, that was definitely  not the case.<\/p>\n<h3>After the election<\/h3>\n<p>   There are two visions of Ukraine&#8217;s future in Kuchma&#8217;s second term: a moderately  optimistic one and a totally pessimistic one.<\/p>\n<p>The optimists anticipate a consolidation of power in the hands of the  president, who will then try to restart reforms and diminish the influence of  oligarchs and criminals (who are often the same people).<\/p>\n<p>   But does everything now depend on the president&#8217;s will? If so, what motives  might induce him to do these things? One answer is: honor, the desire to leave  a good imprint on Ukrainian history. But honor is not enough. Kuchma would need sufficient strength to resist the pressures of the  oligarchs, and for that he would need to be able to count on the support of  strong organized political forces. Unfortunately, there are no such forces.  First a new political bloc would have to be built, capable of safeguarding  market reform and democracy.<\/p>\n<p>The pessimists expect the further deterioration of socio-economic conditions  and a shift toward a more authoritarian regime. The oligarchs who stand behind  the re-elected president are not interested in democracy, though they may not  be interested in establishing a dictatorship either. So we may expect the  growing hidden (under the carpet, as we say in our country) domination of  economically powerful people and clans, who will exterminate any real  opposition. At its extreme, this scenario leads to the direct seizure of power  by the Mafia, with the removal of Kuchma ahead of time by means of impeachment  or otherwise.<\/p>\n<p>In my view, the optimists underestimate and the pessimists overestimate the  strength and political activity of latent pressure groups. Actually, the  oligarchs are not so powerful in Ukraine at present that no political force can  curb their appetites. All depends on the ability of political organizations  really interested in defending public interests to mobilize public support, as  well as on the intentions of President Kuchma himself. <\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p><strong>Antonina Kolodii<\/strong>, with the assistance of S. D. Shenfield. The Presidential Election in Ukraine: Mirror of Society In Transition. On-line publication in: <em>\u00abJohnson&#8217;s Russia List\u00bb<\/em>, #4028, 12 January 2000; The Ukraine List (UKL) &#8211; # 71, complied by Dominique Arel, 20 Jan 2000 <\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":4,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[31],"tags":[123],"class_list":["post-765","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-english","tag-building-democracy-en"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/political-studies.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/765","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/political-studies.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/political-studies.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/political-studies.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/4"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/political-studies.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=765"}],"version-history":[{"count":9,"href":"https:\/\/political-studies.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/765\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":2126,"href":"https:\/\/political-studies.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/765\/revisions\/2126"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/political-studies.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=765"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/political-studies.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=765"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/political-studies.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=765"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}