Ukrainian parliamentary election, 1998

Ukrainian parliamentary election, 1998
Ukraine
29 March 1998

All 450 seats to the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine
226 seats were needed for a majority
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Petro Symonenko Vyacheslav Chornovil Oleksandr Moroz
Party Communist Party People's Movement SPU-SelPU
Leader since 19 June 1993 1989 26 October 1991
Last election 86 20 14 (as Socialists)
Seats won 121 46 34
Seat change +35 +26 +20
Popular vote 10,046,064 3,998,910 3,341,055
Percentage 19.5% 7.8% 6.5%

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
 
Leader Anatoliy Matviyenko Pavlo Lazarenko Vitaliy Kononov
Party NDPU Hromada Greens
Leader since 24 February 1996 12 December 1993 30 September 1990
Last election 4 (as PDVU) New 0
Seats won 28 24 19
Seat change +24 +24 +19
Popular vote 2,317,230 2,122,308 1,640,308
Percentage 4.5% 4.1% 3.2%

Results of the 1998 parliamentary election.

Chairman of Parliament before election

Oleksandr Moroz
Socialist Party

Elected Chairman of Parliament

Oleksandr Tkachenko
Communist Party

This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
Ukraine

Parliamentary elections were held in Ukraine on 29 March 1998.[1] The Communist Party of Ukraine remained the largest party in the Verkhovna Rada, winning 121 of the 445 seats.[2]

After the election votes in five electoral districts had too many irregularities to declare a winner and the parliament was five members short of 450.

Electoral system

In comparison to the first parliamentary election, this time half of 450 parliament seats were filled by single-seat majority winners in 225 electoral regions (constituencies), and the other half were split among political parties and blocks[3] that received at least 4% of the popular vote.

Results

The Communist Party of Ukraine was victorious in 18 regions including the city of Kiev, while in three other regions the party finished in second place. The People's Movement of Ukraine (Rukh) won in five regions, all of them located in Western Ukraine and was a strong runner-up in three others, mostly in the west and Kiev. The electoral block of Socialists and Peasants was able to secure a victory in only two regions, however it did finish strong in seven other regions across central Ukraine. The new and rising party of Hromada won the Dnipropetrovsk Region, while the Social-Democratic Party of Ukraine managed to secure the Zakarpattia Region.

Notable and strong runners up were the Party of Greens, the People's Democratic Party, the Progressive Socialist Party, the People's Party, Working Ukraine, the National Front and Our Ukraine.

Party PR Constituency Total
seats
+/–
Votes % Seats Seats
Communist Party of Ukraine6,550,35325.48437121+35
People's Movement of Ukraine2,498,2629.7321446+26
Socialist Party – Peasant Party 2,273,7888.829534+1
Party of Greens of Ukraine1,444,2645.619019+19
People's Democratic Party1,331,4605.2171128New
Hromada1,242,2354.816824New
Progressive Socialist Party of Ukraine1,075,1184.214216New
Social Democratic Party of Ukraine (United)1,066,1134.114317New
4% threshold for the party-list vote
Agrarian Party of Ukraine978,3303.8022New
Reforms and Order Party832,5743.2033New
Laborious Ukraine Electoral Bloc 813,3263.2000New
National Front Electoral Bloc 721,9662.8055New
TOGETHER Electoral Bloc 502,9692.0011New
Forward Ukraine! Electoral Bloc 461,9241.8022New
Christian Democratic Party of Ukraine344,8261.3022+1
NEP Electoral Bloc 326,4891.3011New
Party of National Economic Development of Ukraine250,4761.0000New
Social Liberal Union Electoral Bloc
  • Viche
  • Inter-regional Bloc of Reforms
241,3670.9011New
Party of Regional Revival of Ukraine241,2620.9022New
All-Ukrainian Party of Workers210,6220.8000New
Union Party186,2490.7011New
All-Ukrainian Party of Women's Initiatives154,6500.6000New
Republican Christian Party143,4960.6000New
Ukrainian National Assembly105,9770.4000–1
Social Democratic Party of Ukraine85,0450.3000–2
Party of Defenders of the Fatherland81,8080.3000New
Party of Spiritual, Economic and Social Progress53,1470.2000New
Party of Muslims of Ukraine52,6130.2000New
Fewer Words Electoral Bloc 45,1550.2011New
European Choice of Ukraine Electoral Bloc 37,1180.1000New
Party of Slavic Unity of Ukraine00New
Other parties00
Independents111111–57
Against all1,396,5925.4
Vacant055–107
Invalid/blank votes821,699
Total26,571,2731002252254500
Registered voters/turnout37,540,09270.8
Source; Nohlen & Stöver

By regions (single constituency)[4]

1998 constituents winners
Crimea (10/10)
Vinnytsia Region (8/8)
Volyn Region (4/5)
Dnipropetrovsk Region (16/17)
Donetsk Region (21/23)
Zhytomyr Region (5/6)
Zakarpattia Region (5/5)
Zaporizhia Region (7/9)
Ivano-Frankivsk Region (6/6)
Kirovohrad Region (3/5)
Luhansk Region (12/12)
Lviv Region (10/12)
Mykolaiv Region (3/6)
Odessa Region (10/11)
Kiev Region (7/8)
Poltava Region (8/8)
Rivne Region (5/5)
Sumy Region (6/6)
Ternopil Region (4/5)
Kharkiv Region (12/14)
Kherson Region (6/6)
Khmelnytsky Region (7/7)
Cherkasy Region (7/7)
Chernivtsi Region (4/4)
Chernihiv Region (5/6)
Kiev (11/12)
Sevastopol (2/2)

Party affiliation changes after 1998 election

The size of the factions created in parliament after the election fluctuated.[5] By January 2000 the Progressive Socialist Party of Ukraine and Hromada did not have any deputies; while Peasant Party of Ukraine had deputies only in 1999.[5] All these factions where disbanded for lack of members.[6]

Party of Regional Revival of Ukraine (later to become the biggest party of Ukraine as Party of Regions[7]) grew massively in parliament (after in March 2001 it united with four parties) from 2 deputies elected in this election to a faction of 24 people in July 2002 (one deputy left the faction later).[5][8][9] Later to become second biggest party of Ukraine,[7] Batkivshchyna, started its existence as a faction when in the spring of 1999 members of Hromada left their party to join other parliament factions, among them Yulia Tymoshenko who set up the parliamentary faction "Batkivshchyna" in March 1999.[10][11][12]

People's Movement of Ukraine split into 2 different factions in the spring of 1999 (the largest membership of the breakaway faction led by Hennadiy Udovenko was 19 and ended with 14, the "other" faction ended with 23; meaning that 10 elected People's Movement of Ukraine deputies did not represent any segment of the party anymore by June 2002).[5][6]

Other mayor "non-elected" factions/parties to emerge in parliament after the election were: Solidarity[13] (27 to 20 members[5]) and Labour Ukraine[14] (38 members in June 2002[5]); by June 2002 the parliament had 8 more factions then its original 8 in May 1998.[5]

References

  1. Nohlen, D & Stöver, P (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, p1976 ISBN 978-3-8329-5609-7
  2. Nohlen & Stöver, p1991
  3. Against All Odds: Aiding Political Parties in Georgia and Ukraine (UvA Proefschriften) by Max Bader, Vossiuspers UvA, 2010, ISBN 90-5629-631-0 (page 93)
  4. Deputies/Elected in multi-mandate constituency/Elections 29.11.1998, Central Election Commission of Ukraine
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Understanding Ukrainian Politics: Power, Politics, and Institutional Design by Paul D'Anieri, M.E. Sharpe, 2006, ISBN 978-0-7656-1811-5
  6. 1 2 Ukraine and Russia: The Post-Soviet Transition by Roman Solchanyk, Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2001 ISBN 0742510174
  7. 1 2 After the parliamentary elections in Ukraine: a tough victory for the Party of Regions, Centre for Eastern Studies (7 November 2012)
  8. 2001 Political sketches: too early for summing up, Central European University (January 4, 2002)
  9. Ukraine Political Parties, GlobalSecurity.org
  10. Revolution in Orange: The Origins of Ukraine's Democratic Breakthrough by Anders Aslund and Michael A. McFaul, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 2006, ISBN 978-0-87003-221-9
  11. State Building in Ukraine: The Ukrainian Parliament, 1990-2003 by Sarah Whitmore, Routledge, 2004, ISBN 978-0-415-33195-1, page 106
  12. (Ukrainian) Всеукраїнське об'єднання "Батьківщина" All-Ukrainian Union Batkivshchyna, RBC Ukraine
  13. Ukrainian Political Update by Taras Kuzio and Alex Frishberg, Frishberg & Partners, 21 February 2008 (page 22)
  14. Explaining State Capture and State Capture Modes by Oleksiy Omelyanchuk, Central European University, 2001 (page 22)
    Trudova Ukraina elects a new chairman, Policy Documentation Center (November 27, 2000)
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