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1990 Ukrainian Supreme Soviet election; 1994 Ukrainian parliamentary election; 1998 Ukrainian parliamentary election; 2002 Ukrainian parliamentary election; 2006 Ukrainian parliamentary election; 2007 Ukrainian parliamentary election; 2012 Ukrainian parliamentary election; 2014 Ukrainian parliamentary election; 2019 Ukrainian parliamentary election
In the 2014 parliamentary elections the official voter turnout was set (by the Central Election Commission of Ukraine) at 52.42%. [36] This figure was determined after the Central Electoral Commission deducted the eligible voters in areas were voting was impossible. [22]
The elections resulted in an outright majority, a novelty in Ukraine, for Zelenskyy's Servant of the People party, which won 254 seats. [3] About 80 percent of the elected candidates were new to parliament, while 83 deputies were re-elected from the previous parliament and 13 deputies from earlier convocations. [3]
Parliamentary elections are expected to take place in Ukraine to elect members of the Verkhovna Rada 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.
Elections to the People's Assemblies of Western Ukraine and Western Belorussia; Soim; 1990 Ukrainian Supreme Soviet election; 1994 Ukrainian parliamentary election; 1998 Ukrainian parliamentary election; 2002 Ukrainian parliamentary election; 2006 Ukrainian parliamentary election; 2007 Ukrainian parliamentary election; 2012 Ukrainian ...
The Central Election Commission of Ukraine finalized the vote count on 12 November 2012 but simultaneously ordered – on recommendation of the Verkhovna Rada (Ukraine's parliament) – repeat elections in five troubled single-mandate constituencies where it could not establish results. [3] Because of occurrences in these five constituencies.
European Council President Herman Van Rompuy and European Commission President José Manuel Barroso called the elections "a victory of the people of Ukraine and of democracy". [36] US President Barack Obama and his Secretary of State John Kerry also congratulated Ukraine "on successful parliamentary elections". [36]
Following the Orange Revolution and the 2004 presidential elections in December 2004 Ukrainian parliament adopted significant changes (amendments) to the Constitution of Ukraine by introducing concepts of political coalition, coalition government, imperative mandate as well as transferred some power from the President to the parliament, making ...