HomeMagazinePoliticsUkraine Hasn’t Held Elections Since Russia’s Full-Scale Invasion

Ukraine Hasn’t Held Elections Since Russia’s Full-Scale Invasion

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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy would have had to face a reelection campaign in the spring of 2024 if it had not been for Russia’s full-scale invasion. Now, the question of the legitimacy of his rule is being weaponized by Russia.

U.S. President Donald Trump also called Zelenskyy a “dictator without elections,” echoing Russian propaganda, but later appeared to rescind the comment by denying he said it.

It is not the first time Western officials have expressed concern about Zelenskyy’s tenure as president especially under martial law when his office has consolidated control of government policy to sustain and direct the war effort. Western officials have also privately expressed their preference for elections to take place in the last year, before Trump assumed office, according to lawmakers who maintain contacts with their European counterparts.

Zelenskyy has declined to hold polls until a ceasefire is declared in line with Ukrainian law and his Ukrainians largely support that decision.

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Putin’s invasion of Ukraine triggered martial law in the country, which effectively postponed presidential and parliamentary elections. Facing an existential war, with a fifth of the country under occupation and millions of Ukrainians evacuated to third countries, holding polls was simply not logistically feasible.

Ukraine’s natural election period for its parliament was slated for October 2023 and Zelenskyy’s five-year term was up in May 2024.

Martial law is established in the Ukrainian constitution and another law states elections can’t be held when martial law is in place, which has been the case since the February 2022 invasion.

 

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