Ukraine's
parliament has voted to return Viktor Yanukovych to the post of prime
minister, less than two years after he abandoned the job to make his
failed bid for the presidency. Parliament also pushed through a
number of other pressing measures Friday, following months of political
wrangling.
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| Viktor Yanukovych cheers to a crowd of his supporters outside parliament in Kiev |
It is a complete reversal of fortunes for Mr. Yanukovych, the former
mechanic-turned politician, who suffered a bitter defeat to President
Viktor Yushchenko amid the mass protests of the Orange Revolution.
By a vote of 271 to nine, Ukraine's parliament voted to confirm Mr. Yanukovych to the cheers of his Region's Party supporters.
Mr. Yanukovych has served in the post before, under former President
Leonid Kuchma, but never with the extent of powers he holds now, thanks
to new constitutional reforms Mr. Yushchenko agreed to during the
revolution in order to end the impasse.
Those powers include greater say in cabinet picks, as well as
greater job security, because according to the new changes, parliament
must now approve any dismissal of the prime minister. Previously,
the president alone could sack his cabinet leader.
Since the revolution, President Yushchenko has said he would like to
see a revision of some of those constitutional changes, presumably
those giving stronger powers to the prime minister. But
parliament moved quickly Friday to ensure that would not happen, also
voting to prohibit the Constitutional Court from revising the changes.
There was no immediate comment from President Yushchenko, who just
one day earlier threw his support behind his archrival and joined his
Our Ukraine forces with those of Regions, the Communists, and
Socialists to form a new majority.
Yulia Timoshenko, who now stands as the sole opposition leader, has branded the president's deal as a sellout.
This businessman, packing up from an opposition tent camp on
Independence Square agrees. Boris Voichishin told VOA he never
believed the president would team up with anyone but Ms. Timoshenko.
Boris says we wanted a Ukraine looking Westward, toward democracy,
fair elections, and European Union and NATO membership. Now, he
says, we will have nothing but a return to Russia.
President Yushchenko has said the decision, while difficult, was the
only way forward to ensure that Ukraine was truly unified between its
Russian-speaking East and pro-democratic West.
Addressing the parliament immediately prior to his acceptance, Mr.
Yanukovych expressed confidence that he could govern the diverse
factions making up the new coalition.
It is of particular interest that he chose to speak in Ukrainian,
despite the fact he campaigned on pledges to make Russian an official
state language.
The United States has said it looks forward to working with
Ukraine's new government. It says the political impasse in
Ukraine has been overcome through democratic elections and diligent
politicking.
Neighboring Russia has also hailed the result. The influential business daily, Kommersant,
predicts that, in practice, Mr. Yanukovych will move closer to Europe
in order to protect the considerable business interests in his
industrial homeland of Donetsk.