2020 Ukrainian local elections

(Redirected from 2020 Lviv local election)

The 2020 Ukrainian local elections took place on Sunday 25 October 2020.[3][1] In the election, deputies of district councils and rural townships were elected and elections for city mayors were held.[1][4] In practice this will mean that most voters had to fill out four ballots.[5] On 15, 22 and 29 November and 6 December 2020 a second round of mayoral elections was held in cities with more than 75,000 voters where no candidate gained more than 50% of the votes.[2][5][6]

2020 Ukrainian local elections

← 2015 25 October 2020[1]
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Location of elections throughout Ukraine.

Due to the 2014 Russian annexation of Crimea and loss of government control of parts of the Donetsk Oblast and Luhansk Oblast, no elections were held in parts of the two oblasts and in the Autonomous Republic of Crimea.[1] Elections were also held in new raions that were formed following the 2020 administrative reform.

According to the results as published by the Central Election Commission of Ukraine the highest number of seats in the election was won by Servant of the People with 17.59% of local deputies nominated in the election by this party.[7] Second place was for Fatherland with 12.39% of deputies and in third place was Opposition Platform — For Life with 11.75%.[7] For the Future gained 11.42% of the total number of seats, European Solidarity 10.73% and Our Land 5.13%.[7] Independent candidates won 661 mayoral elections.[8] Of the remaining elected 733 mayors 30.74% of them were Servant of the People candidates, 12.43% represented For the Future, 7.24% Fatherland, 7.1% Opposition Platform — For Life, 6.15% Our Land and 5.6% European Solidarity.[8] Turnout (on 25 October) was reported at 36.88% by the Central Election Commission, down from almost 47% in the 2015 local elections.[9][10]

President Volodymyr Zelensky's party, Servant of the People, suffered setbacks in major cities across the country, including the capital Kyiv; meanwhile, pro-European and pro-Russian parties made gains.[9] In Ukraine's largest cities, not only Servant of the People but all national parties were beaten by local parties of individual city mayors.[11]

Overview

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The estimated number of voters is 27.2 million people. The number of voters on the lists at polling stations is estimated at 28.1 million people and the number of polling stations was more than 29,000.[12]

Campaign

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Late June 2020 the first street political advertising appeared on Ukrainian streets, although the election campaign for the election officially starts on 5 September.[13] According to Ukrainian law, political campaigning outside election campaign periods is prohibited.[13]

On 15 July 2020, parliament set the election date to 25 October 2020.[14]

Electoral system

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Voting station in Nova Pryluka [uk] on 25 October 2020

For the first time in Ukrainian local elections, all candidates had to pay a cash deposit to be able to take part in the elections.[15] The size of this deposit depends on the size of the population of the place where the election is held.[15] The lowest deposit were for candidates for mayors of Uzhhorod (19,000 hryvnias), Nikopol (20,000 hryvnias) and Melitopol (24,000 hryvnias); while the highest was for the mayoral candidates of Kyiv (445,000 hryvnias), Kharkiv (219,000 hryvnias), and Dnipro (157,000 hryvnias).[15]

On all candidate lists, two out of every five candidates had to be female.[16]

Candidate could only be self-nominated in places with a population of less than 10,000 voters, in all other cases candidates had to be nominated by political parties.[17]

In the mayoral elections in cities with fewer than 75,000 voters mayors were elected under a majoritarian system; in a first-past-the-post system.[18] In the other Ukrainian cities a candidate had to receive more than 50% of all votes cast to win in the first round of the election.[18] If not, the two candidates who received the largest number of votes faced of in a second round, the candidate that receive a simple majority in the second round (no longer necessarily more than 50%) was elected mayor.[18] November 15, November 22 and November 29 are the dates of the second round of mayoral elections in cities with more than 75,000 voters.[2] (On 29 November the second round of the mayoral election of Chernivtsi only.[2]) After Yuriy Vilkul redrew himself from the second round of the mayoral election in Kryvyi Rih this second round was postponed to 6 December 2020.[6]

In populated places with up to 10 thousand voters the town was divided into constituencies, from 2 to 4 deputies of the local council were elected from each constituency under the relative majority system.[18] In the other elections voters had to fill in two types of candidate lists - one for the whole city (district or region) and a separate for their electoral district (in which they had to write down the number of their favourite candidate themselves).[19] The number 1 on the party list of the whole city was guaranteed a place in the local council if the party passed the election threshold.[19] The election will was held with a specific open list system.[17] In order to benefit from this open list system, a candidate in an electoral district needed to gain 25% of the total number of votes received by all parties that did overcame the electoral threshold divided by the number of seats in the local council minus the seats won by the number 1's on the party list of the whole city.[17][19] The elections had a 5% election threshold.[17]

In practice most voters had to fill out four ballots.[5] Voters in Kyiv received only two ballots, for the election of the mayor of Kyiv and the Kyiv City Council election.[5] In Poltava, Kropyvnytskyi, Kryvyi Rih, Kherson and Zhytomyr voters received an additional fifth ballot for candidates for the district councils in the city.[5]

Deputies of local councils will receive no compensation for their work.[5]

Non-voting areas

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Due to the 2014 Russian annexation of Crimea, no elections in the Autonomous Republic of Crimea were held.[1][nb 1] Loss of government control of parts of the Donetsk Oblast and Luhansk Oblast (to the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic and Luhansk People's Republic) also means elections were not held in certain parts of these provinces.[1] There were also no elections for the Donetsk Oblast Council and Luhansk Oblast Council as their functions are currently being performed by civil–military administrations.[21]

Results

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Summary of 2020 local elections - combined results of all oblast (province) councils' elections, raion (district) councils' elections in Donetsk' and Luhansk Oblast and the Kyiv City Council elections. Red and orange denote oblasts (and Kyiv as the city with special status) where pro-Ukrainian and pro-West parties got the most seats, blue and light blue denote oblasts where pro-Russian and euro-sceptical parties got the most seats. Green denotes oblasts where pro-Ukrainian/pro-West and pro-Russian/euro-sceptical parties got the same amount of seats.

Due to the new electoral system in which the elections were held, voting officials and the NGO Committee of Voters of Ukraine warned that the official publication of the election results would probably take several days.[22][23]

Exit polls

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Exit polls indicated that president Volodymyr Zelensky's party, Servant of the People, had suffered setbacks in Ukraine's major cities, including the capital Kyiv[nb 2]; it appeared that only in Zelensky's hometown[26] Kryvyi Rih Servant of the People won the election with a slight margin, although they lost the mayoral election there.[27]

The overall picture emerging from the exit polls was that pro-European and pro-Russian parties had appeared to have made gains,[9] but that in Ukraine's major cities national parties had been beaten by local parties of individual city mayors.[11][27]

Election summary

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According to the results as published by the Central Election Commission of Ukraine, the highest number of seats in the election was won by Servant of the People with 17.59% of local deputies nominated in the election by this party.[7] Second place was for Fatherland with 12.39% of deputies and in third place was Opposition Platform — For Life with 11.75%.[7] For the Future gained 11.42% of the total number of seats, European Solidarity 10.73% and Our Land 5.13%.[7] In total, 110 political parties received their representatives in local councils at various levels.[7] Some of these were won by the parties Svoboda with 2.61%, Ukrainian Strategy with 1.72%, Proposition 1,66% and Radical Party of Oleh Lyashko with 1.62%.[7] Almost half of all seats was won by parties that did not win seats in the 2019 Ukrainian parliamentary election.[28] According to calculations made by Sociological group "RATING" 49% of all voters voted for local parties/non-parliamentary parties.[29] Of the remaining voters 14.5% voted for Servant of the People, 13.7% for European Solidarity and 12.5% for Opposition Platform — For Life.[29]

Most mayors elected were independent candidates, 661 nonpartisan politicians were elected mayor of a village, town or city.[8] Of the remaining elected 733 mayors 30.74% of them were Servant of the People candidates, 12.43% represented For the Future, 7.24% Fatherland, 7.1% Opposition Platform — For Life, 6.15% Our Land, 5.6% European Solidarity, 3.83% Ukrainian Strategy and last came the party Trust with 3.14% (with its 23 mayors).[8] Non-parliamentary parties, primarily the strictly local parties of city mayors, successfully performed in Ukraine's major cities.[28] But in the elections of regional councils, parties represented in the Verkhovna Rada (Ukraine's parliament) still dominated.[28]

Servant of the People showed its best results in Central Ukraine in the north of the country, as well as in the historical regions Transcarpathia and Bukovina.[28] The results of the party in large cities and regional centers, in the regions of Galicia and in the Donbas were weaker.[28] However, the pro-presidential party will be represented in all regional councils, and in the absolute majority of local councils in all regions of the country.[28] European Solidarity did well in West and central Ukraine.[28] Opposition Platform — For Life did well in South and Eastern Ukraine, although the local parties of city mayors (in particular in Odesa, Mykolaiv and Sloviansk) cost them support compared with its predecessor Opposition Bloc in the 2015 Ukrainian local elections.[28][30] Fatherland showed its best results in Central and Northern Ukraine, as well as in a number of western regions.[28] For the Future expectedly won the elections in Volyn Oblast, and also led its deputies to a number of regional councils in Ukraine's western and central regions.[28] Proposition successfully performed only where it was represented by the current mayors of cities - in Dnipro, Zhytomyr and Mykolaiv.[28] The same can be said for Svoboda, which won victory in cities where it had acting mayors, but compared with the 2015 local elections the party's electoral influence this time was limited to Western Ukraine.[28] The parliamentary party Voice had some local success, having led its factions to the Lviv Oblast Council, to the city councils of Kyiv, Lviv, Cherkasy, a number of other city councils, including even in the Donbas.[28]

Voter turnout

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The nationwide turnout of the elections was 36.88% nationwide.[31] The highest participation was in Western Ukraine (ranging from 40% to 45%), lowest was in Donetsk Oblast, Mykolaiv Oblast and Kharkiv Oblast (in all three slightly above 30%).[31] An exit-poll of sociological group "Rating" concluded that more than half of the voters who came to the polling station were over 50 years old.[32]

During the 2015 Ukrainian local elections nationwide voter turnout had been 46.62% of the population.[33] 30% of respondents of the (above mentioned) "Rating" poll stated the COVID-19 pandemic in Ukraine and/or other health issues had prevented them from voting, 19% had not been in her/his place of voting, 15% were employed and working on election day, 14% did not know for whom to vote for and 12% of non-voters simply had no interest in the election.[34]

The voter turnout at the second round of mayoral elections held in Lutsk, Kramatorsk, Ukrainka, Odesa, Sumy, Kherson and Kamianets-Podilskyi on 15 November was on average 24%.[35] The highest turnout rate among seven cities was recorded in Kamianets-Podilskyi with its 34.29%.[36] The lowest turnout was recorded in Sumy with 19.02%.[36]

Mayoral elections (selected cities)

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Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko

Kyiv

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In Kyiv, incumbent Mayor Vitali Klitschko was re-elected in the first round of the election with 50.52% of the votes; 365,161 people had voted for him.[37] Klitschko was nominated by UDAR.[38] In the election Oleksandr Popov (Opposition Platform — For Life) finished second after he secured 68,757 votes, Serhiy Prytula (Voice) gained 56,900 votes, Oleksiy Kucherenko (Batkivshchyna) 45,823 votes, Iryna Vereshchuk (Servant of the People) 39,321 votes and Andriy Palchevsky 38,360 votes.[37]

 
Kharkiv Mayor Hennadiy Kernes

Kharkiv

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In Kharkiv, incumbent Mayor Hennadiy Kernes was re-elected in the first round of the election with 60.34% of the votes.[39] Kernes had been nominated by his new political party Kernes Bloc — Successful Kharkiv.[40] Oleksandr Feldman for Opposition Platform — For Life finished second in the election with 14.32%.[39] Third place went to incumbent Governor of Kharkiv Oblast Oleksiy Kucher of Servant of the People with 7.24%.[39] Voter turnout was 31.3%.[41]

During his re-election, Kernes himself was not in Kharkiv and he had not appeared in public since 23 August 2020, after becoming infected with COVID-19.[42][43] On election day Kernes was (since 17 September 2020) hospitalized in Germany in university hospital Charité.[39] At the time of his election his party assured that Kernes was about to return to Kharkiv to fulfil his duties as Mayor.[44] Kernes died of complications from COVID-19 on 17 December 2020.[44]

On 31 October 2021, a snap mayoral election in Kharkiv was held to determinate Kernes successor.[45] The election commission declared Kernes fellow party member Ihor Terekhov the winner of the election with 50.66% of the votes.[46] Mikhail Dobkin finished the race in second place with 28.4% of the vote.[46] The candidate from European Solidarity, Oleksandr Skoryk, finished third with 5,36% and all other candidates received less than 5% of the vote.[41] In this by-election voter turnout was 28.32%.[41]

Odesa

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Second round mayoral results by districts

In Odesa, incumbent Mayor Gennadiy Trukhanov (nominated by the Truth and Deeds(party) failed to be re-elected in the first round of the election.[47] In the first round Trukhanov received 38% of the votes against Opposition Platform — For Life candidate Mykola Skoryk's 19%.[47] (In the first round) Petro Obukhov of European Solidarity took third place with 11,5% of the votes and fourth spot was occupied by Oleh Filimonov [uk; ru] of Servant of the People with 10,09%.[48]

Trukhanov and Skoryk took part in the final round of the election.[47] Trukhanov defeated Skoryk in the second round of the mayoral election on 15 November 2020, 54.28% of the voters voted for him.[49]

Dnipro

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In Dnipro, a second round of the mayoral election was held between incumbent mayor Borys Filatov and Zahid Krasnov [uk] which was won by Filatov with 80.61% of the votes.[50]

In the first round of the election Filatov (nominated by Proposition) had gained 46.41% of the votes, Krasnov (nominated by Community Power) 13.15%, Oleksandr Vilkul (Bloc Vilkul — Ukrainian perspective) 12.95%, Serhiy Nikitin (Opposition Platform — For Life) 9.15% and Serhey Ryzhenko [uk] (Servant of the People) 8.71%.[51]

Oblasts

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Cherkasy Oblast

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Conduct

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Voting station in Turbiv on 25 October 2020

The day after the election (26 October 2020) OSCE's Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights stated that the election had been "calm and well-organized".[52] It also stated that a non-official poll that had been called for by president Volodymyr Zelensky had created "some illegal political advantage" for Zelensky's party, Servant of the People.[52]

The NGO Committee of Voters of Ukraine stated that the second round of mayoral elections on 22 November were "held in accordance with democratic standards" but that in five cities of eleven voting cities its observer had uncovered attempts at bribing voters.[53]

Notes

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  1. ^ Crimea is currently under dispute by Russia and Ukraine.[20]
  2. ^ In the 2019 Ukrainian parliamentary election 36.46% of Kyivites had voted for Servant of the People,[24] in the 2020 local elections an exit-poll of sociological group "Rating" predicted 9.5% of the votes for the party in the election for the Kyiv City Council and a fourth place for its mayoral candidate Iryna Vereshchuk with 8% of the votes.[25]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f Rada appoints next elections to local self-govt bodies for Oct 25, Interfax-Ukraine (15 July 2020)
  2. ^ a b c d (in Ukrainian) Mayors will be re-elected in seven cities on Sunday, Ukrainska Pravda (13 November 2020)
  3. ^ (in Ukrainian) Ukraine holds local elections 2020 (updated), The Ukrainian Week (25 October 2020)
  4. ^ Romanova, Valentyna (2022). "The 2020 regional elections in Ukraine: Simultaneously nationalized and regionalized". Regional & Federal Studies. doi:10.1080/13597566.2022.2100358. ISSN 1359-7566.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Ukraine prepares for nationwide local elections, The Ukrainian Weekly (2 October 2020)
  6. ^ a b (in Ukrainian) Elections of the mayor of Kryvyi Rih will be held on December 6, Ukrainska Pravda (17 November 2020)
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h (in Ukrainian) The CEC showed the top 10 parties that won the most seats in the election, Ukrainska Pravda (18 November 2020)
  8. ^ a b c d (in Ukrainian) Mayoral and village mayoral elections: CEC shows ranking of winning parties, Ukrainska Pravda (18 November 2020)
  9. ^ a b c "Ukraine's Zelensky suffers setback in local elections". France 24. 2020-10-25. Retrieved 2020-10-26.
  10. ^ (in Ukrainian) Явка виборців на місцевих виборах 25 жовтня 2020 року склала 36,88 % Archived 2020-10-26 at the Wayback Machine Voter turnout in the local elections on 25 October 2020 was 36.88%, Central Election Commission of Ukraine (26 October 2020)
  11. ^ a b Ukrainian local elections: Zelenskyy fairytale is over by Anders Åslund, Atlantic Council (26 October 2020)
  12. ^ "Державний реєстр виборців". www.drv.gov.ua (in Ukrainian). Archived from the original on 2020-08-22. Retrieved 2020-10-26.
  13. ^ a b Campaign false start: who is already advertised in the Dnipro, Civil movement "Chesno" (26 August 2020) (in Ukrainian)
  14. ^ Ukraine's parliament approves date for local elections, UNIAN (15 July 2020)
  15. ^ a b c "Local elections: to go to the mayors of large cities, you need from 19 to 445 thousand hryvnia". Ukrainska Pravda (in Ukrainian). 17 July 2020.
  16. ^ "The CEC pointed out 4 important features of the autumn local elections". Ukrainska Pravda (in Ukrainian). 24 July 2020.
  17. ^ a b c d "How to win elections under the new Electoral Code". Ukrainska Pravda (in Ukrainian). 19 July 2020.
  18. ^ a b c d (in Ukrainian) Surprises of local elections: what you need to know in order not to "break your brain" - 2, Ukrainska Pravda (19 October 2020)
  19. ^ a b c "How to use the new proportional system in local elections?". OPORA (in Ukrainian). 20 July 2020.
  20. ^ Gutterman, Steve (18 March 2014). "Putin signs Crimea treaty, will not seize other Ukraine regions". Reuters. Retrieved 17 July 2020.
  21. ^ "Виборів на Донбасі не буде, поки Росія не виведе війська – віцеспікерка (There will be no elections in Donbas until Russia withdraws troops - the vice-speaker)". Ukrainska Pravda (in Ukrainian). 19 July 2020.
  22. ^ The results of the elections in Kyiv will be known at best on October 28 - TECs, The Ukrainian Weekly (25 October 2020)
  23. ^ Local elections. The counting of votes may take a long time - CVU, The Ukrainian Weekly (25 October 2020)
  24. ^ How Kyiv voted: the final results of the election, Pryamiy kanal (23 July 2019)
  25. ^ Klitschko has the best chance to win Kyiv mayoral elections – exit poll, Ukrinform (25 October 2020)
  26. ^ Higgins, Andrew (24 April 2019). "Ukraine's Newly Elected President Is Jewish. So Is Its Prime Minister. Not All Jews There Are Pleased". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on 25 April 2019. Retrieved 25 April 2019.
  27. ^ a b (in Ukrainian) Local elections 2020: The first exit polls have been announced, The Ukrainian Week (25 October 2020)
  28. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m (in Ukrainian) Party measurement of the results of local elections in 2020, Ukrainska Pravda (23 November 2020)
  29. ^ a b (in Ukrainian) Political Trends November 2020, Ukrainska Pravda (7 December 2020)
  30. ^ (in Ukrainian) Local elections in Slovyansk: a cold shower for OPZZh, The Ukrainian Week (26 November 2020)
  31. ^ a b Ukraine's western regions were most active in local elections - CEC, Ukrinform (26 October 2020)
  32. ^ More than half of the voters who came to the polling station were over 50 years old, Ukrainska Pravda (28 October 2020)
  33. ^ (in Ukrainian) [1]
  34. ^ Did not go to the polls: every 5th because of health, Ukrainska Pravda (26 October 2020)
  35. ^ CEC: Voter turnout in second round of mayoral elections is 24%, Ukrinform (16 November 2020)
  36. ^ a b Turnout in second round of mayoral elections in Ukraine was 24% at 20:00 - CEC, Interfax-Ukraine (16 November 2020)
  37. ^ a b Vitali Klitschko wins in first round of Kyiv mayor election, Ukrinform (6 November 2020)
  38. ^ (in Ukrainian) Klitschko reacted to support from Poroshenko's party: We are not bargaining, Ukrainska Pravda (16 September 2020)
    (in Ukrainian) "Eurosolidarity" will support Klitschko in the elections in Kyiv, Ukrainska Pravda (16 September 2020)
  39. ^ a b c d (in Ukrainian) Kharkiv, the votes in the mayoral election were counted: who wins and whether there will be a second round, UNIAN (4 November 2020)
  40. ^ The first donors appeared in the Kernes Bloc - Successful Kharkiv party (Updated), Civil movement "Chesno" (24 June 2020) (in Ukrainian)
  41. ^ a b c (in Ukrainian) Heir to Kernes, The Ukrainian Week (4 November 2021)
  42. ^ Kharkiv City Council denies reports on mayor's COVID-19 coma, UNIAN (15 September 2020)
  43. ^ (in Ukrainian) Kernes was re-elected mayor of Kharkiv - a voter, Ukrainska Pravda (4 November 2020)
  44. ^ a b Kharkiv mayor Kernes dies, Ukrinform (17 December 2020)
    Помер Геннадій Кернес: мер Харкова, який виграв вибори з реанімації, BBC Ukrainian (17 December 2020) (in Ukrainian)
  45. ^ (in Ukrainian) "Servant of the people" will not nominate a candidate for mayor of Kharkiv, Ukrainska Pravda (6 September 2021)
  46. ^ a b (in Ukrainian) Kharkiv mayoral election: the court denied OPORA's lawsuits, although it acknowledged differences, Ukrainska Pravda (9 November 2021)
  47. ^ a b c Ukrainian local elections: City-by-city guide to this weekend's runoff votes, Atlantic Council (13 November 2020)
  48. ^ (in Ukrainian) The second round of mayoral elections in Odesa: who won, RBC Ukraine (15 November 2020)
  49. ^ (in Ukrainian) Trukhanov officially won the mayoral election in Odesa, The Ukrainian Week (17 November 2020)
  50. ^ (in Ukrainian) Filatov became the mayor of Dnipro for the second time, The Ukrainian Week (23 November 2020)
  51. ^ (in Ukrainian) Elections in Dnipro: rating of candidates before the second round, RBC Ukraine (19 November 2020)
  52. ^ a b (in Ukrainian) OSCE: elections in Ukraine were held without violations, but "SE poll" played into the hands of "servants", Ukrainska Pravda (26 October 2020)
  53. ^ Second round of mayoral elections in some cities on Nov 22 held in accordance with standards, but technologies of voters' bribery used in five cities - CVU, Interfax-Ukraine (23 November 2020)
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