Yulia Tymoshenko Bloc

[17] The alliance also had prominent members who had been associated with the opponents of the Orange Revolutions (the "Blue camp") including Ivan Kyrylenko, the former[18] faction leader of the Bloc Yulia Tymoshenko (BYuT) in the Ukrainian Parliament.[26][27][28][29][30][31][32] In January 2001, President Leonid Kuchma dismissed Tymoshenko from the post of Deputy Prime Minister for fuel and energy sector in the cabinet of Viktor Yushchenko.[33][34] The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe noted at the time that there were physical assaults and harassment of candidates and campaign workers associated with the BYuT, and other opposition parties leading up to the March 2002 election.[35] At the parliamentary elections on 30 March 2002, the alliance comprised the following liberal and nationalist member parties:[36][37] The bloc won 7.2%[38] of the popular vote and 22 out of 450 seats.[59] President Viktor Yushchenko's decree to dissolve the Verkhovna Rada (parliament) – made during the 2008 Ukrainian political crisis – was never put into action.[70] Ten representative of BYuT joined the coalition supporting the Azarov Government as an independent MP in April 2010.[73] On 26 June 2010 the Political Council Presidium of All-Ukrainian Union "Fatherland" expelled Oleksandr Feldman, a Verkhovna Rada deputy of the BYuT faction, from the party because he had joined the coalition supporting the Azarov Government the previous month.[83] On 2 February 2011 party-leader Tymoshenko claimed members of the "Bloc Yulia Tymoshenko-Batkivschyna"-faction had been offered money and places in the election list of the Party of Regions and have been blackmailed into voting for laws introduced by the Azarov Government.[102][103] The Ukrainian Social-Democratic Party had stated in December 2011 "that we are doing nothing that can harm the Bloc of Yulia Tymoshenko... Our task is to collect the most votes in parliament at the 2012 parliamentary elections".[111] During the election the list won 62 seats and 25.55% of the votes under the proportional party-list system (falling from 30.71% in 2007 for BYuT[38]) and another 39 by winning 39 simple-majority constituencies.[116][117] The BYuT had advocated the following positions: Late May was marked with another story on a boring subject – betrayal, conspiracy, coup d'état, the usurpation of power and other terrible things.This has already become a political characteristic of Ukraine.Our Ukraine has been the main ally of the Yulia Tymoshenko Bloc (BYuT) during the Orange Revolution and in its aftermath.[122][123][124][125][126] But early June talks to build a broad coalition to address the economic crisis collapsed; Yulia Tymoshenko accused PoR leader Viktor Yanukovych of betrayal.Official documents from both the European Union and the United States suggest Tymoshenko's prosecution and imprisonment were politically motivated.
Results for "Fatherland" in the 2012 elections
BatkivshchynaLeaderYulia TymoshenkoOleksandr TurchynovAndriy KozhemiakinNational Salvation CommitteeDictatorship Resistance CommitteeIdeologySocial democracyPopulismCivic nationalismSolidarismNational DemocracyPro-EuropeanismPolitical positionBig tentPolitics of UkrainePolitical partiesElectionsAnti-colonialismAnti-communismAtlanticismChristian democracyConservatismCooperativismUkrainian cooperative movementDemocracyFree market economicsLiberalismSocial market economyFrankoBachynskyBochkovskyDziubaChornovilZvarychPetliuraStetskoLukianenkoYukhnovskyiYushchenkoTymoshenkoPoroshenkoEuropean SolidarityCongress of Ukrainian NationalistsOur UkraineOur Ukraine–People's Self-Defense BlocPeople's FrontPeople's Movement of UkraineReforms and Order PartyUkrainian Social Democratic Labour PartyUkrainian Socialist-Revolutionary PartyUkrainianUkraineparliamentary elections2002 parliamentary electionsoblastsRussian languageRussian-speaking provincesCrimeaLyudmyla DenisovaLuhansk OblastNatalia KorolevskaOrange RevolutionIvan Kyrylenkofaction leaderUkrainian ParliamentSoviet dissidentLevko LukyanenkoUNA-UNSOAndriy Shkileducation sectorhealth careVerkhovna RadaParty of RegionsPresidentLeonid KuchmacabinetViktor YushchenkoUkraine without KuchmaOrganization for Security and Co-operation in EuropeFatherland PartyAll-Ukrainian Union "Fatherland"Ukrainian Republican Party "Sobor"Ukrainian Social Democratic PartyUkrainian Republican PartyAnatoliy MatviyenkoVasyl OnopenkoOleh BilorusUkrainian presidential election of 2004Prime Minister of UkraineFatherlandOur Ukraine BlocMykola TomenkoAndriy ShevchenkoOrange MovementSocialist Party of UkraineCommunist Party of Ukraine2007 parliamentary electionsViktor PynzenykYevhen KorniychukUkraine's Central Electoral CommissionSocialist Partyconvocation2008 Ukrainian political crisisVolodymyr LytvynChairman of the Verkhovna RadaLytvyn Blocelections in 2012Prime Minister2010 Presidential electionViktor Yanukovichsecond Tymoshenko GovernmentCentral Election Commission of Ukrainethe new parliamentary coalitionAzarov GovernmentOleksandr FeldmanBatkivschynaReforms for the Futureabuse of powerUkrainian PresidentYanukovychPeople's Self-Defense Political Partyparliamentary elections in March 2012Arseniy YatsenyukFront for ChangeUkrainian Social-Democratic Partypresidential administrationParty of Natalia Korolevska "Ukraine – Forward!"Front of ChangesFor UkrainePeople's Self-DefenseCivil PositionSocial Christian PartyMejlis of the Crimean Tatar Peopleprevious electionliberal nationalismPresidentialParliamentaryCaspian SeaAzerbaijanGeorgiaBlack SeaAzov Seasbroad coalitioneconomic crisisViktor YanukovychViktor YuschenkoCharismatic authorityKyiv PostThe Ukrainian WeekVossiuspers UvA2002 parliamentary election2006 parliamentary election2007 parliamentary electionWayback MachineCentre for Eastern StudiesBBC NewsUkrayinska PravdaI B Tauris & Co LtdInterfax-UkraineBloomberg L.P.RoutledgeImmigration and Refugee Board of CanadaCentral European UniversityRadio Free Europe/Radio LibertyPresidential decreeAndrew WilsonYale University PressMykola RiabchukPeter LangNational University of Kyiv-Mohyla AcademyUkrainska PravdaKorrespondentUkrainian Independent Information AgencyUkrainian News AgencyopenDemocracy.netPulitzer Center on Crisis ReportingTurkish Weeklypresident.gov.uaBBC UkrainianCentral Electoral Commission of UkraineUkrinformUwe BackesVandenhoeck & RuprechtAnders ÅslundPeterson Institute for International EconomicsThe New York TimesJohn GillinghamCambridge University PressJane CurryRowman & Littlefield PublishersDonnacha Ó BeacháinPaul D'AnieriM.E. SharpePolitical parties in UkraineServant of the PeopleFor the FuturePlatform for Life and PeaceSmart PoliticsDoviraRestoration of UkraineJusticeSvobodaSelf RelianceAndriy Baloha's TeamBila Tserkva TogetherOpposition Platform — For LifeKernes Bloc — Successful KharkivOur LandUkrainian Strategy of GroysmanPropositionRadical PartyCherkashchanySvitlychna Bloc — Together!Strength and HonorBloc Vilkul — Ukrainian PerspectiveUnity of Oleksandr OmelchenkoWe Have to Live Here!Agrarian PartyNative ZakarpattiaPower of the PeopleParty of HungariansOpposition BlocUkrainian Galician PartyParty of ShariyVolodymyr Saldo BlocAktsentBrotherhoodChristian Democratic UnionConscience of UkraineDemocratic AllianceDemocratic AxeDemocratic PartyEuropean PartyFor Ukraine!HromadaInternet PartyJustice PartyLabour UkraineLiberal Democratic PartyLiberal Party of UkraineLibertyMotherland Defenders PartyMovement of New ForcesNational CorpsNew LifeNew PoliticsOne RusParty of GreensParty of Free DemocratsParty of Industrialists and EntrepreneursParty of PensionersPeople BlocPeople's Democratic PartyPeople's PartyPirate PartyPolitical Party of Small and Medium-sized BusinessesReasonable ForceRepublican Christian PartyRepublican PlatformRevivalRight SectorSocial-Christian PartyUnited Social Democratic PartySolidarity of WomenStrong UkraineThird Ukrainian RepublicNational-Democratic Association "Ukraine"Ukraine – Forward!Ukraine is Our HomeUkraine UnitedUkrainian Democratic Alliance for ReformUkrainian People's PartyUnion of CommunistsVolt UkraineYouth PartyCommunist Party of Ukraine (renewed)Communist Party of Workers and PeasantsRussian BlocRussian UnityDerzhavaLeft OppositionProgressive Socialist PartySocialistsUnion of Left ForcesWorkers Party of Ukraine (Marxist–Leninist)