Wednesday, 06 November 2024

MPs claim Zelensky has total control of Ukraine - media


President Vladimir Zelensky
© Global Look Press / President of UkraineFILE PHOTO: President Vladimir Zelensky attends the plenary session of the Ukrainian parliament in Kiev, Ukraine, on June 28, 2023
Ukraine is now essentially under the personal rule of President Vladimir Zelensky, leading Kiev news outlet Ukrainskaya Pravda (UP) reported on Wednesday. He has virtually stripped the national parliament - the Verkhovna Rada - of its powers and reduced it to a mere rubber-stamp body, UP outlined in a piece based on numerous interviews with Ukrainian MPs.

The Rada has long been tightly controlled by the presidential administration, according to UP. The outlet claims that Zelensky's office is not only determining the priority of bills on the agenda but also deciding "whether the parliament should convene at all or its MPs should be promptly sent to the trenches."

"The president's office despises the parliament," an unnamed senior MP reportedly said. Zelensky and his team believe his party - the Servant of the People - which holds a majority in the legislature, "would vote for anything" the president needs, according to the lawmaker.

Meanwhile, Zelensky is losing support within his own party, UP claimed. In the last parliamentary election in 2019, Servant of the People won 254 seats in the Rada. This number has been reduced to 235 due to lawmakers leaving the president's party. Many of them, who are still formally considered members, skip parliamentary sessions, according to the outlet's sources. Only between 170 and 180 Servant of the People MPs still actively vote on bills, the sources stated.

"First of all, everyone is tired of the war," a senior lawmaker told UP. Members also understand they are "not influencing the developments in the state and see no role for themselves in the Rada or any sense of being there," he said.

According to the article, the president's faction in the parliament is on the verge of "total disorganization," with MPs apparently ready to surrender their mandates and leave altogether. Dozens have already attempted to do so, UP reported, citing its sources. A "lion's share" of members would also like to see the parliament dissolved, it added.

Zelensky deals with the parliament "from a position of power," the UP report observed, and the parliament essentially works only when the president "needs something." Otherwise, it is "unable to function" and the Ukrainian leader could not care less about it, the outlet wrote.

The absence of real power in the Rada also makes those on the other side of the aisle reluctant to take over the reins, according to the article. "Our ruling [party] has no power and the opposition avoids it as well," an opposing politician said. He explained that "no one needs any authority or power" and everyone just thinks about escaping responsibility for current conditions in the country.

"We have a unique situation in Ukraine: one person decides everything," another opposition MP complained. "There is one very specific decision-making center," he said, referring to Zelensky.
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