Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
06KIEV1243
2006-03-29 15:45:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Kyiv
Cable title:  

UKRAINE: ELECTION RESULTS OVER 97 PERCENT; PARTIES

Tags:  PGOV PINR KDEM PHUM RU 
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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 KIEV 001243 

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 03/29/2016
TAGS: PGOV PINR KDEM PHUM RU
SUBJECT: UKRAINE: ELECTION RESULTS OVER 97 PERCENT; PARTIES
UNDER THRESHOLD CALL FOR RECOUNT


Classified By: POL Counselor Aubrey Carlson for reasons 1.4(a,b,d).

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 KIEV 001243

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 03/29/2016
TAGS: PGOV PINR KDEM PHUM RU
SUBJECT: UKRAINE: ELECTION RESULTS OVER 97 PERCENT; PARTIES
UNDER THRESHOLD CALL FOR RECOUNT


Classified By: POL Counselor Aubrey Carlson for reasons 1.4(a,b,d).


1. (C) Summary: With over 97 percent of the national
parliamentary vote tallied by 6 pm March 29, opposition Party
of Regions continued to lead with 31.8 percent of the vote,
followed by Yuliya Tymoshenko's Bloc (BYuT) at 22.4 percent,
and President Yushchenko's Our Ukraine at 14.1 percent. Five
parties not reaching the three-percent threshold called for a
nationwide recount. Coalition talks among major parties
continued, and many of the Our Ukraine election bloc member
parties called for an Orange coalition, or at least a
democratic one founded on common goals. Presidential chief
of staff Rybachuk told us March 28 that incumbent Kiev mayor
Omelchenko had contacted Our Ukraine to plead for support in
fixing the Kiev mayoral election after it became apparent he
was losing his reelection bid. End summary.

Official Results - nearly 98 percent now in
--------------


2. (U) CEC official results continued to come slowly
throughout the day March 29. With 97.86 percent of precincts
reporting as of 1820, the official vote tally stood at:

Regions 31.86 percent
Tymoshenko 22.34
Our Ukraine 14.10
Socialists 5.75
Communists 3.65
-------------- 3% threshold --------------
Vitrenko 2.86
Lytvyn 2.44
Kostenko-Plyushch 1.90
Viche 1.71
PORA-PRP 1.47

Coalition Talks
--------------


3. (U) As party heads carried on coalition talks, leaders of
the member parties of the Our Ukraine electoral bloc were
voicing their support for a democratic coalition, with some
specifying Orange parties and others more ambiguous in their
statements. The Our Ukraine political council released a
press statement March 28 backing the creation of a democratic
coalition. Prime Mininster Yekhanurov summarized the
council's meeting, noting that the coalition had to be given
a framework in a memorandum. The council was scheduled to
meet again March 29 to work out additional details,
anticipating that a coalition could be announced on the day

when the CEC announces final results.


4. (U) Party of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs (PIE) leader
(and National Security and Defense Council Secretary)
Anatoliy Kinakh said his party supported a democratic
coalition that would support President Yushchenko's program.
Head of the Christian Democratic Union Volodymyr Stretovych
specifically noted that the democratic coalition should
include Our Ukraine, BYuT, and the Socialist Party, and
further called for the abolition of Rada deputy immunity.
Foreign Minister Borys Tarasyuk, leader of Rukh, the People's
Movement of Ukraine, and Oleksiy Ivchenko, head of the
Congress of Ukrainian Nationalists, also endorsed the
formation of a trilateral Maidan coalition. Tarasyuk did not
rule out other parties joining, but specified that Regions
could only join if it gave up on federalism and state
language status for Russian and endorsed European
integration.


5. (U) The Socialist Party made public March 29 a memorandum
setting down principles for a coalition between OU, BYuT and
themselves. The memorandum, which foresaw signing a
coalition agreement on the day the Rada opened its first
session, set down principles of Ukraine's strategic course to
Europe and stable relations with Russia and other neighbors.
The participants in the coalition would promise to coordinate
their programs with the President and prepare a domestic and
foreign policy document for Rada approval. In addition, the
coalition would have to prepare an action plan within 30 days
and submit it to parliament. The participants would be
obliged not to engage in separate talks with any other party
or bloc, and decisions would be based on consensus of the
coalition. Deputy Socialist Party leader Yosyp Vinskyy
publicly ruled out a Socialist Party coalition with Regions.

Losers demand recounts
--------------


6. (U) Inna Bohoslovska (Viche),Lyudmila Suprun (People's
Democratic Party),Vladyslav Kaskiv (Pora),and Ihor Yeremeev
(Lytvyn-led People's bloc),all representing parties failing
to meet the three percent threshold for Rada representation,
held a joint press conference at 2 pm, demanding a nationwide
recount of votes in the Rada elections. At a separate press
conference on 28 March, People's Opposition bloc leader
Vitrenko claimed mass falsification in the vote count and
warned of an international conspiracy. The Crimean branch of
People's Union Our Ukraine, meanwhile, called for
invalidation of the elections to the Crimean parliament,
claiming that its observers had documented that at 14 polling
stations in Crimea voters had not been given ballots for the
Crimean parlimentary election.

Kiev Elections: incumbent getting the boot
--------------


7. (C) Official results of the Kiev mayoral election, with
83.98 percent of the vote counted by 1400 March 29, continued
to show Our Ukraine MP Chernovetskyy in the lead with 31.8
percent of the vote, followed by ex-World Boxing Champion and
Pora-PRP candidate Klychko with 23.82 percent, and incumbent
mayor Omelchenko with 21.17 percent. (Note: Reftel's
previously reported vote counts by Pora's website appear to
have been parallel vote counts based on precinct reports.)
In a March 28 meeting, presidential chief of staff Rybachuk
told us that Kiev Mayor Omelchenko had contacted Our Ukraine
after it became clear that he was losing his re-election
race. Rybachuk said that Omelchenko wanted to cook the
results and was looking to Our Ukraine for support. Rybachuk
implied that Our Ukraine had not responded to, and thus had
rejected, Omelchenko's plea. Kiev campaign chair for
Pora-PRP candidate Klychko, Volodymyr Bondarenko, told DELO
newspaper March 28 that Mayor Omelchenko was removing
documents from his office.


8. (U) In the Kiev City Rada election, BYuT was strongly in
the lead at 1500 March 29, with 80.27 percent of the vote
counted:

BYuT 24.67 percent
Chernovetskyy 12.85
OU 8.88
PORA-PRP 8.54
Regions 5.57
Kiev People's Aktyv 4.06
Socialists 3.98
Lytvyn Bloc 3.64


9. (U) Visit Embassy Kiev's classified website:
www.state.sgov.gov/p/eur/kiev.
Herbst