Ukrainian_Platform_"Sobor"

Republican Platform

Republican Platform

Political party in Ukraine


Republican Platform (Ukrainian: Республіканська платформа) is a political party in Ukraine. It was the first registered political party in Ukraine, created on November 5, 1990[1] by the Ministry of Justice of UkrSSR.[3] RP was founded earlier that year in place of the Ukrainian Helsinki Group in April 1990.

Quick Facts Leader, Founded ...
Anatoliy Matviyenko (2003), a party leader 1999-2011.
Old logo

Previous names

  • 1990 – 2002: Ukrainian Republican party
  • 2002 – 2011: Ukrainian Republican Party "Sobor" (Ukrainian: Українська республіканська партія „Собор“)[4]
  • 2011 – 2015: Ukrainian Platform "Sobor"
  • 2015: Republican platform

History

November 1976 – Ukrainian community groups was established to promote the implementation of the Helsinki agreements. Almost all members of this Ukrainian Helsinki Group were subsequently repressed; four of them (V. Stus, Yu. Lytvyn, O. Tykhyi, V. Marchenko) died in Soviet camps.

March 1988 – Ukrainian Helsinki Union (UKhS) was formed. Since 1989, UKhS has moved to open propaganda activity, promoting the independence of Ukraine.

April 29–30, 1990 – Ukrainian Republican Party (URP) was established in the place of the UKhS. The party was registered on November 5, 1990 by the Ministry of Justice of the Ukrainian SSR as the first political party in Ukraine.

A 1992 split in the party resulted in the creation of the rival Ukrainian Conservative Republican Party (UKRP) led by Stepan Khmara.[5]

In the 1994 parliamentary elections the URP core party obtained nine seats initially, adding three more by the end of the year.

During the 1998 Ukrainian parliamentary election the party was part (together with Congress of Ukrainian Nationalists & Ukrainian Conservative Republican Party) of the Election Bloc "National Front"[1] (Ukrainian: Виборчий блок партій «Національний фронт») which won 2,71% of the national votes[1] and 6 (single-mandate constituency) seats.[6][7] In January 2001 the "National Front" parliamentary faction had grown to 17 deputies.[6]

After being part of the National Salvation Committee[8][9] the party became part of the Yulia Tymoshenko Electoral Bloc alliance during the Ukrainian 2002 parliamentary elections.[10][11] On April 21, 2002 the party merged with the Ukrainian People's Party "Sobor" as the Ukrainian Republican Party "Sobor".[12]

More information Date, Event ...

On 15 October 2012 the party withdrew itself from the national list of the 2012 Ukrainian parliamentary election.[17] In the election it did not win any constituencies (it had competed in 12 constituencies[18]) and thus failed to win parliamentary representation.[19]

In the 2014 Ukrainian parliamentary election the participated in 6 constituencies; but its candidates lost in all of them and thus the party won no parliamentary seats.[20][21]

Local elections

2010

In the 2010 local elections the party won a few representatives in 3 regional parliaments, all in Western Ukraine.[22]

Elections

More information Presidential since 2004(year links to election page), Year ...
More information Parliamentary since 2002(year links to election page), Year ...

References

  1. Virtual Politics – Faking Democracy in the Post-Soviet World, Andrew Wilson, Yale University Press, 2005, ISBN 0-300-09545-7 (page 31)
  2. About Tymoshenko Archived 2009-09-26 at the Wayback Machine, Official website of Yulia Tymoshenko
  3. (in Russian)/(website has automatic Google Translate option) Small biography of Anatoliy Matviyenko, LIGA
  4. (in Ukrainian) Candidates, RBC Ukraine

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