Suddenly, Ukraine faces another stark choice: dismiss the government and parliament and hold new elections, or see the country’s independence surrendered bit by bit. There is renewed talk, too, of violent civil unrest. None of this should be surprising, given how our corrupt rulers systematically incite regional and ethnic hatred.
Some say that President Viktor Yushchenko’s decision this week to dismiss Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych’s government was unwarranted. They are wrong: Yushchenko’s actions were necessary because the Yanukovych government, in clear violation of the law, was preparing to mount a constitutional coup that would have stripped the president of his remaining supervisory powers over the army and police. Either the president acted now, or Ukraine would return to the absolute rule of criminal clans that existed before our Orange Revolution in 2004.
I did not agree with Yushchenko’s decision to appoint Yanukovych prime minister following last year’s parliamentary election. For a democratic-minded president to co-habit (as the French call it) with the very man who sought to sabotage Ukraine’s last presidential ballot would, I knew, provoke institutional paralysis and political chaos. And so it has.
But the ultimate shortcoming of that cohabitation was its curtailment of the democratic process. Ukraine’s democrats, who won that election, were denied their voice and their place in government. Yushchenko offered his hand to his foes in good faith so as to bind up our nation’s wounds; in return, the governing pact that he reached with Yanukovych was betrayed at every turn. A new election will restore democratic choice – and thus revitalize our democracy.
Europe and the world are, of course, right to worry. But Ukraine has changed dramatically since the Orange Revolution. Even those Europeans who believe – wrongly – that democracy does not easily take root in post-Soviet countries should recognize that our people now feel empowered. A country that emerged so recently from one period of dictatorship is unlikely to volunteer for another at the hands of a man who sought to falsify the presidential election of 2004.
Economic growth since the Orange Revolution reinforces that reluctance, because an expanding middle class nearly always prefers the flexibility of pluralism to the thump of an authoritarian's fist. The general election called for May 27 will help to keep things this way.
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But the dangers that Ukraine faces are serious, stemming from problems – particularly fragile institutions and economic dislocation – that are common to every young post-communist democracy, as well as from some special problems of its own. Many of Ukraine’s richest citizens, who gained their wealth through the crony capitalism that is the only way Yanukovych knows how to govern, remain unreconciled to Ukraine’s democracy. For them, manufactured discontent in Ukraine’s Russian-speaking regions – which have embraced a centrifugal tendency greater than in any other European democracy – impels them toward the system of managed democracy found in Russia in order to protect their continued misrule.
A decade ago, the world had a foretaste of what can happen when ethnic divisions are exploited for sinister political purposes. Yugoslavia is but a miniature version of what might happen in Ukraine if Yanukovych’s tactics are allowed to bring ethnic antagonisms to the boiling point.
Ukraine’s unity, however, is not artificial. It is natural, as is demonstrated by the huge majority – even among the Russian minority – that continues to support the country’s independence. So it would be wrong to say that the democratic center cannot hold in Ukraine.
The best and still most living thing about our Orange Revolution was the democratic empowerment of our people. As a result, something remarkable for a former Soviet country informs the habits of those who are demanding that their liberties be preserved: a deep respect for the rule of law, which is the ultimate check on abuse of power.
Our people understand that the Yanukovych government is not just political poison. It seeks to dominate, and deaden, the whole economy, too. No business can be conducted without kowtowing to the regime for permission.
Ukraine’s neighbors should now help us by offering support and hope. Europe must send a clear signal that Ukraine, unlike Czechoslovakia to Neville Chamberlain in 1938, is not some faraway place of which it knows little, but rather an integral part of the European project.
After all, the European Union is first and foremost a community of democracies: if Ukraine can aspire to membership, any oligarch or criminal politician who undermines that prospect will have to face the ire of all Ukrainians. Moreover, all of Europe needs a truly democratic Ukraine. New elections to secure our democracy are the only way forward, both for us and for advancing Europe’s interest in seeing that genuine democracy takes root in the nations of the former Soviet Union.
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Suddenly, Ukraine faces another stark choice: dismiss the government and parliament and hold new elections, or see the country’s independence surrendered bit by bit. There is renewed talk, too, of violent civil unrest. None of this should be surprising, given how our corrupt rulers systematically incite regional and ethnic hatred.
Some say that President Viktor Yushchenko’s decision this week to dismiss Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych’s government was unwarranted. They are wrong: Yushchenko’s actions were necessary because the Yanukovych government, in clear violation of the law, was preparing to mount a constitutional coup that would have stripped the president of his remaining supervisory powers over the army and police. Either the president acted now, or Ukraine would return to the absolute rule of criminal clans that existed before our Orange Revolution in 2004.
I did not agree with Yushchenko’s decision to appoint Yanukovych prime minister following last year’s parliamentary election. For a democratic-minded president to co-habit (as the French call it) with the very man who sought to sabotage Ukraine’s last presidential ballot would, I knew, provoke institutional paralysis and political chaos. And so it has.
But the ultimate shortcoming of that cohabitation was its curtailment of the democratic process. Ukraine’s democrats, who won that election, were denied their voice and their place in government. Yushchenko offered his hand to his foes in good faith so as to bind up our nation’s wounds; in return, the governing pact that he reached with Yanukovych was betrayed at every turn. A new election will restore democratic choice – and thus revitalize our democracy.
Europe and the world are, of course, right to worry. But Ukraine has changed dramatically since the Orange Revolution. Even those Europeans who believe – wrongly – that democracy does not easily take root in post-Soviet countries should recognize that our people now feel empowered. A country that emerged so recently from one period of dictatorship is unlikely to volunteer for another at the hands of a man who sought to falsify the presidential election of 2004.
Economic growth since the Orange Revolution reinforces that reluctance, because an expanding middle class nearly always prefers the flexibility of pluralism to the thump of an authoritarian's fist. The general election called for May 27 will help to keep things this way.
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Access every new PS commentary, our entire On Point suite of subscriber-exclusive content – including Longer Reads, Insider Interviews, Big Picture/Big Question, and Say More – and the full PS archive.
Subscribe Now
But the dangers that Ukraine faces are serious, stemming from problems – particularly fragile institutions and economic dislocation – that are common to every young post-communist democracy, as well as from some special problems of its own. Many of Ukraine’s richest citizens, who gained their wealth through the crony capitalism that is the only way Yanukovych knows how to govern, remain unreconciled to Ukraine’s democracy. For them, manufactured discontent in Ukraine’s Russian-speaking regions – which have embraced a centrifugal tendency greater than in any other European democracy – impels them toward the system of managed democracy found in Russia in order to protect their continued misrule.
A decade ago, the world had a foretaste of what can happen when ethnic divisions are exploited for sinister political purposes. Yugoslavia is but a miniature version of what might happen in Ukraine if Yanukovych’s tactics are allowed to bring ethnic antagonisms to the boiling point.
Ukraine’s unity, however, is not artificial. It is natural, as is demonstrated by the huge majority – even among the Russian minority – that continues to support the country’s independence. So it would be wrong to say that the democratic center cannot hold in Ukraine.
The best and still most living thing about our Orange Revolution was the democratic empowerment of our people. As a result, something remarkable for a former Soviet country informs the habits of those who are demanding that their liberties be preserved: a deep respect for the rule of law, which is the ultimate check on abuse of power.
Our people understand that the Yanukovych government is not just political poison. It seeks to dominate, and deaden, the whole economy, too. No business can be conducted without kowtowing to the regime for permission.
Ukraine’s neighbors should now help us by offering support and hope. Europe must send a clear signal that Ukraine, unlike Czechoslovakia to Neville Chamberlain in 1938, is not some faraway place of which it knows little, but rather an integral part of the European project.
After all, the European Union is first and foremost a community of democracies: if Ukraine can aspire to membership, any oligarch or criminal politician who undermines that prospect will have to face the ire of all Ukrainians. Moreover, all of Europe needs a truly democratic Ukraine. New elections to secure our democracy are the only way forward, both for us and for advancing Europe’s interest in seeing that genuine democracy takes root in the nations of the former Soviet Union.