Fri, Feb 10 2012

Power grab

Fri, Mar 12 2010 10:35 CET 941 Views
Power grab

Former prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko

After a quick March 11 parliamentary session, the president is in charge of nearly everything now. After changing the rules in what critics call an unconstitutional way, President Viktor Yanukovych moved fast to control government. He has a 235-member ruling majority in parliament, a loyal prime minister and control of other powerful posts. Is this good or bad for the nation?

Goodbye, gridlock government. Hello, steamroller government.

Viktor Yanukovych needed little more than two weeks in power to consolidate control over parliament, get his top choice as prime minister and to assemble a new Cabinet of Ministers – albeit in a manner critics called unconstitutional.

Read more at Kyiv Post

  • Print
  • Send via email
  • Translate to
  • Share:

To post comments, please, Login or Register.


Please read the The Sofia Echo forum comments policy.

More in this category

Auction reveals Ceausescu’s personal age of plenty

Iranian silver-plated pigeons, African leopard skins and a Chinese bronze yak were among the 70 items sold in an auction of gifts presented to Romania’s former dictator Nicolae Ceausescu and his wife Elena.

EC praises airports for progress in dealing with extreme weather

Airports were also showing signs of better co-ordination and providing passengers with accurate real-time information, compared to previous period of travel disruption, transport commissioner Siim Kallas said.

Hungary's PM condemns international critics amid economic uncertainty

Viktor Orban defends government's record, new constitution in state-of-the-nation address as he slams European Commission.

Polish PM, digitalisation minister hold public debates on ACTA ratification

PM Donald Tusk invited authors, NGOs, experts and bloggers to a debate on the ACTA copyright agreement, but several key organisations, including the Helsinki Foundation, rejected the invitation claiming that the talks will likely offer no opportunity to discuss concrete issues.

Protesters clash in Budapest as controversial theatre director takes stage

'Dirty Jews' and 'Dirty Nazis' were the most popular chants when two groups clashed in front of Új Színház (New Theatre)