Jump to content

Mykhailo Dobkin

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Mikhail Dobkin)

Mykhailo Dobkin
Михайло Добкін
Dobkin in 2008
People's Deputy of Ukraine
In office
27 November 2014 – 29 August 2019
ConstituencyOpposition Bloc, No. 3
In office
14 May 2002 – 25 May 2006
ConstituencyKharkiv Oblast, No. 174
Governor of Kharkiv Oblast
In office
10 March 2010 – 2 March 2014
PresidentViktor Yanukovych
Preceded byVolodymyr Babayev (acting)
Succeeded byIhor Baluta
4th Mayor of Kharkiv
In office
26 March 2006 – 10 March 2010
Preceded byVolodymyr Shumilkin
Succeeded byHennadiy Kernes
Personal details
Born (1970-01-26) 26 January 1970 (age 54)
Kharkiv, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union
(now Ukraine)
Political partyParty of Christian Socialists (since 2018)
Other political
affiliations
Alma mater
Signature

Mykhailo Markovych Dobkin[a] (born 26 January 1970)[1] is a Ukrainian politician, former governor of Kharkiv Oblast, former mayor of Kharkiv,[1] and a former deputy of the Ukrainian parliament.[2]

Early life and career

[edit]

Mykhailo Dobkin was born to a Jewish father and Ukrainian mother in Kharkiv.[1][3][4] He graduated from the National University of Internal Affairs with a degree in law and the Kharkiv National University of Economics, majoring in international economics.[1][5]

From 1993 until 2002, Dobkin was an entrepreneur and director of several businesses.[1] In his 2015 tax declaration, Dobkin stated that he owned 12 vehicles.[6]

People's Deputy of Ukraine (2002–2006)

[edit]

In the 2002 Ukrainian parliamentary election, Dobkin was elected as People's Deputy of Ukraine.[7] Dobkin changed his political party several times while serving as a People's Deputy, going from For United Ukraine! to the Democratic Initiatives [uk] group less than a year after his election. Two years later, Dobkin again switched his party to the Social Democratic Party of Ukraine (united), and the year afterwards joined the Party of Regions, where he remained until the Verkhovna Rada was dissolved for the 2006 Ukrainian parliamentary election.[1] From late 2005, Dobkin was a member of the political council of the Party of Regions.[1]

Mayor of Kharkiv (2006–2010)

[edit]

From March 2006 to March 2010, Dobkin was Mayor of Kharkiv.[1] In office, Dobkin was close to Hennadiy Kernes, who exerted unofficial power upon Dobkin.

Election video scandal

[edit]

On September 27, 2007, a video recording how Dobkin’s election speech was prepared in December 2005 was posted on YouTube. A video containing profanity by Hennadiy Kernes was also shown on television. The authenticity of this recording is controversial. Dobkin himself called this video "partially edited".[8] On the first day, the video on YouTube was viewed by about 120 thousand people,[8] and in total, as of June 2020, there were more than 6.1 million views.[9] The video spawned a huge number of Internet memes in the Russian-speaking segment of the Internet.[10]

Governor of Kharkiv Oblast (2010–2014)

[edit]
Mykhailo Dobkin with Ukrainian actor Bohdan Stupka

In March 2010, President Viktor Yanukovych appointed Dobkin as Governor of Kharkiv Oblast.[1]

In 2014, amidst Euromaidan, Dobkin formed the Ukrainian Front, an organisation in support of Yanukovych. Dobkin furthermore stated his intention to "clean and purify our Ukrainian land of those who come here with plans for occupation".[11] In February 2014, Dobkin called for Ukraine’s capital to be moved from Kyiv to Kharkiv, and for a federal structure of government to be established in Ukraine.[12] He also claimed that by late February 2014, "all peaceful protesters of Euromaidan had left" and that "Negotiations with [remaining protesters] will be to no avail. They need to disarm, and those who resist and kill people physically destroyed."[13]

Revolution of Dignity and 2014 pro-Russian unrest

[edit]

Following the Revolution of Dignity, Dobkin was a leading participant of local officials in Eastern Ukraine, which questioned the legality of the new government's actions and declared local officials would take responsibility for their own oblasts until order was restored.[14] Dobkin was later reported to have fled to Russia, along with Kharkiv mayor Hennadiy Kernes, but he returned to attend a pro-Russian rally in the city.[15][16]

In late February 2014, he indicated that he intended to run for president in the upcoming Ukrainian presidential election due to his concerns regarding the behaviour of the revolutionary government towards the Russophone population.[17][18] Dobkin tendered his resignation as governor on 26 February 2014, "following [a] decision to run for the office of the President of Ukraine".[19] On 2 March 2014, a decree by acting President Oleksandr Turchynov formally dismissed Dobkin as governor.[1] On 10 March 2014, Dobkin was arrested on charges of leading a separatist movement.[20][21] However, on 20 August 2014, Dobkin's criminal case was closed "in the absence of corpus delicti".[22]

2014 presidential campaign

[edit]
Billboard of Mykhailo Dobkin during the protests in Donetsk

On 25 March 2014, Dobkin filed documents to the Central Election Commission to run in the 2014 Ukrainian presidential election.[23] On 29 March, a Party of Regions convention supported Dobkin's nomination as a presidential candidate.[24][25]

During his presidential campaign, Dobkin advocated for regionalism and the establishment of a federal Ukraine, Ukraine joining the Eurasian Customs Union, improving Russia–Ukraine relations, "defending the joint Russian-Ukrainian history, culture and traditions", maintaining Ukrainian neutrality, tax relief in the agricultural sector over the next 15 years, and the abolition of conscription.[26][27]

In the presidential election, Dobkin received 3.03% of the vote, ranking 6th among all candidates, and performed well in eastern Ukraine, receiving 26.25% of the vote in Kharkiv Oblast and 8.02% of the vote in neighbouring Luhansk Oblast.[28]

Return to parliamentary politics

[edit]
Mykhailo Dobkin in the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine

In the 2014 Ukrainian parliamentary election, Dobkin was again re-elected into the Verkhovna Rada, this time as third on the party list for Opposition Bloc.[29][30]

On 13 July 2017, the Verkhovna Rada stripped Dobkin of his parliamentary immunity. Dobkin was subsequently arrested on suspicions of abuse of office and assistance to fraud in order to obtain 78 hectares of land in Kharkiv worth more than US$8.5 million.[7] Two days later, a Kyiv court ruled that Dobkin was to remain in custody until 14 September 2017, and granted bail at ₴50 million.[31][32] On 19 July, members of the Opposition Bloc posted his bail.[33]

Dobkin left Opposition Bloc in October 2017, voicing his disapproval of the party's support for judicial reform efforts.[34] In February 2018, he founded his own party, the Party of Christian Socialists, and in June 2019 joined Opposition Bloc (2019), along with the rest of his party.[35][36] In the 2019 Ukrainian parliamentary election, Dobkin unsuccessfully ran as a candidate on the party list, with the party failing to cross the 5% election barrier.[37]

2020 and 2021 Kharkiv mayoral elections

[edit]

Although in July 2020 Dobkin had announced his candidacy for Mayor of Kharkiv in the 2020 Kharkiv local elections, he stated in September 2020 that he had submitted documents for registration as a candidate for mayor of Kharkiv.[38][39] On 4 October 2020, 11 days prior to the election, he withdrew his candidacy in favour of incumbent mayor Hennadiy Kernes, his political ally and successor.[40]

Kernes died on 17 December 2020 from complications of COVID-19.[41] A snap mayoral election in Kharkiv was set on 31 October 2021 to determinate Kernes' successor.[42] In this election, Dobkin was once again a mayoral candidate.[43] On 29 September 2021, Opposition Platform — For Life announced it supported Dobkin in the mayoral election.[44] The election commission declared Ihor Terekhov the winner of the election with 50.66% of the votes.[45] Dobkin finished the race in second place with 28.4% of the vote.[45]

2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine

[edit]

Dobkin condemned the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine on its second day.[46] On 17 March 2022, Dobkin posted a video of President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on his Instagram page, and signed it with the comment "[He is] ours".[47]

Dobkin graduated from the Kharkiv Theological Seminary (UOC-MP), and on April 7, 2022, in the Kharkiv Annunciation Cathedral, Metropolitan Onufry of Kharkiv and Bohodukhiv ordained him to the rank of deacon.[48][49]

In June, Igor Girkin (Strelkov) said that a month before the start of the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, the 5th service of the FSB was negotiating with Dobkin about the possibility of creating the so-called "Kharkov People’s Republic" in the Kharkiv Oblast.[50]

Personal life

[edit]

Dobkin is married and has four children; a son and three daughters.[1]

Since first meeting Hennadiy Kernes in 1998, Dobkin was his close friend and political ally, and was succeeded by him as Mayor of Kharkiv in 2010. Kernes remained as mayor until his death in 2020.[1][51][41]

Dobkin's younger brother, Dmytro Dobkin, was elected as a People's Deputy of Ukraine in the 2012 Ukrainian parliamentary election for the Party of Regions, being re-elected in 2014 as a member of Opposition Bloc.[1][52] In the 2019 Ukrainian parliamentary election, Dmytro Dobkin failed to be re-elected.[37]

Dobkin is widely known by the nickname "Dopa".[16][53]

In 2022, Dobkin became a Deacon in the Ukrainian Orthodox Church[54].

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Ukrainian: Михайло Маркович Добкін
    Russian: Михаил Маркович Добкин, romanizedMikhail Markovich Dobkin

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m (in Russian) Short bio of Mykhailo Dobkin, LIGA
  2. ^ "Official website of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine".
  3. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "Добкин – Гордону: Я не обрезанный. Могу показать". YouTube.
  4. ^ "Jews Join Maidan To Preserve an Independent, and Safe, Ukraine". Tablet Magazine. 25 February 2014.
  5. ^ "Lenta.ru: : Добкин, Михаил". 3 November 2010. Archived from the original on 3 November 2010. Retrieved 1 January 2024.
  6. ^ (in Ukrainian) MPs in 2015 declared 951 "cars", some up to 36, Ukrayinska Pravda (12 July 2016)
  7. ^ a b Ukraine's parliament gives the thumbs up for arrest of MP Dobkin, UNIAN (13 July 2017)
  8. ^ a b "Видеообращение мэра Харькова вошло в число самых популярных роликов YouTube: Медиа: Lenta.ru". 23 January 2021. Archived from the original on 23 January 2021. Retrieved 1 January 2024.
  9. ^ Мэр города Харькова Михаил Добкин, retrieved 1 January 2024
  10. ^ When politicians fall foul of social media, BBC News (29 September 2017)
  11. ^ McLaughlin, Daniel. "Ukraine's revolutionaries reject 'fascist' jibe as conflicting histories collide". The Irish Times. Dublin. ISSN 0791-5144.
  12. ^ Buckley, Neil (22 February 2014). "Uncertainty in Ukraine as president goes missing". Financial Times. London.
  13. ^ (in Ukrainian) Dobkin decided that BP blow and offers physically destroy Protestants, Ukrayinska Pravda (February 20, 2014)
  14. ^ "Protests in east Ukraine ease separatism fears". Reuters. 22 February 2014. Retrieved 25 February 2014.
  15. ^ Mackinnon, Mark (24 February 2014). "Globe in Ukraine: In Kharkiv, revolution meets a Russophile resistance". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 25 February 2014.
  16. ^ a b (in Ukrainian) Dopa and Gepa fled to Russia, Ukrayinska Pravda (22 February 2014)
  17. ^ Booth, William; Englund, Will (24 February 2014). "Russia cries 'mutiny' over change in Ukraine". The Washington Post. Retrieved 25 February 2014.
  18. ^ "Kharkiv region governor decides to run for Ukrainian presidency". Kyiv Post. 24 February 2014. Retrieved 25 February 2014.
  19. ^ Kharkiv governor Dobkin tenders resignation, Interfax-Ukraine (26 February 2014)
  20. ^ "Добкін у СІЗО, суд обере йому запобіжний захід".
  21. ^ "Генпрокуратура: Добкин задержан, подозревается в посягательстве на территориальную целостность Украины".
  22. ^ (in Ukrainian) The case against Dobkin closed, Ukrayinska Pravda (30 August 2014)
  23. ^ Mikhail Dobkin filed documents to the Central Election Commission on an election of the president of Ukraine, March 25, 2014
  24. ^ Ukraine's Party of Regions expels presidential hopefuls Tigipko, Tsariov and Boiko, Interfax-Ukraine (7 April 2014)
  25. ^ Ukraine: Party of Regions nominates Mykhailo Dobkin as presidential candidate Archived 8 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine, Euronews (29 March 2014)
  26. ^ Yanukovych's Kharkiv duo in legal trouble: Dobkin arrested, Kernes named as suspect, Kyiv Post (11 March 2014)
  27. ^ (in Ukrainian) Dobkin promises federalization of Ukraine and join the Customs Union, Ukrayinska Pravda (31 March 2014)
  28. ^ "Poroshenko wins presidential election with 54.7% of vote – CEC". Radio Ukraine International. 29 May 2014. Archived from the original on 29 May 2014.
    (in Russian) Results election of Ukrainian president, Телеграф (29 May 2014)
  29. ^ Poroshenko Bloc to have greatest number of seats in parliament, Ukrinform (8 November 2014)
    People's Front 0.33% ahead of Poroshenko Bloc with all ballots counted in Ukraine elections – CEC, Interfax-Ukraine (8 November 2014)
    Poroshenko Bloc to get 132 seats in parliament – CEC, Interfax-Ukraine (8 November 2014)
  30. ^ (in Ukrainian) Full electoral list of Opposition Bloc, Ukrayinska Pravda (19 September 2014)
  31. ^ [Read more on UNIAN: https://www.unian.info/politics/2031624-ex-mayor-of-kharkiv-mp-dobkin-arrested-for-two-months-with-bail.html]
  32. ^ "Court arrests MP Dobkin with alternative of UAH 50 MLN bail".
  33. ^ "Opposition Bloc members post Hr 50 million bail for arrested lawmaker Dobkin – Jul. 19, 2017". 19 July 2017.
  34. ^ "Добкін заявив про вихід з Опоблоку".
  35. ^ "Добкін створив партію Християнські соціалісти". ua.korrespondent.net.
  36. ^ "Добкин создал партию христианских социалистов".
  37. ^ a b "Добкіни не пройшли в Раду". 22 July 2019.
  38. ^ (in Ukrainian) Battle for Kyiv. Life, career, promises of Klitschko, Vereshchuk, Palchevsky and others, Ukrayinska Pravda (15 September 2020)
    (in Ukrainian) Dobkin was going to become mayor of Kharkiv and wished Kernes to recover from COVID-19, Ukrayinska Pravda (23 September 2020)
  39. ^ Rada appoints next elections to local self-govt bodies for Oct 25, Interfax-Ukraine (15 July 2020)
  40. ^ (in Ukrainian) Dobkin changed his mind to go to the mayor of Kharkiv, Ukrayinska Pravda (4 October 2020)
  41. ^ a b Kharkiv mayor Kernes dies, Ukrinform (17 December 2020)
    Помер Геннадій Кернес: мер Харкова, який виграв вибори з реанімації, BBC Ukrainian (17 December 2020) (in Ukrainian)
  42. ^ (in Ukrainian) "Servant of the people" will not nominate a candidate for mayor of Kharkiv, Ukrayinska Pravda (6 September 2021)
  43. ^ (in Ukrainian) Kernes' bloc nominated Ihor Terekhov as a candidate for mayor, Ukrayinska Pravda (6 September 2021)
  44. ^ (in Ukrainian) OPZH supports Dobkin in the mayoral election in Kharkiv, Ukrayinska Pravda (29 September 2021)
  45. ^ a b (in Ukrainian) Kharkiv mayoral election: the court denied OPORA's lawsuits, although it acknowledged differences, Ukrayinska Pravda (9 November 2021)
  46. ^ Another Stalingrad’: assault on Kharkiv shatters ties that once bound two nations, Financial Times (2 March 2022)
  47. ^ "Zelenskyy won Dobkin's heart and forced him to argue with Shariy". Українська правда (in Ukrainian). 17 March 2022. Retrieved 20 March 2022.
  48. ^ "Онуфрий дал Добкину сан диакона УПЦ МП". Украинская правда (in Russian). Retrieved 29 October 2023.
  49. ^ "Экс-нардеп Михаил Добкин стал диаконом УПЦ Московского патриархата (фото)". ФОКУС (in Russian). 8 April 2022. Retrieved 29 October 2023.
  50. ^ Strelkov assures that the FSB discussed the creation of KhNR with Dobkin a month before the invasion - the politician is silent
  51. ^ Wounded Mayor Is Both Colorful and Powerful, Loved and Loathed, The New York Times (28 April 2014)
  52. ^ Mikhail Dobkin commented on the resonance live with his brother in Parliament, Ukrop News 24 (2 November 2016)
  53. ^ (in Ukrainian) Dobkin and Kernes significant move on the other wheels , Tablo ID (22 September 2011)
  54. ^ http://www.eparchia.kharkov.ua/readnews/3093
Political offices
Preceded by Governor of Kharkiv Oblast
2010–2014
Succeeded by