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* [[Ukrainian nationalism]]<ref>{{citation |first=Wolfram|last=Nordsieck |title=Ukraine |work=Parties and Elections in Europe|url=http://parties-and-elections.eu/ukraine.html |accessdate=5 November 2012}}</ref>
* [[Ukrainian nationalism]]<ref>{{citation |first=Wolfram|last=Nordsieck |title=Ukraine |work=Parties and Elections in Europe|url=http://parties-and-elections.eu/ukraine.html |accessdate=5 November 2012}}</ref>
* [[Right-wing populism]]<ref>{{citation |first=Gilles |last=Ivaldi|title=The Populist Radical Right in European Elections 1979-2009|work=The Extreme Right in Europe |publisher=Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht|year=2011 |page=20 |url=http://books.google.fr/books?id=RBnmachN8vkC&pg=PA20&dq=mudde+populist+radical+right+parties+ukraine+svoboda&hl=de&sa=X&ei=alNBT8PzIMu2hAfh3YDKBQ&ved=0CC4Q6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=mudde%20populist%20radical%20right%20parties%20ukraine%20svoboda&f=false<}}</ref>
* [[Right-wing populism]]<ref>{{citation |first=Gilles |last=Ivaldi|title=The Populist Radical Right in European Elections 1979-2009|work=The Extreme Right in Europe |publisher=Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht|year=2011 |page=20 |url=http://books.google.fr/books?id=RBnmachN8vkC&pg=PA20&dq=mudde+populist+radical+right+parties+ukraine+svoboda&hl=de&sa=X&ei=alNBT8PzIMu2hAfh3YDKBQ&ved=0CC4Q6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=mudde%20populist%20radical%20right%20parties%20ukraine%20svoboda&f=false<}}</ref>
* [[Nazism]]<ref>http://www.ibtimes.com/svoboda-rising-spectre-neo-nazism-ukraine-974110</ref>
* [[Antisemitism]]<ref>http://www.algemeiner.com/2013/06/21/telling-the-truth-about-ukraine%E2%80%99s-rising-anti-semitic-svoboda-party-an-eye-opening-experience-%E2%80%93-with-portents-for-ukraine%E2%80%99s-future/</ref><ref>http://www.jta.org/2013/04/26/news-opinion/world/ukrainian-jews-worry-that-rise-of-svoboda-party-will-bring-anti-semitism-back-into-vogue</ref><ref>http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/europe/120329/ukraine-svoboda-nationalist-party-nazi-echoes-hitler-pt-2</ref>
}}
}}
|position = [[Right-wing politics|Right-wing]]<ref name=brit/> to [[Far-right politics|Far-right]]<ref>{{cite news|last=Butenko|first=Victoria|title=Ukraine: Demonstrators rally against new law curbing protests|url=http://edition.cnn.com/2014/01/19/world/europe/ukraine-protests/index.html?hpt=hp_t2|date=19 January 2014}}</ref><ref name="Shekhovtsov">Shekhovtsov, Anton (2011).[http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/content~db=all~content=a934922041 "The Creeping Resurgence of the Ukrainian Radical Right? The Case of the Freedom Party".] ''[[Europe-Asia Studies]]'' Volume 63, Issue 2. pp. 203-228. {{doi|10.1080/09668136.2011.547696}} (source also available [http://www.academia.edu/1209355/The_Creeping_Resurgence_of_the_Ukrainian_Radical_Right_The_Case_of_the_Freedom_Party here])</ref><ref name="Kuzio 2010 6, 15">{{citation |first=Taras |last=Kuzio |title=Populism in Ukraine in a Comparative European Context |journal=Problems of Post-Communism|volume=57 |number=6|date=November–December 2010|publisher=M.E. Sharpe|url=http://commonweb.unifr.ch/artsdean/pub/gestens/f/as/files/4760/25737_184750.pdf|accessdate=16 October 2012|pages=6, 15}}</ref><ref name=rudling /><ref name="Bojcun 2012 151">{{Citation |first=Marko |last=Bojcun |title=The Socioeconomic and Political Outcomes of Global Financial Crisis in Ukraine|work=Socioeconomic Outcomes of the Global Financial Crisis: Theoretical Discussion and Empirical Case Studies|publisher=Routledge|year=2012 |page=151}}</ref>
|position = [[Right-wing politics|Right-wing]]<ref name=brit/> to [[Far-right politics|Far-right]]<ref>{{cite news|last=Butenko|first=Victoria|title=Ukraine: Demonstrators rally against new law curbing protests|url=http://edition.cnn.com/2014/01/19/world/europe/ukraine-protests/index.html?hpt=hp_t2|date=19 January 2014}}</ref><ref name="Shekhovtsov">Shekhovtsov, Anton (2011).[http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/content~db=all~content=a934922041 "The Creeping Resurgence of the Ukrainian Radical Right? The Case of the Freedom Party".] ''[[Europe-Asia Studies]]'' Volume 63, Issue 2. pp. 203-228. {{doi|10.1080/09668136.2011.547696}} (source also available [http://www.academia.edu/1209355/The_Creeping_Resurgence_of_the_Ukrainian_Radical_Right_The_Case_of_the_Freedom_Party here])</ref><ref name="Kuzio 2010 6, 15">{{citation |first=Taras |last=Kuzio |title=Populism in Ukraine in a Comparative European Context |journal=Problems of Post-Communism|volume=57 |number=6|date=November–December 2010|publisher=M.E. Sharpe|url=http://commonweb.unifr.ch/artsdean/pub/gestens/f/as/files/4760/25737_184750.pdf|accessdate=16 October 2012|pages=6, 15}}</ref><ref name=rudling /><ref name="Bojcun 2012 151">{{Citation |first=Marko |last=Bojcun |title=The Socioeconomic and Political Outcomes of Global Financial Crisis in Ukraine|work=Socioeconomic Outcomes of the Global Financial Crisis: Theoretical Discussion and Empirical Case Studies|publisher=Routledge|year=2012 |page=151}}</ref>
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The '''All-Ukrainian Union "Svoboda"''' ({{lang-uk|Всеукраїнське об’єднання «Свобода»}}, ''Vseukrayinske obyednannia "Svoboda"''), translated as '''Freedom''', is a [[Ukraine|Ukrainian]] [[Ukrainian nationalism|nationalist]] [[political party]],<ref name=osw-tadeusz/> and currently one of the five major parties of the country.<ref name="CESOlszańskiUKel12">[http://www.osw.waw.pl/en/publikacje/eastweek/2012-11-07/after-parliamentary-elections-ukraine-a-tough-victory-party-regions After the parliamentary elections in Ukraine: a tough victory for the Party of Regions], [[Centre for Eastern Studies]] (7 November 2012)</ref>
The '''All-Ukrainian Union "Svoboda"''' ({{lang-uk|Всеукраїнське об’єднання «Свобода»}}, ''Vseukrayinske obyednannia "Svoboda"''), translated as '''Freedom''', is a [[Ukraine|Ukrainian]] [[Ukrainian nationalism|nationalist]] [[political party]],<ref name=osw-tadeusz/> and currently one of the five major parties of the country.<ref name="CESOlszańskiUKel12">[http://www.osw.waw.pl/en/publikacje/eastweek/2012-11-07/after-parliamentary-elections-ukraine-a-tough-victory-party-regions After the parliamentary elections in Ukraine: a tough victory for the Party of Regions], [[Centre for Eastern Studies]] (7 November 2012)</ref>


Founded in 1991 as the '''Social-National Party of Ukraine''' ({{lang-uk|Соціал-національна партія України}}), the party has acted as a proponent of [[Ukrainian nationalism|nationalism]] and [[anti-communism]] in Ukrainian politics. It is positioned on the [[Right-wing politics|right]] of the Ukrainian political spectrum,<ref name=brit>{{cite book|last=Encyclopaedia Britannica|title=Britannica Book of the Year 2010|year=2010|publisher=Encyclopaedia Britannica, Inc.|page=478|url=http://books.google.ca/books?id=QeKbAAAAQBAJ&pg=PA478&dq=svoboda+right-wing+ukraine&hl=en&sa=X&ei=0a2wUoWEK6m2yAHVz4DQBg&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q=svoboda%20right-wing%20ukraine&f=false}}</ref><ref name=osw-tadeusz>{{cite journal|last=Olszański|first=Tadeusz A.|title=Svoboda Party – The New Phenomenon on the Ukrainian Right-Wing Scene|journal=Centre for Eastern Studies|date=4 July 2011|series=OSW Commentary|issue=56|page=6|url=http://www.isn.ethz.ch/Digital-Library/Publications/Detail/?lng=en&id=137051|accessdate=27 September 2013}}</ref><ref>http://voiceofrussia.com/2012_11_13/Ukraine-publishes-final-polls-results/</ref><ref>{{cite news|last=Kramer|first=Andrew|title=Unease as an Opposition Party Stands Out in Ukraine’s Protests|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2013/12/17/world/europe/unease-as-an-opposition-party-stands-out-in-ukraines-protests.html?smid=tw-share&_r=0|newspaper=New York Times|date=17 December 2013}}</ref> and has been described by some scholars as [[Far-right politics|far-right]].<ref name="Shekhovtsov"/><ref name="Kuzio 2010 6, 15"/><ref name=rudling>{{citation |first=Per Anders |last=Rudling |title=Anti-Semitism and the Extreme Right in Contemporary Ukraine |work=Mapping the Extreme Right in Contemporary Europe: From Local to Transnational|publisher=Routledge |year=2012 |page=200}}</ref><ref name="Bojcun 2012 151"/> The current party leader (elected every two years<ref name=SIEKP81212>[http://www.kyivpost.com/content/politics/tiahnybok-reelected-svoboda-party-head-317346.html Tiahnybok reelected Svoboda party head], [[Kyiv Post]] (8 December 2012)</ref>) is [[Oleh Tyahnybok]], who has held the role since February 2004.<ref name=osw-tadeusz/>
Founded in 1991 as the '''Social-National Party of Ukraine''' ({{lang-uk|Соціал-національна партія України}}), the party has acted as a proponent of [[Ukrainian nationalism|nationalism]] and [[anti-communism]] in Ukrainian politics. It is positioned on the [[Right-wing politics|right]] of the Ukrainian political spectrum,<ref name=brit>{{cite book|last=Encyclopaedia Britannica|title=Britannica Book of the Year 2010|year=2010|publisher=Encyclopaedia Britannica, Inc.|page=478|url=http://books.google.ca/books?id=QeKbAAAAQBAJ&pg=PA478&dq=svoboda+right-wing+ukraine&hl=en&sa=X&ei=0a2wUoWEK6m2yAHVz4DQBg&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q=svoboda%20right-wing%20ukraine&f=false}}</ref><ref name=osw-tadeusz>{{cite journal|last=Olszański|first=Tadeusz A.|title=Svoboda Party – The New Phenomenon on the Ukrainian Right-Wing Scene|journal=Centre for Eastern Studies|date=4 July 2011|series=OSW Commentary|issue=56|page=6|url=http://www.isn.ethz.ch/Digital-Library/Publications/Detail/?lng=en&id=137051|accessdate=27 September 2013}}</ref><ref>http://voiceofrussia.com/2012_11_13/Ukraine-publishes-final-polls-results/</ref><ref>{{cite news|last=Kramer|first=Andrew|title=Unease as an Opposition Party Stands Out in Ukraine’s Protests|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2013/12/17/world/europe/unease-as-an-opposition-party-stands-out-in-ukraines-protests.html?smid=tw-share&_r=0|newspaper=New York Times|date=17 December 2013}}</ref> and has been described by some scholars as [[Far-right politics|far-right]].<ref name="Shekhovtsov"/><ref name="Kuzio 2010 6, 15"/><ref name=rudling>{{citation |first=Per Anders |last=Rudling |title=Anti-Semitism and the Extreme Right in Contemporary Ukraine |work=Mapping the Extreme Right in Contemporary Europe: From Local to Transnational|publisher=Routledge |year=2012 |page=200}}</ref><ref name="Bojcun 2012 151"/> The current party leader (elected every two years<ref name=SIEKP81212>[http://www.kyivpost.com/content/politics/tiahnybok-reelected-svoboda-party-head-317346.html Tiahnybok reelected Svoboda party head], [[Kyiv Post]] (8 December 2012)</ref>) is [[Oleh Tyahnybok]], who has held the role since February 2004.<ref name=osw-tadeusz/> According to the party leader, Oleh Tyahnybok, a "Moscow-Jewish mafia" rule Ukraine and that "Germans, Kikes and other scum" want to "take away our Ukrainian state."<ref>http://www.strategic-culture.org/pview/2014/01/26/ukraine-destabilization-know-how-put-into-practice.html</ref> He also has bring the [[Nazi salute]].<ref>http://i.imgur.com/s0sR7dL.jpg</ref>


During the [[Ternopil Oblast local election, 2009|2009]] and [[Ukrainian local elections, 2010|2010 local elections]] in [[Galicia (Eastern Europe)|Galicia]], the party made significant gains and became a major force in local government.<ref name="SvobodawonthankstoYanu">[http://www.osw.waw.pl/en/publikacje/eastweek/2010-11-04/local-government-elections-ukraine-last-stage-party-regions-takeover- Local government elections in Ukraine: last stage in the Party of Regions’ takeover of power], [[Centre for Eastern Studies]] (October 4, 2010)</ref><ref name="TernopileleSvo"/> In the [[Ukrainian parliamentary election, 2012|2012 Ukrainian parliamentary elections]], Svoboda won its first seats in the [[Verkhovna Rada|Ukrainian Parliament]],<ref name=SvobBBC>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-20113616 Ukraine election:President Yanukovych party claims win], [[BBC News]] (29 October 2012).</ref> garnering 10.44% of the popular vote and the 4th most seats among national political parties;<ref>http://www.kyivpost.com/content/politics/results-of-the-vote-count-continuously-updated-315153.html</ref> this transposed into 37 parliamentary seats.<ref>[http://en.interfax.com.ua/news/general/126937.html#.UUzMyKnCus0 Party of Regions gets 185 seats in Ukrainian parliament, Batkivschyna 101 - CEC], [[Interfax-Ukraine]] (12 November 2012)</ref> In October 2012, Svoboda joined a formal [[Political coalition|coalition]] with the [[centre-right]] [[Batkivshchyna]] and [[Ukrainian Democratic Alliance for Reform|UDAR]] parties to form the parliament's collective [[Opposition (parliamentary)|opposition]].
During the [[Ternopil Oblast local election, 2009|2009]] and [[Ukrainian local elections, 2010|2010 local elections]] in [[Galicia (Eastern Europe)|Galicia]], the party made significant gains and became a major force in local government.<ref name="SvobodawonthankstoYanu">[http://www.osw.waw.pl/en/publikacje/eastweek/2010-11-04/local-government-elections-ukraine-last-stage-party-regions-takeover- Local government elections in Ukraine: last stage in the Party of Regions’ takeover of power], [[Centre for Eastern Studies]] (October 4, 2010)</ref><ref name="TernopileleSvo"/> In the [[Ukrainian parliamentary election, 2012|2012 Ukrainian parliamentary elections]], Svoboda won its first seats in the [[Verkhovna Rada|Ukrainian Parliament]],<ref name=SvobBBC>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-20113616 Ukraine election:President Yanukovych party claims win], [[BBC News]] (29 October 2012).</ref> garnering 10.44% of the popular vote and the 4th most seats among national political parties;<ref>http://www.kyivpost.com/content/politics/results-of-the-vote-count-continuously-updated-315153.html</ref> this transposed into 37 parliamentary seats.<ref>[http://en.interfax.com.ua/news/general/126937.html#.UUzMyKnCus0 Party of Regions gets 185 seats in Ukrainian parliament, Batkivschyna 101 - CEC], [[Interfax-Ukraine]] (12 November 2012)</ref> In October 2012, Svoboda joined a formal [[Political coalition|coalition]] with the [[centre-right]] [[Batkivshchyna]] and [[Ukrainian Democratic Alliance for Reform|UDAR]] parties to form the parliament's collective [[Opposition (parliamentary)|opposition]].

Revision as of 07:51, 2 February 2014

Svoboda
LeaderOleh Tyahnybok
Parliamentary leaderOleh Tyahnybok
FoundedOctober 13, 1991
Registered as political party on October 16, 1995.[1]
Preceded bySocial-National Party
HeadquartersKiev
Membership (2010)15,000[2]
Ideology
Political positionRight-wing[9] to Far-right[10][11][12][13][14]
European affiliationAlliance of European National Movements (observer status)[15]
International affiliationnone
ColorsBlue and Yellow
Slogan"20 Years of Fight"
Verkhovna Rada
36 / 450
[16]
Regions (2010)
132 / 3,056
[17]
Website
http://www.svoboda.org.ua

The All-Ukrainian Union "Svoboda" (Ukrainian: Всеукраїнське об’єднання «Свобода», Vseukrayinske obyednannia "Svoboda"), translated as Freedom, is a Ukrainian nationalist political party,[2] and currently one of the five major parties of the country.[18]

Founded in 1991 as the Social-National Party of Ukraine (Ukrainian: Соціал-національна партія України), the party has acted as a proponent of nationalism and anti-communism in Ukrainian politics. It is positioned on the right of the Ukrainian political spectrum,[9][2][19][20] and has been described by some scholars as far-right.[11][12][13][14] The current party leader (elected every two years[21]) is Oleh Tyahnybok, who has held the role since February 2004.[2] According to the party leader, Oleh Tyahnybok, a "Moscow-Jewish mafia" rule Ukraine and that "Germans, Kikes and other scum" want to "take away our Ukrainian state."[22] He also has bring the Nazi salute.[23]

During the 2009 and 2010 local elections in Galicia, the party made significant gains and became a major force in local government.[24][25] In the 2012 Ukrainian parliamentary elections, Svoboda won its first seats in the Ukrainian Parliament,[26] garnering 10.44% of the popular vote and the 4th most seats among national political parties;[27] this transposed into 37 parliamentary seats.[28] In October 2012, Svoboda joined a formal coalition with the centre-right Batkivshchyna and UDAR parties to form the parliament's collective opposition.

History

Social-National Party of Ukraine

First party logo (1991–2003), with the letters I and N standing for "Idea of the Nation", graphically identical to the Wolfsangel rune, a symbol of European neo-Nazi organizations.[2]

The Social-National Party of Ukraine (SNPU) was registered as a party on October 16, 1995;[1][29] although the original movement was founded on October 13, 1991, in Lviv. Membership was restricted to ethnic Ukrainians, and for a period the party did not accept atheists or former members of the Communist Party. The SNPU's official program defined itself as an "irreconcilable enemy of Communist ideology" and all other parties to be either collaborators and enemies of the Ukrainian revolution, or romanticists. During the 1994 Ukrainian parliamentary elections, the party presented itself as separate from both communist and social democrat platforms.[30][third-party source needed]

In the 1998 parliamentary elections the party joined a bloc of parties (together with the All-Ukrainian Political Movement "State Independence of Ukraine")[31] called "Less Words" (Ukrainian: Менше слів), which collected 0.16% of the national vote.[29][32][33] Party member Oleh Tyahnybok[34] was voted into the Ukrainian Parliament in this election.[34] He became a member of the People's Movement of Ukraine faction.[34]

The party established the paramilitary organization Ukraine’s Patriot in 1999 as an "Association of Support" for the Military of Ukraine. The paramilitary organization, which continues to use the Wolfsangel symbol, was disbanded in 2004 during the SNPU's reformation, and reformed in 2005.[2] Svoboda officially ended association with the group, but they remain closely linked,[35][36] with representatives of Svoboda attending social campaigns such as protests against price increases and leafleting against drugs and alcohol.[37]

In 2001, the party joined some actions of the "Ukraine without Kuchma" protest campaign and was active in forming the association of Ukraine's rightist parties and in supporting Viktor Yushchenko's candidacy for prime minister, although it did not participate in the 2002 parliamentary elections.[29] However, as a member of Victor Yushchenko’s Our Ukraine bloc, Tyahnybok was reelected to the Ukrainian parliament.[34] The SNPU won two seats in the Lviv oblast council of deputies and representation in the city and district councils in the Lviv and Volyn oblasts.[30][third-party source needed]

In 2004 the party had less than 1,000 members.[11]

All-Ukrainian Union "Svoboda"

The Social-National Party of Ukraine changed its name to the All-Ukrainian Union "Svoboda" in February 2004 with the arrival of Oleh Tyahnybok as party leader.[2] It moved to improve its image, replacing the "I + N" ("Idea Natsii" ukr. "idea of a nation") Wolfsangel logo by a three-fingered hand reminiscent of a 'Tryzub' pro-independence gesture of the late 1980s, also pushing out the radical neo-Nazi and racist groups.[38] One such neo-fascist group, "Patriots of Ukraine",[39][40] operating independently of Svoboda since 2007[41][third-party source needed], continue to use a form of the Wolfsangel revised to no longer be interpreted as "I + N."[38]

In 2004 Tyahnybok was expelled from the Our Ukraine parliamentary faction for a speech calling for Ukrainians to fight against a "Muscovite-Jewish mafia" - using two highly insulting words to describe Russians and Jews.[34][39][42]

In the 2006 local elections the party had obtained 4.2% of the votes and 4 seats in the Ternopil Oblast Council, 5.62% of the votes and 10 seats in the Lviv Oblast Council and 6.69% of the votes and 9 seats in the Lviv city council.[11]

In the 2007 parliamentary elections, the party received 0.76% of the votes cast,[29] more than double their share during the 2006 parliamentary elections, when they received 0.36%.[29] It was ranked eighth out of 20 parties (in the 2007 elections) and the non-participation of the Congress of Ukrainian Nationalists made the party the only far-right party to participate in the 2007 parliamentary elections.[11]

In the autumn of 2009, Svoboda joined the Alliance of European National Movements as the only organisation from outside the European Union.[2] That year the party claimed to have 15,000 members.[11]

A Svoboda meeting in Kiev in 2009.

Electoral breakthrough

The party's electoral breakthrough was the 2009 Ternopil Oblast local election when they obtained 34.69% of the votes and 50 seats out of 120 in the Ternopil Oblast Council.[11] This was the best result for a far-right party in Ukraine’s history.[11]

The party leader Tyahnybok's candidacy in the 2010 presidential election did not build on the 2009 Ternopil succes.[11] Tyahnybok received 1.43% of the vote.[43] Most of his votes he gained in Lviv oblast, Ternopil oblast and Ivano-Frankivsk oblast accounted to 5% of the vote.[44] In the second round, Tyahnybok did not endorse a candidate. He did present a list of some 20 demands for second round candidate Yulia Tymoshenko had to fulfil first before gaining his endorsement - which included publicizing alleged secret deals Tymoshenko had with Vladimir Putin and ridding herself of what he called Ukraine-haters in her close circles.[45]

During the 2010 Ukrainian local elections the party won between 20-30% of the votes in Eastern Galicia, where it became one of the main forces in local government.[24] The 2009 provincial elections in Ternopil had previously been the greatest success of the Svoboda party, when it won 34.4 per cent of votes cast.[25] During the 2010 Ukrainian local elections, Svoboda surpassed this figure, accounting for 5.2% of the vote nationwide.[46] Analysts explained Svoboda’s victory in Galicia during the 2010 elections as a result of the policies of the Azarov Government, who were seen as too pro-Russian by the electorate.[46][47][48] According to Andreas Umland, Senior Lecturer in Political Science at the National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy,[49] Svoboda's increasing exposure in the Ukrainian media has contributed to its recent successes.[48]

Between 2004 and 2010, party membership increased threefold to 15,000 members[2] (traditionally party membership is low in Ukraine[50][51][52]).

As of 2011, Svoboda has factions in eight of Ukraine's 25 regional councils, and in three of those Svoboda is the biggest faction.[53] Umland and novelist Andrey Kurkov have accused the Party of Regions of giving "unofficial support" to Svoboda to make their main opponent, BYuT, weaker.[48][54] Reportedly, the members and supporters of Svoboda are predominantly young people.[2]

Several clergymen of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Kyivan Patriarchate, Ukrainian Autocephalous Orthodox Church and Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church are Svoboda members and have stood for election as Svoboda chosen candidates.[55] According to the party, they were chosen on election lists "to counterbalance opponents who include “Moscow priests” in their election lists and have aspirations to build the “Russian World” in Ukraine".[55] Per the party's desire to separate the clergy from politics, all churchmen will be recalled if a draft Constitution of Ukraine proposed by the party is approved.[55]

2012 elections

Svoboda's results in the 2012 elections.

In July 2012 the party agreed with Batkivshchyna on the distribution of the candidates in single-seat constituencies (its share was 35 constituencies)[56] in the October 2012 parliamentary elections.[57] In the run up to these elections various opinion polls predicted the national vote (in a parliamentary election) of the party to sixfolded or sevenfolded which would make it possible that the party would pass the 5% election threshold.[58][59] But the parties results in the elections where much better than that with 10,44%[nb 1] (almost a fourteenfold of its votes compared with the 2007 parliamentary elections[29][39]) of the national votes and 38 out of 450 seats in the Ukrainian Parliament.[60][61] The lion's share of these votes votes were won in Western Ukraine (30-40% in three Oblasts), while in Eastern Ukraine it won 1% of the votes.[39] At the at 116 foreign polling stations Svoboda won most votes of all parties with 23,63% of all votes.[62] In Lviv the party reportedly won over 50% of the votes.[63] In Kiev it became the second most popular party, after Fatherland.[64] Voting analysis showed it was the party most popular among voters with a higher education (about 48% of its voters had a higher education).[64] Oleh Tyahnybok was elected leader of the party's parliamentary faction (also) on 12 December 2012.[65] On 19 October 2012 the party and Batkivshchyna signed an agreement "on the creation of a coalition of democratic forces in the new parliament".[66] The party is also coordinating its parliamentary activities with Ukrainian Democratic Alliance for Reform (UDAR).[67]

In recent years, the BBC writes that "Svoboda" has "tapped a vast reservoir of protest votes" because of its anti-corruption stance and because it has softened its own image.[39][64] According to Sociological group "RATING" the percentage of the party's electorate who only use the Ukrainian language decreased from 75% to 68% between September 2012 and March 2013.[68]

After 2012 election

In May 2013 "Svoboda", "Fatherland" and UDAR vowed to coordinate their actions during the 2015 Ukrainian presidential election.[69]

In an opinion poll conducted on December 7–17, 2013, respondents showed that in a presidential election between Viktor Yanukovych and Svoboda leader Tyahnybok, results found that Tyahnybok would win with 28.8% of the popular vote, versus Yanukovych's 27.1%.[70]

Euromaidan campaign

Svoboda actively participates in the ongoing pro-European Union protest campaign aimed at influencing regime change and integration with the EU.

After the Vladimir Lenin monument in Kiev was toppled during the ongoing Euromaidan protest, MP Igor Myroshnychenko officially accepted responsibility for this action on behalf of the Svoboda,[71] though it is unclear whether the party organized and/or planned it.

Ideology

Svoboda's ideological base emanates from Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists leader Yaroslav Stetsko's "Two Revolutions" doctrine (written in 1951).[72] The essence of this doctrine states: "the revolution will not end with the establishment of the Ukrainian state, but will go on to establish equal opportunities for all people to create and share material and spiritual values and in this respect the national revolution is also a social one".[72] A crucial condition for joining Svoboda is that its members must belong to the Ukrainian nation.[30]

Nationalism

Svoboda is a party of Ukrainian nationalism and in favor of a purely presidential regime.[48][73] This led to comparisons between Svoboda and the pro-Russian Party of Regions; however, the party often voices opposition to perceived Russian influences in Ukraine.[48]

According to party leader Oleh Tyahnybok, Svoboda is not an ‘extremist’ party; he said that "depicting nationalism as extremism is a cliché rooted in Soviet and modern globalist propaganda".[53] He also stated that "countries like" Japan and Israel are fully nationalistic states, "but nobody accuses the Japanese of being extremists".[53] According to Tyahnybok, the party's view of nationalism "shouldn’t be mixed with chauvinism or fascism, which means superiority of one nation over another", and that its platform is called “Our Own Authorities, Our Own Property, Our Own Dignity, on Our Own God-Given Land”.[74]

The party's agenda is set out in an article entitled "Nationalism and pseudonationalism" published on the official website of the party. Svoboda member Andriy Illienko calls for a "social and national revolution in Ukraine," a "major shift in [the] political, economic, [and] ethical system", and the "dismantling [of] the liberal regime of antinational occupation". Illienko explains that "only the revolution can now prevent Ukraine from the brink, and make it the first modern nationalist state that will ensure continuous development of the Ukrainian nation, and show other nations the path to genuine sovereignty and prosperity."[75][third-party source needed]. Illienko continues that cultural details are not important for a nationalist who "must wake up with the idea that he is a metal political soldier of Nation." ("Націоналіст... забов'язаний просинатися з думкою, що він – залізний політичний солдат Нації..."). This document sets up the enemy of Svoboda, a pseudonationalist, a person who wants "all-ukrainian values" ("українськість","щоб все було українське") and adheres to "conventional liberalism [of] 'civilized' Western democracy and capitalism". Another attribute of a pseudonationalist is the belief in "Free market", "democracy", "fighting authoritarianism" [the quotes are from the original document].

The party views the dominating role of Ukraine's oligarchy as "devastating".[76][third-party source needed] While oligarchs have typically played a major role in the funding of other Ukrainian parties,[77][78] In 2004 Tyahnybok referred to "the Moscow-Jewish mafia which today runs Ukraine".[42][79] Svoboda claims to receive no financial support from oligarchs, but rather from Ukraine's small and medium-sized businesses.[80][third-party source needed]

The party seeks to put a stop to immigration into Ukraine, and to make sure that only ethnic Ukrainians can be employed as civil servants.[79]

Anti-Communism

Svoboda is known for its anti-Communist stance, and several party activists over the years have been accused of trying to destroy Communist-era statues.[73][81][82][83][84]

On February 16, 2013, police in Ukraine opened a criminal case on charges of hooliganism against nationalist activists lead by Svoboda Supreme Rada deputy Ihor Miroshnychenko for the dismantling of a statue of Vladimir Lenin in Okhtyrka, Sumy Oblast. “There is no place for Communist symbols and ideology in European Ukraine and if the authorities cannot get rid of them, we will do it ourselves”, said Miroshnychenko. According to police, Miroshnychenko climbed the statue and put a rope around Lenin’s figure, which was then pulled down by a truck.[85]

Stances

Party leader Oleh Tyahnybok (in January 2011) has described the Azarov Government and the presidency of Viktor Yanukovych "a Kremlin colonial administration",[53] referencing Svoboda's opposition to perceived Russian influences in Ukrainian politics.

Before the 2012 Ukrainian parliamentary election most of the radical points which were present on the Svoboda’s original party platform vanished from the official election program that Svoboda filed with the Central Election Commission of Ukraine. In its place, a tamer, populist program focused on the impeachment of President Viktor Yanukovych and the renunciation of the 2010 Kharkiv agreements that let Russia’s Black Sea Fleet stay in Crimea through 2042 was used.[64] In its campaign for the 2008 Kiev local elections the party also used less ethnic nationalist terms and it relied more on a strong anti-establishment, populist and anti-corruption rhetoric.[11]

Points in the Svoboda party programme (have) include(d):

Svoboda also states in its programme that it is both possible and necessary to make Ukraine the “geopolitical centre of Europe”.[48] The European Union is not mentioned in the programme.[2] According to Party leader Oleh Tyahnybok the programme is a worldview based on Christian values of the rejection of various deviations.[89]

Member of parliament Ihor Miroshnychenko asked the head of the Kiev City State Administration Oleksandr Popov on 7 March 2013 to ban a LGBT march that was held the next day because he believed it would "contribute to promoting sexual orientation" and he further stated in his request "homosexuality provokes sexually transmitted diseases and AIDS".[91] The 8 March rally was in fact not an LGBT march but organized by feminist organizations.[92]

Tyahnybok stated in March 2013 that "spin doctors who are working against Svoboda" cover up the non-controversial point in the parties election programme "by promoting some clearly secondary issues through mass media outlets controlled by pro-government forces".[89]

Language

Late January 2013 Svoboda urged Ukrainians to boycott revised Ukrainian history textbooks and give up the learning of the Russian language in school, calling Ukrainians "to categorically refuse to study in school the language of the occupier – Russian, as a further reliable means of the assimilation of Ukrainians".[93]

Criticism of Svoboda

Nazism

The core positions in the party's ideology has been broadly described as Anti-Semitism by political opponents, Jewish organisations, various Israeli politicians and journalists.[2][94]

In the Global Post, writer Michael Goldfarb ran the headline "Ukraine's nationalist party embraces Nazi ideology" in April 2012, criticizing party speeches that "echo Hitler" and the party's support of the Nazi German Waffen-SS Galicia (which was made up primarily of conscripted Ukrainian soldiers and accused, but not found guilty of any war crimes).[95] According to Goldfarb the party, originally known as the Social-National Party, it is rooted in Nazi collaboration.[96] The Jerusalem Post ran a story in October 2012 that criticized Svoboda for "openly admiring the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, a resistance group during World War II which fought both Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union, as evidence of supporting Nazi collaborators".[63] Thirty members of the Israeli Knesset condemned the party in a signed letter addressed to the President of the European Parliament. In the letter the Israeli politicians accused Svoboda of, without evidence or examples, "openly glorifying Nazi murder' and 'Nazi war criminals".[97] In May 2013 the World Jewish Congress listed the party as "neo-Nazi" and called for European governments to ban them.[98] During a Party of Regions support rally in Kiev counter to the Euromaidan protests, MP Olena Bondarenko said during a speech that Svoboda leader Oleh Tyahnybok was a "Traitor" and one "who helps the Kremlin and Moscow." Her words were controversially altered to read on her party's website that he was instead a "Nazi" and that "Nazis are not just disrespected, they are outlawed in Europe and throughout the civilized world".[99] During the Euromaidan protests, which Svoboda was a major organizer of, Prime Minister Azarov of the Party of Regions called protesters "Nazis and extremists".[100] On March 19, 2013, Party of Regions parliamentary leader Oleksandr Yefremov accused deputies from Svoboda of being neo-fascists after they booed a speech he made in Russian, which provoked a physical altercation to erupt between the two sides.[101][102]

The party was criticized for the contents of a book on Social-Nationalism published by Yuriy Mykhalchyshyn, a Svoboda politician, in 2010 contained German sources in its bibliography, including writings by Ernst Röhm and Gregor Strasser, as well as Joseph Goebbels.[103] Elsewhere Mykhalchyshyn referred to the Holocaust as a "period of Light in history".[104] Mykhalchyshyn, who is a Svoboda member of parliament, "often quotes former German Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels, as well as other Third Reich luminaries like Ernst Röhm and Gregor Strasser".[39][79] In 2004 party leader Tyahnybok was expelled from the Our Ukraine parliamentary faction for a speech calling for Ukrainians to fight against a "Muscovite-Jewish mafia" - which was seen as offensive.[34][39][42] The Svoboda party is calling for a Ukraine that is “one race, one nation, one Fatherland.”[96]

Party leader Tyahnybok has denied the existence of anti-Semitism in his party.[105][106]

According to political scientist Tadeusz A. Olszański, Ivan Katchanovski and Alexander J. Motyl, it plays in the Party of Regions favor to manipulate the voters from the eastern and southern parts of the country (especially the elderly and less educated) who are attached to the Soviet historical narrative, and "convince them that Svoboda is an inheritor of the Nazi invaders and a threat to peace, and that the Party of Regions should be voted for as the only force capable of stopping the ‘brown revenge’".[2][107][108]

Jewish leaders in Ukraine believe Svoboda’s success in the 2012 Ukrainian parliamentary election owes more to frustration with the establishment than to its anti-Semitic statements.[94]

Xenophobia

The party has also been accused of racism. Tyahnybok says a criminal case was opened against him for promoting racial rights, but he managed to win all the court cases and protect his name.[74]

In December 2012 the European Parliament expressed concern "about the rising nationalistic sentiment in Ukraine, expressed in support for the Svoboda Party". "It recalls that racist, anti-Semitic and xenophobic views go against the EU's fundamental values and principles and therefore appeals to pro-democratic parties in the Verkhovna Rada not to associate with, endorse or form coalitions with this party".[109] Party leader Oleh Tyahnybok claimed in March 2013 this resolution was "inspired by Moscow agents working through a Bulgarian socialist MP".[89]

In the "2012 Top Ten Anti-Semitic/Anti-Israel Slurs", as published in December 2012 by the Simon Wiesenthal Center, Svoboda was ranked at number 5 due to anti-semitic remarks of its leader, and parliament member Miroshnichenko.[110]

Andreas Umland, a senior lecturer in political science at the National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy,[49] has asserted that "Svoboda is a racist party promoting explicitly ethnocentric and anti-Semitic ideas".[111] He also believes that internally, Svoboda "is much more radical and xenophobic than what we see”.[60] However, Umland has also stated that he believes the party will continue to become more moderate over time, stating that "there's a belief that Svoboda will change, once in the Verkhovna Rada, and that they may become proper national democrats".[39] According to Tadeusz Olszański of the Centre for Eastern Studies, the party's unofficial programme,[clarification needed] "implicit in statements and actions by members of Svoboda", is racist.[2] He also claims "it is practically impossible to hold rational debates with Svoboda's programme".[2]

Svoboda members have denied the party is anti-Semitic.[112][113][114] Party leader Tyahnybok stated in November 2012 “Svoboda is not an anti-Semitic party, Svoboda is not a xenophobic party. Svoboda is not an anti-Russian party. Svoboda is not an anti-European party. Svoboda is simply and only a pro-Ukrainian party”.[60]

In early 2012, the party was criticised for saying that pop star Gaitana was a poor choice to represent Ukraine at the Eurovision Song Contest 2012 because she did not 'represent Ukrainian culture' because of her African roots; Gaitana perceived this as racism.[115]

Ihor Miroshnychenko, Svoboda deputy leader and member of parliament drew criticism from Jewish organisations in December 2012 for writing on his Facebook wall that American actress Mila Kunis, who was born in the Ukrainian SSR and is of Russian and Jewish descent, is ”not Ukrainian but a zhydivka",[116] which they contended was a slur.[39][79][117] Both Ukrainian academics and Svoboda argued that in the Ukrainian language the word does not have the anti-semitic connotations that it always does in the Russian language;[116][118][nb 3] the Ukrainian Ministry of Justice declared that Miroshnichenko's use of the word was legal because it is an archaic term for Jew, and not necessarily a slur.[116][117] Svoboda has repeatedly stated that it will not stop using such words, which it says are legitimate Ukrainian parlance.[116]

President of the Jewish Committee of Ukraine Oleksandr Feldman[120] criticized Svoboda as a "party which is notorious for regularly injecting anti-Semitism into their speeches and public pronouncements" and accused the party of "rallying behind this recognition and exploited mistrust of Jews to gain popularity among some in the lower class who painfully welcomed the chance to be a part of campaigns of hate".[121]

Other

Former members of Svoboda have criticized the organization for requiring prospective members to submit their birth certificates and internal passports in order to verify their ethnicity.[122][clarification needed]

In 2011 the party was accused by some Ukrainian media and political analysts of being used by Party of regions to limit the electorate of its main national opponents Bloc Yulia Tymoshenko and other civic nationalist parties;[2] this has been denied by the party.[123]

Electoral results

Parliamentary since 2002
Year Block Votes % Mandates (const.)
1994
Steady
Steady 49,483
0.20
- (0)
1998
Less Words
Decrease 45,155
0.20
0 (1)
2002
Did not participate
2006
Steady
Increase 91,321
0.36
0 (0)
2007
Steady
Increase 178,660
0.76
0 (0)
2012
Steady
Increase 2,129,246
10.45
25 (12)
Date Party leader Remarks
1995–2004 Yaroslav Andrushkiv
2004-present Oleh Tyahnybok


Representation in regional councils

Oblast
council
Flag Total council
members
Svoboda % Svoboda individual seats won Svoboda total seats won
Ternopil oblast council
120
34,69%
50
Lviv oblast council
116
25,98%
16
41
Ivano-Frankivsk oblast council
114
16,60%
5
17
Volyn oblast council
80
7,44%
1
6
Rivne oblast council
80
6,34%
1
5
Chernivtsi oblast council
104
3,90%
4
Kyiv oblast council
148
3,48%
0
5
Khmelnytskyi oblast council
104
4,06%
0
5

Change in party voting

See also

Notes

  1. ^ An electoral result similar to results of far-right parties in countries neighboring Ukraine in previously held elections since 1990.[11]
  2. ^ In June 2013 Ukraine’s First Deputy Foreign Minister Ruslan Demchenko stated an unilateral denunciation of the 2010 Ukrainian–Russian Naval Base for Natural Gas treaty was not possible from a legal point of view.[86]
  3. ^ Before the 1930s the traditional Ukrainian word for Jew zhyd had no negative connotations; because it resembled the Russian derogative slur for Jews zhid the Ukrainian word zhyd was banned illegal to use by the Soviet authorities in the 1930's.[119]

References

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  97. ^ http://voiceofrussia.com/2013_07_09/Israeli-Knesset-sign-protest-letter-against-anti-Semitism-and-Russophobia-in-Ukraine-4060/
  98. ^ World Jewish Congress calls Svoboda a neo-Nazi party, Ukrinform (14 May 2013)
  99. ^ http://www.theinsider.com.ua/politics/52ac9988bfcfd/
  100. ^ http://www.irishtimes.com/news/world/europe/ukraine-right-revives-wartime-symbols-amid-revolution-1.1642760
  101. ^ "MPs throw punches in Ukraine parliament brawl". BBC News. 19 March 2013.
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  103. ^ http://www.pravda.com.ua/articles/2011/10/27/6708115/
  104. ^ http://eajc.org/page18/news33726.html
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  109. ^ 13/12/2012 Text adopted by Parliament, single reading, European Parliament (13 December 2012)
  110. ^ 2012 Top Ten Anti-Israel/Anti-Semitic Slurs:Mainstream Anti-Semitism Threatens World Peace, Simon Wiesenthal Center (27 December 2012)
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  112. ^ Reuters (25 September 2011). Kyiv Post http://www.kyivpost.com/news/nation/detail/113523/. Retrieved 25 September 2011. {{cite news}}: |last= has generic name (help); Missing or empty |title= (help)
  113. ^ Ukrainian party picks xenophobic candidate, Jewish Telegraphic Agency (May 25, 2009)
  114. ^ Tiahnybok denies anti-Semitism in Svoboda, Kyiv Post (27 December 2012)
  115. ^ http://cnsnews.com/news/article/ukrainian-party-accused-racism-pop-scandal
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  117. ^ a b Outrage as Ukrainian politician attacks Mila Kunis and labels her a 'dirty Jewess', London Daily Mail, December 20, 2012.
  118. ^ Glavcom.ua, Alexander Ponomarev [Олександр Пономарів], 28 November 2012, Reason to believe the word "жид" is not anti-Semitic (Підстав вважати слово "жид" антисемітським немає).
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  122. ^ Український погляд [Ukrainian Opinion, "Свобода" зсередини [Inside "Svoboda"], 28 December 2009. The passports Svoboda require are internal Ukrainian passports - not international passports allowing travel abroad.
  123. ^ Template:Uk iconКого насправді "розкручує" влада? Факти проти міфів, Ukrayinska Pravda (June 14, 2011)

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