Ukrainian Democratic Alliance for Reform

(Redirected fromUDAR of Vitaliy Klychko)

TheUkrainian Democratic Alliance for Reform of Vitali Klitschko(Ukrainian:Український демократичний альянс за реформи Віталія Кличка;the acronymUDAR(Ukrainian:УДАР) translates to "strike" or "punch", English:PUNCH of Vitali Klitschko)[16]is apolitical partyinUkraineheaded by retired[17]Ukrainian professionalheavyweight boxerand theWBCworld heavyweight champion emeritusVitali Klitschko.[2]The party has been an observer member of theEuropean People's Party(EPP) since 2013.[13]

Ukrainian Democratic Alliance for Reform of Vitali Klitschko
Український демократичний альянс за реформи Віталія Кличка
LeaderVitali Klitschko[1][2]
Founded24 April 2010[3]
Registered14 March 2005[1](as European Capital)
Preceded byEuropean Capital
Vitali Klitschko Bloc
HeadquartersKyiv
IdeologyLiberalism[4][5][6]
Civic nationalism[7]
Pro-Europeanism[8][9][10]
Political positionCentre[11][12]
European affiliationEuropean People's Party(observer)[13]
ColoursRed and white
SloganFrom personal success to the success of the country[14]
Verkhovna Rada
0 / 450
Regions[15]
183 / 43,122
Kyiv City Council
30 / 120
Election symbol
Website
udar.partyEdit this at Wikidata

Legally[clarification needed]the party is the successor ofPolitical Party "European Capital"(Ukrainian:Політична партія "Європейська столиця",Russian:Политическая партия "Европейская столица" ) which was registered in March 2005.[1]In its last outing the party was founded on April 24, 2010, on the basis of theVitali Klitschko Bloc(Ukrainian:Блок Віталія Кличка,Russian:Блок Виталия Кличко), a local political alliance inKyiv(the capital of Ukraine).[3][18]

The party won 40 seats in theUkrainian parliamentin the2012 Ukrainian parliamentary election.[19]

In the2014 parliamentary election,30% of thePetro Poroshenko Blocelection list was filled by members of UDAR (asnon-partisan) and UDAR leader Klitschko topped that list.[20]The Petro Poroshenko Bloc won the election with 132 seats.[21]UDAR officially merged into the Petro Poroshenko Bloc on 28 August 2015.[22]

In May 2019 Klitschko announced that UDAR would take part independently in the2019 Ukrainian parliamentary election.[23]In this election UDAR did compete as an independent party again, but only in 15 single-mandate constituencies and it failed to win any seats.[24][25]

In the2020 Kyiv local electionUDAR won 30 of the 120 seats of theKyiv City Council.[26]In the same election Klitschko was reelected asMayor of Kyivwith 50.52% of the votes.[27]

History

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Former logo

Political Party "European Capital"

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The Political Party "European Capital" was registered in March 2005 (its party-leader was Ukrainian businessman Lev Partshaladze[28][29]) and the party gained 0.04% of the votes during theUkrainian parliamentary elections 2006;the party did not participate in the2007 Ukrainian parliamentary elections.[1]In February 2009[citation needed]the party renamed itself Political Party "New Country".[failed verification][1][30]Lev Partshaladze was elected into theKyiv City Councilfor theVitaliy Klychko Blocin 2008,but expelled from the faction, for repeatedly voting differently from the faction, on 2 December 2010.[29][31][nb 1]

Ukrainian Democratic Alliance for Reform

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On a party congress, held on 24 April 2010, the Political Party "New Country" (founded in 2005 as Political Party "European Capital and renamed into" New Country "14 months before April 2010[1][30]) renamed itself into Ukrainian Democratic Alliance for Reform and elected boxerVitali Klitschkoas its leader.[30][33]The party officially became Ukrainian Democratic Alliance for Reform (UDAR) of Vitali Klitschko mid-July 2010.[34]

During the2010 Ukrainian local electionsthe party won about 400 representatives in municipalities and Oblast Councils (regional parliaments).[35][36][37][38]

The Bloc of Vitali Klitschko faction in theKyiv City Councilchanged its name to UDAR of Vitali Klitschko in February 2011.[39]The party has a strong popularity in Kyiv.[40]

Results in the 2012 elections

In September 2011 party leader Klitschko stated that the party was considering the possibility of merging with other political parties before contending in the2012 Ukrainian parliamentary elections.[41]In December 2011 UDAR of Vitali Klitschko andCivil Positionwhere negotiating a unification.[42]But Civil Position eventionally joinedBatkivshchynaduring these elections.[43]

UDAR became a partner of theChristian Democratic UnionofGermanyin November 2011.[44]Udar is supported by the German government and theKonrad Adenauer Foundation[45][46]and received support in particular fromAngela Merkeland also politicians from the conservativeEuropean People's Party.According to information gained by the German magazine DER SPIEGEL, the target was to "set up Klitschko purposefully as a new strong man in Kiew - in order to counter this way the Kremlin's growing influence". Support consisted in logistics, training and joint performances. Assistance was also promised byChristoph Heusgen,Ronald PofallaandGuido Westerwelle.[47]

UDAR did not join theDictatorship Resistance Committee;but on 22 January 2012 it did sign an agreement on joint actions with that alliance.[48]

Starting in March 2010 the party's popularity in opinion polls reached a level almost twice as high as the election threshold (which was raised to 5% in November 2011[49]).[50][51][35][52][53][54]The election list of the party was a mixture of candidates who used to represent parties from all over the political spectrum of Ukraine.[55]

After a successful application theEuropean People's Partystarted on 5 April 2012 the process of making UDAR anobserver memberof the organization.[56]

In July 2012 party leader Klychko stated that his party would not cooperate with theParty of Regionsin a new parliament.[57]

In early August 2012 the party complained its candidates for people's deputies (and all other parties not involved in thefirst Azarov Government) suffered "psychological and physical pressure" and this "ten times higher than other parties".[58]

Two weeks before the 28 October2012 Ukrainian parliamentary electionUDAR withdrew 26 of its candidates running insingle-member constituenciesin favour of Batkivshchyna candidates and Batkivshchyna withdrew 26 parliamentary candidates in favor of UDAR in an attempt to maximise votes for the opposition.[59]In the election the party won 13.97% of the national votes and 6constituencies(it had competed in 183 of the 225 constituencies[60]) and thus 40 parliamentary seats.[61]Support for UDAR was the least diversified at the regional level compared with the results of the other leading parties.[62]Independent candidatesYaroslav DubnevychandFedir Nehoijoined the UDAR parliamentary faction on 12 December 2012; the same day party leader Klitschko was elected to lead the party's faction. [63]The party is coordinating its parliamentary activities with Batkivshchyna andSvoboda.[64]

In late December 2012 UDAR and theUnited National MovementfromGeorgiasigned a cooperation agreement.[65]

In May 2013 UDAR, Batkivshchyna and Svoboda vowed to coordinate their actions during the2015 Ukrainian presidential election.[66]

On 6 September 2013 the party was granted "observer status" in theEuropean People's Party.[13][nb 2]

Party leader Klitschko confirmed on 28 February 2014 that he would take part in the2014 Ukrainian presidential election(, this also ended the May 2013 agreement to coordinate with Batkivshchyna and Svoboda).[67]But on 29 March 2014 announced that he had changed his mind and would run for the post ofMayor of Kyivin the2014 Kyiv local election(including Mayoral elections) set for 25 May 2014.[68][69]In the 2014 Ukrainian presidential election Klitschko endorsed the candidacy ofPetro Poroshenko.[70]Klitschko won Kyiv's mayoral elections with almost 57% of the votes.[71][72]Poroshenko was electedPresident of Ukraineon 25 May 2014.[73]Klitschko was sworn in as Mayor on 5 June 2014.[74]The same day the Ukrainian parliament had deprived Klitschko of his MP mandate (Ukrainian MPs are not entitled to combine parliamentary activities with any other public employment).[75]HenceVitaliy Kovalchukwas elected to lead the party's faction in parliament on 7 June 2014.[76]

Merge into the Petro Poroshenko Bloc

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On 2 September Kovalchuk stated that since his party andPetro Poroshenko Blochad agreed to "joint participation in parliamentary elections" on 29 March 2014 the two parties were "in discussion" about "the format" for how to do so in the (late) October2014 Ukrainian parliamentary election.[77]On 15 September it became clear that 30% of the Petro Poroshenko Bloc election list would be filled by members of UDAR and that UDAR leaderVitali Klitschkois at the top of this list, Klitschko vowed not to resign as incumbentMayor of Kyiv.[20]Petro Poroshenko Bloc went on to win the2014 Ukrainian parliamentary electionwith 132 seats; surpassing the runner upPeople's Frontwhich won 82 seats.[21]However, People's Front did perform better than the Petro Poroshenko Bloc with 0.33% in the nationwide election under party lists (22.14% against 21.81%) but the party did win 69constituencyseats while People's Front won only 18 constituencies.[21]

On 28 August 2015 Petro Poroshenko Bloc and UDAR merged into 1 party, Petro Poroshenko Bloc.[22]At the unifying congress (of 28 August 2015) Klitschko was elected as leader of this party.[22]

In 2017 UDAR was still registered as a political party and it employed two persons.[78]According to former UDAR member andUkrainian lawmakerDmytro Belotserkovetsit was necessary that "the party performs only the technical functions necessary in terms of Ukrainian legislation."[79]

Return as a political party

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On 18 May 2019 party leader Klitschko announced that the party would take part in the2019 Ukrainian parliamentary election.[23]

On 4 June Klitschko offered formerPresident of GeorgiaMikheil Saakashvilito join the leadership of his party and to take part in the July 2019 early parliamentary elections with UDAR, Saakashvili turned down the offer.[80]

In the July 2019 Ukrainian parliamentary election the party only competed in 15single-mandate constituencies.[81][24]It failed to win any seats.[25][81]The party's most successful candidate wasYuriy Solovei[uk]who won 14.83% of the votes in constituency 89 located inSniatyn(Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast).[82]Its second most successful candidate, Valentyn Mondryivskyi, gained 4.84% of the votes inKyiv'sPodilskyi District.[82]

In the election forMayor of Kyivof the2020 Kyiv local electionUDAR nominated incumbent mayor Klitschko as their candidate.[83]Klitschko was last reelected in the election with 50.52% of the votes, in the first round of the election.[27]UDAR won 30Kyiv City Councilseats in the 2020 Kyiv local election.[26]In total in the whole of Ukraine the party gained 187 deputies (0.43% of all available mandates).[84]In the elections for theKyiv Oblast Councilthe party did not win any seats after finishing 9th place in the election.[85]

Ideology and political positions

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UDAR tends to avoid sensitive and polarising subjects and focuses instead on popular topics, such as more empowerment to ordinary Ukrainians and a ruthless campaign againstcorruption,the indifference of the authorities, the lack oflocal governance,inequality, and poverty.[86][87][88]The party wants to "unleash the power of the state and provide conditions for welfare".[89]

The party is in favor of theAssociation Agreementbetween Ukraine and theEuropean Union(EU).[90]It has made no stance on apossible NATO membership of Ukraine.[89]

UDAR wants to overcome social inequality with "the abandonment of the idea of cheap labor".[89]

In education, the party wants to bringeducation in Ukraineto "European standards" by "development of external testing and monitoring the quality of education".[89]UDAR wants to return to a 12-yearcompulsorysecondary educationwith specialized training in the last two classes and three cycles of learning inhigher educationbachelor's degree,master's degreeandpostgraduate.[89]It also wants to guarantee autonomy of educational institutions by legislation.[89]

The party wants to combatcorruption in Ukrainewith more transparency and the creation of an independent anti-corruption agency.[88][89]

UDAR wants to reduce the number of state agencies in order "to minimize the interaction of the citizen with an official".[89]And it wants to simplify procedures for registering property.[89]It wants to reduce the number of taxes from 23 to 7 and to generally simplify the taxing system.[88][89]"Owners of the land for agricultural purposes" should only be citizens of Ukraine.[89]

UDAR wants to abolish the privileges of theChairman of the Verkhovna Rada(Ukraine's parliament) and formerPresidents of Ukraine[91]and to reduce benefits for currentparliamentarians.[92]

The party has pledged to "reboot" thecourt system,and "reinforce the control of the public over elections".[88]

The party is in favor of holdingCitizens' initiativesafter 150,000 signatures are collected.[89]The party is in favor of elections with regionalopen lists[89]and mayoral elections in two rounds.[89]Inlocal elections,it favors a voting age of 16 (currently 18).[89]It also wants to introduce in Ukraine a law onimpeachmentof thePresident of Ukraine.[89]

The party wants to simplify procedures for the establishment and registration of public and charitable organizations.[89]

In June 2013, the party's parliamentary faction voted for the denunciation of the2010 Ukrainian–Russian Naval Base for Natural Gas treaty.[nb 3][94]

Election results

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Verkhovna Rada

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Year Popular vote Percentage Overall seats Change Government Remarks
2006 12,027 0.04
0 / 450
as Political Party "European Capital"
2007 did not participate
2012 2,847,878 13.97
40 / 450
40 Opposition
2014 Petro Poroshenko Bloc Coalition government as non-partisan politicians of Petro Poroshenko Bloc
2019 single-mandate constituencies
0 / 424
Extra-Parliamentary

Kyiv City Council

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Year Popular vote Percentage Overall seats Change Government Remarks
2008 122,243 10.61
15 / 120
1 Opposition as part ofVitali Klitschko Bloc
2014 535,709 40.54
77 / 120
62 Government
2015 237,970 27.56
52 / 120
25 Government as part ofPetro Poroshenko Bloc
2020 138,239 19.98
30 / 120
22 Government

Leaders

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Years Party leader
2005–2009 Lev Partshaladze
2009–2010 Roman Romanyuk
2010–present Vitali Klitschko

Notes

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  1. ^In the2014 Ukrainian parliamentary electionLev Partshaladze placed 93rd on the election list ofPetro Poroshenko Bloc;30% of this election list was filled by members of UDAR.[32][20]
  2. ^On 6 September 2013 the fellow Ukrainian partyOur Ukrainewas deprived of its "observer status" in theEuropean People's Party.[13]
  3. ^In June 2013, Ukraine's First DeputyForeign MinisterRuslan Demchenkostated a unilateral denunciation of the2010 Ukrainian–Russian Naval Base for Natural Gas treatywas not possible from a legal point of view.[93]

References

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  3. ^ab(in Ukrainian)Віталій Кличко очолив політичну партію «УДАР» (фото),Vitali Klitschko Bloc (April 24, 2010)
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  8. ^Freeman, Colin (6 November 2011)."Why boxer Vitali Klitschko wants to become Ukraine's new political heavyweight".The Telegraph.Retrieved19 February2012.
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  13. ^abcd(in Ukrainian)Європейська народна партія взяла до себе "УДАР" і виключила "Нашу Україну"European People's Party took a "hit" and excluded "Our Ukraine",Ukrayinska Pravda(6 September 2013)
    Member PartiesArchived2016-05-04 at theWayback Machine,European People's Party
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  19. ^Party of Regions gets 185 seats in Ukrainian parliament, Batkivschyna 101 - CEC,Interfax-Ukraine(12 November 2012)
  20. ^abc(in Russian)Pilots, combat, and journalists. Who goes to the new Verkhovna Rada,Korrespondent.net(September 15, 2014)
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  21. ^abcPoroshenko Bloc to have greatest number of seats in parliament,Ukrinform(8 November 2014)
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  22. ^abcKlitschko becomes leader of Petro Poroshenko Bloc 'Solidarity' party,Interfax-Ukraine(28 August 2015)
  23. ^ab(in Ukrainian)Klitschko said that UDAR will go to the polls,Ukrayinska Pravda(May 18, 2019)
  24. ^ab"Віталій Кличко: Хочу застерегти нового президента від кроків, які робив у столиці Янукович".glavcom.ua.21 June 2019.
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  33. ^(in Ukrainian)Кличко знайшов собі нову партіюbyUkrayinska Pravda(April 24, 2010)
  34. ^New Country party renamed UDAR of Vitaliy Klitschko,Kyiv Post(Jul 13, 2010)
  35. ^abKlitschko To The Rescue?,Kyiv Post(12 January 2012)
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  39. ^Faction of Bloc of Klitschko in Kyiv Council changes name to UDAR of Vitaliy Klychko,Kyiv Post(February 17, 2011)
  40. ^Poll: Klychko's UDAR to receive a fourth of seats in Kyiv Council,Kyiv Post(September 27, 2011)
  41. ^Klitschko: UDAR party considering unification before 2012 parliamentary election,Kyiv Post(September 19, 2011)
  42. ^(in Ukrainian)Гриценко збирається йти на вибори з Кличком,Ukrayinska Pravda(9 December 2011)
  43. ^They Call Themselves the Opposition,The Ukrainian Week(31 August 2012)
  44. ^(in German)24. CDU-Bundesparteitag in LeipzigArchived2015-01-21 at theWayback Machine,Christian Democratic UnionbranchDüren-Jülich(15 November 2011)
    (in German)"Politik ist wie ein Boxkampf": Vitali Klitschko beim CDU-Parteitag in Leipzig im InterviewArchived2012-12-10 at theWayback Machine,Leipziger Volkszeitung(14 November 2011)
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  48. ^Tymoshenko, Lutsenko should participate in 2012 parliamentary elections, says Klychko,Interfax Ukraine(23 January 2012)
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    Party Of Regions, Tymoshenko bloc, Strong Ukraine, Front for Change and Communist Party would get into parliament,Kyiv Post(April 12, 2010)
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  69. ^Klitschko will run for mayor of Kyiv,Interfax-Ukraine(29 March 2014)
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    Klitschko was deprived of parliamentary mandate, NovostiMira (5 June 2014)
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  83. ^(in Ukrainian)Klitschko reacted to support from Poroshenko's party: We are not bargaining,Ukrayinska Pravda(16 September 2020)
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  86. ^Q&A:Ukrainian parliamentary election,BBC News(23 October 2012)
  87. ^Ukraine election:President Yanukovych party claims win,BBC News(29 October 2012).
  88. ^abcdKlitschko: We'll leave only seven nationwide taxes, root out government corruption,Kyiv Post(1 April 2012)
  89. ^abcdefghijklmnopq"Electronic Bulletin" Your Choice - 2012 ". Issue 4: Batkivshchyna".Archived fromthe originalon 2013-12-03.
  90. ^UDAR submits to Rada resolution on Ukraine's integration with EU,Interfax-Ukraine(8 January 2013)
  91. ^(in Ukrainian)"УДАР" хоче позбавити голів парламенту і екс-президентів пільг"UDAR" wants to deprive the heads of parliament and former presidents of benefits,Ukrayinska Pravda(6 February 2013)
  92. ^UDAR initiating restriction on free flights, railway tickets for MPs,Kyiv Post(29 November 2012)
  93. ^Kyiv cannot denounce Kharkiv accords unilaterally, says Foreign Ministry,Interfax-Ukraine(19 June 2013)
  94. ^Rada fails to support bill on denunciation of Kharkiv accords on Black Sea Fleet basing in Ukraine,Interfax-Ukraine(19 June 2013)
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