1999 Ukrainian presidential election

{{Short description|none}}

{{Infobox election

| country = Ukraine

| type = presidential

| previous_election = 1994 Ukrainian presidential election

| previous_year = 1994

| next_election = 2004 Ukrainian presidential election

| next_year = 2004

| election_date = 31 October 1999 (first round)
14 November 1999 (second round)

| turnout = 70.15% (first round) {{decrease}} 0.22pp
74.87% (second round) {{increase}} 3.24pp

| image1 = Kuchma 1999.jpg

| nominee1 = Leonid Kuchma

| party1 = Independent politician

| popular_vote1 = 15,870,722

| percentage1 = 57.70%

| image2 = НДУ 3 Симоненко Петро Миколайович.jpg

| nominee2 = {{nowrap|Petro Symonenko}}

| party2 = Communist Party of Ukraine

| popular_vote2 = 10,665,420

| percentage2 = 38.77%

| map_image = {{Switcher

| 300px

| First round results by oblast

| 300px

| Second round results by oblast

| default = 2

}}

| title = President

| before_election = Leonid Kuchma

| before_party = Independent politician

| after_election = Leonid Kuchma

| after_party = Independent politician

}}

{{Politics of Ukraine}}

Presidential elections were held in Ukraine on 31 October 1999, with a second round on 14 November.Dieter Nohlen & Philip Stöver (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, p. 1976. {{ISBN|9783832956097}} The result was a victory for Leonid Kuchma, who defeated Petro Symonenko in the run-off, winning a second consecutive presidential election.Nohlen & Stöver, p1994

As of 2024, this is the only re-election of an incumbent president in the history of independent Ukraine.

Electoral system

At the time of election the population in Ukraine was 50,105,600 with 34,017,400 living in cities.{{citation needed|date=September 2014}} The Donetsk Oblast, the most populous oblast, contained the most electoral districts, with 23. The least electoral districts among oblasts were in the Chernivtsi Oblast, which only had 4. The city of Kyiv had 12 electoral districts and Sevastopol 2. There also was a special out-of-country district available for voters who at the time of elections were not available to vote in Ukraine.

Registration

A total of 32 individuals applied for registration as candidates for the presidency, of whom 19 were registered by the Central Election Commission of Ukraine; the other 13 had their applications rejected.

Since the summer of 1999 there was heavy competition between candidates. Four candidates Yevhen Marchuk, Oleksandr Moroz, {{ill|Volodymyr Oliynyk|uk|Олійник Володимир Миколайович}} (mayor of Cherkasy), and Oleksandr Tkachenko (speaker of the Verkhovna Rada) met in Kaniv and called on all candidates to ensure just and honest elections. The "Kaniv Four" had intentions to present a single candidate who would have a better chance of success. However, they failed to do so and no-one else joined them. On 27 October Oliynyk withdrew his candidacy in favor of Yevhen Marchuk, while Oleksandr Tkachenko favored Petro Symonenko (leader of the Communist Party of Ukraine).

=Registered candidates=

Udovenko and Kostenko initially were denied in registration, but on 21 May 1999 both were registered.

=Registration denied=

=Candidates=

All pretenders were required to collect signatures to become candidates. In the process ten pretenders were not able to gather the required signatures, while six were reinstated on decision of the Supreme Court of Ukraine. Later another two registered candidates withdrew.

Campaign

During the campaign Kuchma was supported by the Bloc "Our Choice – Leonid Kuchma!"[http://www.ukrinform.ua/ukr/news/zasdannya_naradi_golv_poltichnih_party_bloku_nash_vibr___leond_kuchma_19125 Session of the conference of leaders of political parties of the bloc "Our Choice - Leonid Kuchma!"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140914233849/http://www.ukrinform.ua/ukr/news/zasdannya_naradi_golv_poltichnih_party_bloku_nash_vibr___leond_kuchma_19125 |date=2014-09-14 }}. Ukrinform. 19 November 1999Soskin, O. [https://web.archive.org/web/20140914234706/http://uncp.soskin.info/print/news/487/lkuchma-pri-vladi---ukrayina-v-zanepadi.html L. Kuchma at power – Ukraine in decline]. Institute of Society Transformation.

On 27 October 1999 Oliynyk and Tkachenko withdrew from the election campaign.

Conduct

According to historian Serhy Yekelchyk President Kuchma's administration "employed electoral fraud freely" during the election.[https://books.google.com/books?id=_KRBCgAAQBAJ&dq=Ukrainian+constitutional+referendum+election+fraud+2000&pg=PA87 The Conflict in Ukraine: What Everyone Needs to Know] by Serhy Yekelchyk, Oxford University Press, 2015, {{ISBN|0190237287}} (page 87)

Results

In the first round the most oblasts and the out-of-country district were won by Leonid Kuchma. In seven oblasts the top candidate was Petro Symonenko mostly in the centre and south. Oleksandr Moroz managed to become the leader in the more agrarian oriented Poltava and Vinnytsia Oblasts. Nataliya Vitrenko took the peak of the candidate list in the Sumy Oblast.

{{Election results

|cand1=Leonid Kuchma|party1=Independent|votes1=9598672|votes1_2=15870722

|cand2=Petro Symonenko|party2=Communist Party of Ukraine|votes2=5849077|votes2_2=10665420

|cand3=Oleksandr Moroz|party3=Socialist Party of Ukraine|votes3=2969896

|cand4=Nataliya Vitrenko|party4=Progressive Socialist Party of Ukraine|votes4=2886972

|cand5=Yevhen Marchuk|party5=Independent|votes5=2138356

|cand6=Yuriy Kostenko|party6=Independent|votes6=570623

|cand7=Hennadiy Udovenko|party7=The MovementReforms and Order|votes7=319778

|cand8=Vasyl Onopenko|party8=Social Democratic Party of Ukraine (united)|votes8=124040

|cand9=Oleksandr Rzhavskyy|party9=One Family{{Cite web |url=http://www.edina-rodina.org/ |title=Official website of the One Family |access-date=2014-01-29 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141219204100/http://www.edina-rodina.org/ |archive-date=2014-12-19 |url-status=dead }}|votes9=96515

|cand10=Yuriy Karmazin|party10=Motherland Defenders Party|votes10=90793

|cand11=Vitaliy Kononov|party11=Party of Greens of Ukraine|votes11=76832

|cand12={{ill|Oleksandr Bazyliuk|uk|Базилюк Олександр Філімонович}}|party12=Slavic Party|votes12=36012

|cand13={{ill|Mykola Haber|uk|Габер Микола Олександрович}}|party13=Patriotic Party of Ukraine|votes13=31829

|row14=Against all|votes14=477019|votes14_2=970181

|invalid=1038749|invalid2=706161

|electorate=37498630|electorate2=37680581

|source=Nohlen & Stöver

}}

References

{{reflist}}

Bibliography

  • Fritz, D. V. "State-Building: A Comparative Study of Ukraine, Lithuania, Belarus, and Russia". Central European University Press. Budapest 2008. {{ISBN|9637326995}}

External links

  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20140901124908/http://www.cvk.gov.ua/pls/vp1999/WEBPROC0 Ukrainian presidential election, 1999]. Central Electoral Commission of Ukraine website.
  • [http://www.history.vn.ua/book/ukrzno/174.html Handbook on preparation to the Foreign Independent Evaluation (ZNO) on history of Ukraine]. www.history.vn.ua
  • Romanyuk, A.S., Skochilias, L.S., and others. [https://web.archive.org/web/20140203051505/http://www.lnu.edu.ua/faculty/Phil/El_karta_knyzka/el_hystory_ukraine-1999.htm Electoral map of Lviv region in inter regional section]. Lviv: TsPD, 2010.
  • Tantsiura, V. [http://pidruchniki.ws/12191010/istoriya/vibori_verhovnoyi_radi_1998_r Political history of Ukraine].
  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20140201214909/http://www.ucipr.kiev.ua/publications/uroki-ta-pidsumki-viborchoii-kampaniii-1999-roku-v-konteksti-viboriv-2004 Yulia Tyshchenko, Ukrainian Independent Center of Political Studies].
  • [http://www.cvk.gov.ua/metod/vydannja/vibory1999.pdf 1999 Presidential elections]. Central Electoral Commission. Kyiv 2000
  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20181126135239/http://svobodaslova.in.ua/news/read/23300 1999 Presidential elections: how it was. Part 2]. Freedom of speech in Ukraine.

{{1999 presidential election candidates, Ukraine}}

{{Ukrainian elections}}

Ukraine

Presidential

Category:Presidential elections in Ukraine

Ukraine

Ukraine

Category:Leonid Kuchma