You're reading: Right-wing Svoboda releases its party list

Ukraine's right-wing Svoboda Party approved on Aug. 1 its list of candidates for the parliamentary elections this fall.

Both its
closed party list of candidates and their candidates for single constituencies
included only members of Svoboda.

The party
leader, Oleh Tiahnybok, on the list is followed by Bohdan Beniuk, well known
Ukrainian theater actor, who has long been a Svoboda member. His candidacy fits
the suit of several other parties, like President Viktor Yanukovych’s Party of
Regions and Natalia Korolevska’s Ukraine Forward, that included a football player
and and a pop signer.

Half of
Ukraine’s 450-seat parliament is elected through closed party list and another
half on single mandate constituencies.

Svoboda,
which according to a recent poll conducted by the Raiting group, can muster 4.4
percent of votes that is not sufficient to pass 5 percent threshold needed to enter
the parliament through party list.

During the
party congress Tyahnybok said the party’s faction in the next parliament might
also compete for the seat of the parliament speaker, despite such low ratings.

Therefore,
the party put some of their most prominent members on single mandate districts
in Kyiv, Ternopil and Lviv, where it has most of its supporters.

Andriy
Illenko, long time Svoboda member and son of a famous Ukrainian film director,
will run for parliament in one of the districts in Kyiv.

Outspoken
ring wing radicals Iryna Farion and Yuriy Mykhalchyshyn will run in Lviv.
Tyahnybok’s brother Andriy will also run in one of the districts in the city.

Oleksiy
Kayda, head of Svoboda faction in the Ternopil Oblast council, will run for a
seat in the legislature in the city of Ternopil, where the party has overwhelming
support and whose mayor is a Svoboda member.

Svoboda also approved Serhiy Rudyk, former deputy of
controversial ex-major of Kyiv Leonid Chernovetsky, to run in Cherkasy Oblast.

The party
said they stand for ousting President Yanukovych and the government of Mykola
Azarov, fighting corruption, canceling Kharkiv Accords, which extend the base of
Russian Black Sea fleet in Crimea, as well as strengthening status of the Ukrainian language
and Ukrainian identity. They also said they will help small and medium businesses to
develop by changing tax legislation.

The
following is the first 50 candidates on the Svoboda party list:

1.    Oleh
Tyahnybok

2.    Bohdan
Beniuk

3.    Andriy
Mokhnyk

4.    Ihor
Miroshnychenko

5.    Oleksandr
Shevchenko

6.    Anatoliy
Vitiv

7.    Oleh
Pankevych

8.    Ihor
Shvayka

9.    Pavlo
Kyrylenko

10. 
Ihor
Yankiv

11. 
Leonid
Martyniuk

12. 
Ruslan
Koshulynsky

13. 
Ihor
Kryvetsky

14. 
Yuriy
Syrotiuk

15. 
Oleh
Helevey

16. 
Oleh
Syrotiuk

17. 
Mykhaylo
Blavatsky

18. 
Oleksandr
Myrny

19. 
Andriy
Mishchenko

20. 
Ruslan
Martsinkiv

21. 
Oleh
Makhnitsky

22. 
Valeriy
Cherniakov

23. 
Eduard
Leonov

24. 
Svyatoslav
Khanenko

25. 
Ruslab
Zenyk

26. 
Oleksiy
Furman

27. 
Oleh
Bondarchuk

28. 
Taras
Osaulenko

29. 
Markiyan
Lopachak

30. 
Halyna
Chorna

31. 
Oleksiy
Buchynsky

32. 
Ruslan
Andriyko

33. 
Vitaly
Podlobnikov

34. 
Yuriy
Noyevy

35. 
Ivan
Hrynda

36. 
Nazar
Horuk

37. 
Svyatoslav
Borutsky

38. 
Roman
Navrotsky

39. 
Bohdan
Saliy

40. 
Oleksandr
Romashchenko

41. 
Vitaliy
Didenko

42. 
Yaroslav
Kachmaryk

43. 
Oleh
Havrylko

44. 
Yuriy
Naumko

45. 
Bohdan
Halayko

46. 
Oleksandr
Semenenko

47. 
Kostyantyn
Lubentsov

48. 
Vitaliy
Melnychuk

49. 
Stepan
Molchan

50. 
Yuriy
Botnar

Kyiv Post
staff writer Yuriy Onyshkiv can be reached at [email protected]