1994 Ukrainian parliamentary election
Parliamentary elections were held in Ukraine on 27 March 1994, with a second round between 2 and 10 April. 15 political parties gained seats and the majority of deputies were independents. However, 112 seats were remained unfilled, and a succession of by-elections were required in July, August, November and December 1994 and more in December 1995 and April 1996. Three hundred seats or two thirds of the parliament were required to be filled for the next convocation.
In what were the first elections held after Ukraine broke away from the Soviet Union, the Communist Party of Ukraine emerged as the largest party in the Verkhovna Rada, winning 86 of the 338 seats decided in the first two rounds. This election was the result of a compromise between the President and the Verkhovna Rada, which was reached on 24 September 1993 because of a political crisis caused by mass protests and strikes particularly from students and miners. On that day, the Rada adopted a decree to organize parliamentary elections ahead of schedule, and ahead of scheduled presidential elections in June.
Electoral system (50% rule)
As in the previous this election took place according to the majoritarian electoral system in 450 electoral districts containing several precincts. Each region was assigned a proportion of districts depending on its population. Hence the most mandates were received by the more populated eastern regions of Ukraine, particularly the regions of Donets basin such as Donetsk Oblast and Dnipropetrovsk Oblast.In order to be elected a candidate needed to obtain more than 50% of votes and in order for the election to be valid more than 50% of registered voters needed to vote. If no candidate obtained more than 50% in the first round, the top two candidates were listed on the ballot in the second round. In the second round the 50% rule was applied as well. Reelections were called in case if the 50% votes in the second round was not met.
Because of those conditions several districts in the Verkhovna Rada were left not represented for a whole convocation. Particularly acute that problem was in the city of Kiev that was assigned 23 mandates, while in the parliament only its 10 representatives participated in the second convocation - less than a half. Kiev became the most under represented region.
Results
Parliamentary factions
Blocs were formed in the Rada on 11 May 1994:Political Bloc | Seats | Supported for the President |
Communists of Ukraine | 83 | Oleksandr Moroz, Leonid Kuchma |
Socialist Party of Ukraine | 25 | Oleksandr Moroz |
People's Movement of Ukraine | 27 | Volodymyr Lanovyi |
Interregional Bloc | 26 | Leonid Kuchma |
Bloc "Derzhavnist'" | 25 | Leonid Kravchuk |
Bloc "Center" | 38 | Leonid Kravchuk |
Bloc "Agrarians of Ukraine" | 36 | Oleksandr Tkachenko, Leonid Kravchuk |
Bloc "Reforms" | 27 | Volodymyr Lanovyi |
Bloc "Unity" | 25 | – |
Not affiliated | 23 | – |
Total | 355 |
The political blocks formed in the Verkhovna Rada did not exactly represented a similar party. Such parties as the Peasant's Party of Ukraine and the Agrarians for Reform formed the Agrarians of Ukraine block. Although some of the deputies, especially from SelPU, joined the Socialist block. The Ukrainian Republican Party, the Congress of Ukrainian Nationalists, and the Democratic Party of Ukraine has formed the electoral block Derzhavnist.
- The left electoral blocks: Communists of Ukraine, Socialist block, and Peasant's Party of Ukraine
- The right electoral blocks: People's Movement of Ukraine and Derzhavnist
- The center electoral blocks: Interregional block, Social-Market Choice, Unity, and Agrarians for Reforms
- The right-center electoral blocks: Reforms and Center
- The leftist: Communist of Ukraine, Socialist Party of Ukraine and Peasant's Party of Ukraine
- The centrist: Constitutional Center, Unity, Intraregional Deputies Group, Social-Market Choice and Independents
- The national democratic: Reforms and People's Movement of Ukraine.
By regions (single constituency)
Regional rankings
by party
;Crimea- No party affiliation
- Communist Party of Ukraine
- Party of Economic Revival of Crimea
- No party affiliation
- Communist Party of Ukraine
- No party affiliation
- Ukrainian Republican Party
- Democratic Party of Ukraine
- No party affiliation
- Labor Party
- Peasant Party of Ukraine
- Communist Party of Ukraine
- Socialist Party of Ukraine
- Party of Democratic Revival of Ukraine
- Communist Party of Ukraine
- No party affiliation
- Socialist Party of Ukraine
- Peasant Party of Ukraine
- Labor Party
- Democratic Party of Ukraine
- No party affiliation
- Communist Party of Ukraine
- Peasant Party of Ukraine
- No party affiliation
- Social-Democratic Party of Ukraine
- Christian Democratic Party of Ukraine
- No party affiliation
- Communist Party of Ukraine
- Party of Democratic Revival of Ukraine
- Socialist Party of Ukraine
- Peasant Party of Ukraine
- No party affiliation
- Congress of Ukrainian Nationalists
- Ukrainian Republican Party
- No party affiliation
- Communist Party of Ukraine
- People's Movement of Ukraine
- Democratic Party of Ukraine
- Communist Party of Ukraine
- No party affiliation
- Socialist Party of Ukraine
- No party affiliation
- People's Movement of Ukraine
- Congress of Ukrainian Nationalists
- Party of Democratic Revival of Ukraine
- Ukrainian Republican Party
- Ukrainian Conservative Republican Party
- No party affiliation
- Communist Party of Ukraine
- Peasant Party of Ukraine
- No party affiliation
- Communist Party of Ukraine
- Peasant Party of Ukraine
- Socialist Party of Ukraine
- No party affiliation
- People's Movement of Ukraine
- Socialist Party of Ukraine
- Peasant Party of Ukraine
- Ukrainian Republican Party
- No party affiliation
- Communist Party of Ukraine
- Peasant Party of Ukraine
- No party affiliation
- People's Movement of Ukraine
- Ukrainian Republican Party
- Communist Party of Ukraine
- Socialist Party of Ukraine
- No party affiliation
- People's Movement of Ukraine
- Peasant Party of Ukraine
- Ukrainian Republican Party
- People's Movement of Ukraine
- No party affiliation
- Congress of Ukrainian Nationalists
- Ukrainian National Assembly
- Ukrainian Conservative Republican Party
- No party affiliation
- Communist Party of Ukraine
- Socialist Party of Ukraine
- Peasant Party of Ukraine
- Communist Party of Ukraine
- No party affiliation
- Socialist Party of Ukraine
- Peasant Party of Ukraine
- No party affiliation
- Socialist Party of Ukraine
- Ukrainian Republican Party
- Communist Party of Ukraine
- Peasant Party of Ukraine
- No party affiliation
- Peasant Party of Ukraine
- Communist Party of Ukraine
- No party affiliation
- People's Movement of Ukraine
- Socialist Party of Ukraine
- Peasant Party of Ukraine
- No party affiliation
- Communist Party of Ukraine
- Labor Party
- Peasant Party of Ukraine
- No party affiliation
- People's Movement of Ukraine
- Ukrainian Republican Party
- Communist Party of Ukraine
- No party affiliation
by nationality
- Ukrainian
- Russian
- Bulgarian
- Russian
- Ukrainian
- Not identified
- Russian
- Ukrainian
- Jewish
- Karaite
- Not identified
- Ukrainian
- Russian
- Polish
- Ukrainian
- Ukrainian
- Russian
- Not identified
- Ukrainian
- Russian
- Adyghe
- Jewish
- Ukrainian
- Russian
- German
- Ukrainian
- Russian
- Hungarian
- Ukrainian
- Russian
- Ukrainian
- Russian
- Not identified
- Ukrainian
- Russian
- Ukrainian
- Russian
- Not identified
- Ukrainian
- Russian
- Chuvash
- Jewish
- Ukrainian
- Ukrainian
- Russian
- Ukrainian
- Russian
- Jewish
- Moldavian
- Bulgarian
- Not identified
- Ukrainian
- Russian
- Belorussian
- Ukrainian
- Not identified
- Ukrainian
- Ukrainian
- Ukrainian
- Russian
- Jewish
- Polish
- Not identified
- Ukrainian
- Belorussian
- Not identified
- Ukrainian
- Russian
- Ukrainian
- Ukrainian
- Romanian
- Ukrainian
- Russian
Aftermath
On 30 May 1994 MP Roman Kuper died of a heart attack and Leonid Kravchuk was elected as his replacement on 25 September. On 15 July Leonid Kuchma surrendered his parliamentarian mandate after being elected President, and Vasyl Yevrukhov was elected in his place. On 21 August MP Vitaliy Yurkovsky died, and was replaced by Natalya Vitrenko.