{"id":7407,"date":"2022-05-30T13:55:49","date_gmt":"2022-05-30T11:55:49","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/centreua.org\/?p=7407"},"modified":"2022-05-30T13:58:18","modified_gmt":"2022-05-30T11:58:18","slug":"oleksandr-turchynov-on-the-optimal-system-of-government-for-ukraine","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/centreua.org\/en\/parliamentary-republic\/oleksandr-turchynov-on-the-optimal-system-of-government-for-ukraine\/","title":{"rendered":"Oleksandr Turchynov on the optimal system of government for Ukraine"},"content":{"rendered":"<p align=\"justify\"><strong><span lang=\"en-US\">A c<\/span>lassical parliamentary republic is historically and mentally <span lang=\"en-US\">the <\/span>mo<span lang=\"en-US\">st<\/span> <span lang=\"en-US\">fitting for our country<\/span>. <span lang=\"en-US\">\u2014<\/span> Oleksandr Turchynov<\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">30 years is a <span lang=\"en-US\">long <\/span>enough period to look back and analyze <span lang=\"en-US\">what we have achieved <\/span>and what to do next. This is exactly what the <span lang=\"en-US\">Centre of United Actions <\/span>is trying to do <span lang=\"en-US\">with its <\/span>#ukrstateunderconstruction project dedicated to the 30th anniversary of <span lang=\"en-US\">independence<\/span>.<span lang=\"en-US\"> By taking <\/span>interview<span lang=\"en-US\">s<\/span> with statespersons of different periods, Oleh Rybachuk <span lang=\"en-US\">is <\/span>trying to <span lang=\"en-US\">get a better <\/span>understand<span lang=\"en-US\">ing<\/span> <span lang=\"en-US\">of <\/span>how the state machine worked and why independence<span lang=\"en-US\"> has not brought any magic solutions to Ukrainian problems<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">Ukrainian politician Oleksandr Turchynov was the coordinator of two Maidans and has experience <span lang=\"en-US\">in<\/span> many high state positions.<span lang=\"en-US\"> He <\/span>assum<span lang=\"en-US\">ed<\/span> the post of <span lang=\"en-US\">the Chairperson<\/span> of the Verkhovna Rada during the most critical phase of the Revolution of Dignity after the escape of Yanukovych and <span lang=\"en-US\">majority of Ukrainian top officials. <\/span>For several days in February <span lang=\"en-US\">of <\/span>2014<span lang=\"en-US\">,<\/span> he had absolute power, acting as <span lang=\"en-US\">the <\/span>President of Ukraine, <span lang=\"en-US\">the <\/span>Prime Minister<span lang=\"en-US\">,<\/span> and the entire <span lang=\"en-US\">Cabinet<\/span>. From 2015 to 2019, Oleksandr Turchynov held a position of <span lang=\"en-US\">the <\/span>Secretary of the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine, <span lang=\"en-US\">focusing<\/span> on <span lang=\"en-US\">restoring state <\/span>security and defense.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong>How well do you remember the day when Ukraine declared <span lang=\"en-US\">its <\/span>independence? How did you imagine the development of <span lang=\"en-US\">an <\/span>independent Ukraine<span lang=\"en-US\"> at the time<\/span>?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">I remember those days quite well. For me, it was freedom in the literal sense because I was in <span lang=\"en-US\">the <\/span>Dnipropetrovsk region among dissidents, <span lang=\"en-US\">the <\/span>opponents of the communist regime. After the coup (August 19-21, 1991, the self-proclaimed State Committee <span lang=\"en-US\">on the<\/span> State of Emergency tried to stage a coup <span lang=\"en-US\">to<\/span> preserve the USSR <span lang=\"en-US\">\u2014<\/span> ed.), I was on the list of those who should have been arrested. As a matter of fact, the failure of the coup and Ukraine\u2019s independence gave me the opportunity to work and live in a free<span lang=\"en-US\">,<\/span> independent country. Despite the power of the Soviet Union, we <span lang=\"en-US\">i<\/span>ndependence gained <span lang=\"en-US\">at small cost \u2014<\/span> without fighting <span lang=\"en-US\">or even <\/span>fierce confrontation. <span lang=\"en-US\">However,<\/span> <span lang=\"en-US\">the room for <\/span>transformations w<span lang=\"en-US\">as<\/span> <span lang=\"en-US\">limited by <\/span>nostalgia<span lang=\"en-US\"> for soviet times,<\/span> <span lang=\"en-US\">by<\/span> the generation that was born in the Soviet Union and <span lang=\"en-US\">filled up with<\/span> dogmas dangerous to human consciousness. Unfortunately, rapid changes that <span lang=\"en-US\">m<\/span>any Eastern European countries<span lang=\"en-US\"> have undergone and<\/span> which we had hoped for, have not happened in our country.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong>How did the Ukrainian economy feel <span lang=\"en-US\">during<\/span> the first years? What were the main problems for economic development?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">Two destructive processes <span lang=\"en-US\">were unwinding <\/span>in parallel. On the one hand, the Ukrainian economy was fully integrated into the soviet economy, and one day <span lang=\"en-US\">all <\/span>these ties began to break down. On the other hand, 99% of our means of production <span lang=\"en-US\">were owned by <\/span>the state. <span lang=\"en-US\">State monopoly<\/span>. <span lang=\"en-US\">P<\/span>lanned economy. Therefore, the destruction of the planned economy, state property<span lang=\"en-US\">,<\/span> and complete disintegration of all processes constituted a very severe blow.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><span lang=\"en-US\">Withdrawal from the ruble zone, panic, unemployment, and shutdown of many powerful industries, especially the defense sector, all happened simultaneously. It was really difficult, people had to study and work at the epicenter of the whirlpool of these devastating events.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><span lang=\"en-US\">And how did President Leonid Kravchuk interact with the Parliament and the Cabinet?<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">At that time, <span lang=\"en-US\">there were no factions in <\/span>the <span lang=\"en-US\">P<\/span>arliament. There were a communist majority and a democratic opposition, but it was a <span lang=\"en-US\">disorganized<\/span> and <span lang=\"en-US\">amorphous <\/span>&#8220;jelly&#8221;.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">As a result, the <span lang=\"en-US\">P<\/span>arliament <span lang=\"en-US\">was hardly able <\/span>to make <span lang=\"en-US\">any <\/span>decisions. <span lang=\"en-US\">Then, however,<\/span> a very <span lang=\"en-US\">peculiar<\/span> innovation<span lang=\"en-US\"> was introduced<\/span>, which President Kravchuk <span lang=\"en-US\">was not in favor of<\/span>, but the <span lang=\"en-US\">Chairperson <\/span>of the Verkhovna Rada Ivan Plyushch <span lang=\"en-US\">supported<\/span>. The innovation was to give the <span lang=\"en-US\">Cabinet<\/span> the right to pass decrees (legal acts equal to laws<span lang=\"en-US\"> \u2014<\/span> ed.). It meant that the <span lang=\"en-US\">G<\/span>overnment de facto became the legislature in matters of social and economic activities <span lang=\"en-US\">\u2014<\/span> virtually everything.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">This unique regime was <span lang=\"en-US\">Ukrainian know-how that<\/span> worked long enough <span lang=\"en-US\">to<\/span> stop some dangerous processes. <span lang=\"en-US\">U<\/span>nfortunately, many decisions<span lang=\"en-US\"> made by the Cabient<\/span> were pure lobbying or<span lang=\"en-US\"> just illconceived<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><span lang=\"en-US\">What can you say about the period of <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">&#8220;<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">decree management<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">&#8220;<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> now? Was that an adequate response to the challenges at the time?<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">The collapse of power when there was no structured Verkhovna Rada, no political responsibility, <span lang=\"en-US\">and <\/span>no programmatic vision, <span lang=\"en-US\">it was necessary <\/span>to overcome the crisis by passing <span lang=\"en-US\">governmental <\/span>decrees. It was <span lang=\"en-US\">a <\/span>way to somehow stabilize the situation. Even when a wrong decision was made, it could still be corrected. <span lang=\"en-US\">T<\/span>o do nothing at all would have been worse.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">As an adviser to the Prime Minister, I was forced to work with <span lang=\"en-US\">the P<\/span>arliament. <span lang=\"en-US\">Let me put it this way:<\/span> it was difficult to<span lang=\"en-US\"> get the vote<\/span>. Everyone had <span lang=\"en-US\">their<\/span> own vision, position, <span lang=\"en-US\">and <\/span>everyone believe<span lang=\"en-US\">d<\/span> that only he knows <span lang=\"en-US\">what to do<\/span>. And most of them were people who left the Soviet Union with a soviet upbringing and worldview. <span lang=\"en-US\">It seriously hindered<\/span> our progress and economic reforms.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><span lang=\"en-US\">So why did the Constitution of 1996 limit presidential powers? Did these restrictions work for real?<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><span lang=\"en-US\">I do not agree that they were limiting something. On the contrary, the Constitution of 1996 created a semi-presidential republic.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><span lang=\"en-US\">But at first, we had a purely presidential republic.<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><span lang=\"en-US\">In truth, in the beginning <\/span>the power <span lang=\"en-US\">belonged to those who thought <\/span>they have <span lang=\"en-US\">the <\/span>power.<span lang=\"en-US\"> For example<\/span>, most decisions depended on <span lang=\"en-US\">our Chaiperson <\/span>Plyushch<span lang=\"en-US\"> who just assumed power, and<\/span> not President Kravchuk<span lang=\"en-US\"> who felt more limited by law<\/span>. <span lang=\"en-US\">Plyushch pushed <\/span>Kuchma for <span lang=\"en-US\">the P<\/span>rime <span lang=\"en-US\">M<\/span>inister, and Kravchuk was not too happy with this decision because he had his own vision.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><span lang=\"en-US\">Before the Constitution was adopted, power was concentrated in the hands of the President because no one had the strength to really oppose him due to the lack of strong parties and factions, legal restrictions. As a result, the agenda was defined by the President: what questions had to be asked and what questions have to be suppressed. During the time of &#8220;decree management&#8221;, the center of decision-making shifted to the Cabinet of Ministers. After difficult discussions and conflicts, the Constitution of 1996 effectively put the President back at the center. It is incorrect to say that President Kuchma\u2019s power was limited by law.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><span lang=\"en-US\">In other words, he lost nothing?<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">Moreover, he gained legal control over the <span lang=\"en-US\">Cabinet<\/span>. <span lang=\"en-US\">T<\/span>he <span lang=\"en-US\">P<\/span>resident <span lang=\"en-US\">picked the<\/span> Prime Minister and ministers. He could <span lang=\"en-US\">appoint and dismiss <\/span>ministers without consulting the Prime Minister. Strictly speaking, the entire executive branch including local administrations was under the president.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><span lang=\"en-US\">Moreover, the power to appoint judges made the judiciary dependent not even on the President but on his administration. The President also got control over law enforcement. In particular, the unreformed prosecutor\u2019s office at its discretion could open criminal cases, decide which cases to investigate, independently report on them in court, etc. According to the Constitution, the Prosecutor General was also appointed by the President. It meant he gained control not only over the executive branch, but also over law enforcement. Eventually, this power was used against political opponents. Kuchma actively used it for his own purposes.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><span lang=\"en-US\">Kuchma is called the father of Ukrainian oligarchy. Do you agree with this statement? What other institutions did Kuchma create? Were they useful for the development of Ukraine?<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><span lang=\"en-US\">Back<\/span> <span lang=\"en-US\">when <\/span>Kuchma <span lang=\"en-US\">was the Prime Minister and later when he became president, <\/span>the so-called &#8220;Great Privatization&#8221; began and <span lang=\"en-US\">unwinded<\/span>. It <span lang=\"en-US\">gave no<\/span>thing to <span lang=\"en-US\">the majority of Ukrainians<\/span> but helped <span lang=\"en-US\">to <\/span>create <span lang=\"en-US\">a <\/span>powerful business stratum <span lang=\"en-US\">that<\/span> grew on state property and is now called oligarchs. The <span lang=\"en-US\">bond <\/span>between big business and <span lang=\"en-US\">politicians<\/span>, <span lang=\"en-US\">a fairly <\/span>systemic corruption, blocked the <span lang=\"en-US\">coming<\/span> of powerful foreign companies to the Ukrainian market: &#8220;Why <span lang=\"en-US\">should we <\/span>share <span lang=\"en-US\">anything <\/span>when we can take everything for<span lang=\"en-US\"> free ourselves<\/span>?&#8221; In fact, all the vast resources of state property were divided <span lang=\"en-US\">among<\/span> a narrow circle<span lang=\"en-US\"> of people<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">I must say that Kuchma created <span lang=\"en-US\">quite effective law enforcement block<\/span>. We parted ways with him, in part because of<span lang=\"en-US\"> his<\/span> political <span lang=\"en-US\">vision<\/span> of <span lang=\"en-US\">the<\/span> <span lang=\"en-US\">future of Ukraine<\/span>. I<span lang=\"en-US\"> was <\/span>categorically <span lang=\"en-US\">against the <\/span>usurpation of power and oppos<span lang=\"en-US\">ed<\/span> President Kuchma. <span lang=\"en-US\">The confrontation <\/span>in those days<span lang=\"en-US\"> was fierce<\/span>. <span lang=\"en-US\">I faced<\/span> <span lang=\"en-US\">seven <\/span>criminal cases &#8220;for attempts to seize power, for mass riots, for resistance to law enforcement agencies.&#8221; <span lang=\"en-US\">Three requests for my arrest were submitted <\/span>to the <span lang=\"en-US\">P<\/span>arliament. I remember <span lang=\"en-US\">quite well <\/span>what it was like to be a <span lang=\"en-US\">member of the <\/span>opposition in Kuchma<span lang=\"en-US\"> times<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><span lang=\"en-US\">How did Kuchma change the institution of the presidency during his second term?<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">He created <span lang=\"en-US\">a<\/span> power club<span lang=\"en-US\"> capable of <\/span>destroy<span lang=\"en-US\">ing<\/span> any opponent. Mass protest movements &#8220;Ukraine without Kuchma&#8221; and &#8220;<span lang=\"en-US\">Rise up<\/span>, Ukraine!&#8221; were the answer not only to the murder of a journalist but also to all the arbitrariness, lack of control <span lang=\"en-US\">over<\/span> the government<span lang=\"en-US\">,<\/span> and the fact that <span lang=\"en-US\">no alternative was left for <\/span>people. Leonid Danylovych <span lang=\"en-US\">was the first one to <\/span>use <span lang=\"en-US\">law enforcement agencies <\/span>against political opponents. <span lang=\"en-US\">It became possible to lose not <\/span>only <span lang=\"en-US\">your <\/span>freedom but also <span lang=\"en-US\">your <\/span>life.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><span lang=\"en-US\">After the Orange Revolution Viktor Yushchenko became president. He had Kuchma\u2019s powers for about a year. How would you describe that time? What happened then?<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">In my opinion, <span lang=\"en-US\">the situation got worse.<\/span> Our democratic camp<span lang=\"en-US\"> was <\/span>united during the Orange Revolution <span lang=\"en-US\">but right after the victory <\/span>we began to fight for power instead of building Ukraine. There were a lot of conflicts. The biggest conflict was between President Yushchenko and Prime Minister Tymoshenko. Yushchenko then used Kuchma\u2019s powers to dismiss Tymoshenko. <span lang=\"en-US\">The power of <\/span>the President <span lang=\"en-US\">to <\/span>dismiss the Prime Minister without parliament<span lang=\"en-US\">ary consent \u2014 a relic from times of Kuchma<\/span> <span lang=\"en-US\">\u2014 caused <\/span>a very deep crisis. <span lang=\"en-US\">As a result<\/span>, Yanukovych <span lang=\"en-US\">recovered from a <\/span>crushing defeat <span lang=\"en-US\">as<\/span> the head of pro-Russian forces in 2004.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><span lang=\"en-US\">After the election of 2006, Ukraine was already a semi-presidential republic. Amendments to the Constitution came into force. A new parliament was elected \u2014 more or less democratically. However, the Parliament still came to a stalemate. Why?<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><span lang=\"en-US\">That was precisely the result of<\/span> the conflict <span lang=\"en-US\">between<\/span> the democratic forces. <span lang=\"en-US\">The p<\/span>latforms and goals of Yulia Tymoshenko\u2019s Batkivshchyna and Viktor Yushchenko\u2019s Our Ukraine groups <span lang=\"en-US\">were not that different<\/span> but there was no trust between the<span lang=\"en-US\"> parties<\/span>. There was <span lang=\"en-US\">an <\/span>internal competition, internal confrontation <span lang=\"en-US\">that prevented <\/span>these political forces <span lang=\"en-US\">from forming a solid <\/span>coalition and <span lang=\"en-US\">working together on <\/span>build<span lang=\"en-US\">ing<\/span> the country. The formal reason was a discussion between three parties: BYuT, Our Ukraine, and the Socialists<span lang=\"en-US\">.<\/span> <span lang=\"en-US\">They squabbled about the candidates for <\/span>the Prime Minister and the <span lang=\"en-US\">Chairperson<\/span> of the Verkhovna Rada.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><span lang=\"en-US\">Their mistrust, their inability to compromise and put the interests of the state above their political interests has delayed the election of the Chairperson and the Prime Minister. In the end, the Party of Regions led by Yanukovych took the upper hand. To put it mildly, they lured the Socialists to their side by promising Moroz the position of the Chairperson. As a result, a &#8220;horned&#8221; communist-socialist-oligarchic alliance emerged that appointed a government led by Yanukovych and took control over the country. They even tried to change the Constitution. We overcame this crisis only by holding an early parliamentary election. For a while, the situation stabilized.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><span lang=\"en-US\">But Yanukovych still became president. How the system of government has changed when he immediately concentrated power and regained the powers of Kuchma times?<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><span lang=\"en-US\">Yanukovych has not won the presidential election. Democrats lost the presidential election. The struggle for power in the democratic camp left us no chances to unite in the face of new challenges: the global financial crisis of 2008, the gas war with Russia of early 2009, and the pandemic of a dangerous flu virus. As a result, no one took a stand against Yanukovych. Instead, Tymoshenko took a stand against Yushchenko \u2014 and vice versa. The party responsible for the defeat was the democratic camp: we have learned nothing from the situation of 2005 or the crisis of 2006.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><span lang=\"en-US\">How would you describe the presidency of Yanukovych?<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><span lang=\"en-US\">Corrupted authoritarianism. First, he de facto raped the Constitution by restoring presidential powers from the times of Kuchma. It was a real usurpation of power. Second, he regained complete control over law enforcement, the executive branch, and the judiciary. As a result, we got a power monopoly of Yanukovych that surpassed Kuchma in its cruelty, pressure, and attempts to destroy the opposition.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><span lang=\"en-US\">The beginning of 2014, from February to June, is one of the most difficult pages of Ukrainian history: Crimea was taken away, parts of the Donetsk and Luhansk regions were occupied, and Russia tried to convince the world that Ukraine is not a real country. Which state institutions deflected this information attack and managed to keep the country afloat?<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><span lang=\"en-US\">It was not just an information attack. It was a hybrid war \u2014 a war on the battlefield, on the economic, energy, information, cyber, and other planes. I guess this was the most dramatic situation in Ukraine since 1918. The state was headless, and the war was waged against us.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><span lang=\"en-US\">The occupation of Crimea began on February 20, 2014. This was the day when Kyiv was covered in blood. They took under control the critical infrastructure of Crimea while we only began to form a new government. As it happened, politicians from the former opposition that now were in power elected me, the chief of staff at Maidan, the Chairperson of the Verkhovna Rada. At that time, it was the only legitimate top position in the country.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><span lang=\"en-US\">So you became an acting president?<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><span lang=\"en-US\">It was not that simple. I commanded to prepare a resolution. Parliamentary lawyers came to me and said: &#8220;Olexandr Valentynovych, we can\u2019t sign this because you are committing a serious violation.&#8221;<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><span lang=\"en-US\">Violation of the Constitution?<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><span lang=\"en-US\">Certainly. According to the Constitution, a person can serve as an acting president only if the President has died, resigned, or has been removed via impeachment or due to poor health. The Constitution does not provision that an acting president can be appointed if the President fled the country. The legislator could not have foreseen such emergency. Therefore, we were supposed to launch an impeachment procedure which takes six months at best and which would have never been supported by the \u201cregionals\u201d and communists. At the same time, the fate of the country depended on some immediate decision.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><span lang=\"en-US\">So how have you managed to convince those MPs?<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><span lang=\"en-US\">I flipped through the Constitution and found the oath of the people\u2019s deputy that states that the deputy has to defend the independence and freedom of the country by any means available. So I said: \u201cYou see? And you say that this is a violation of the Constitution. We defend our freedom and independence. Therefore, take the resolution to the floor.&#8221; And that is how I became an acting president. Then a decision was made that the Chairperson of the Verkhovna Rada would act both as the Prime Minister and the Cabinet since there were neither at the moment. I worked like that for some time.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><span lang=\"en-US\">Many Ukrainian politicians can only dream about such powers.<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><span lang=\"en-US\">Powers are one thing: huge and unlimited. Quite another thing \u2014 the complete lack of resources, tools, and institutions. You are the Supreme Commander-in-Chief who has no army ready for combat. You have a completely destroyed security and defense sector, and a ruin of the defense industry. You lead the Cabinet, but you have about \u20b4100,000 in the national treasury and huge debts incurred by the financial pyramid of Azarov and Yanukovych. You do not have any ministers, you do not have ministries, and you do not have local administrations. And you have to somehow protect the country against powerful external and internal enemies.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><span lang=\"en-US\">Russians thought that we would not be able to cope with this, that we would not manage to stop the chaos. But we had no other choice and rapidly began to restore the power hierarchy.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><span lang=\"en-US\">Russian military aggression began and we needed help. I naively hoped that our strategic partners would immediately come to our aid as guarantors of our security in accordance with the Budapest Memorandum. However, when we turned to them hoping for protection and help, they replied: &#8220;Friends, this is a political declaration. We will cover you up only at a diplomatic level.&#8221; I asked: &#8220;Give us at least weapons, helmets, bulletproof vests \u2014 help at least with something.&#8221; They response was: &#8220;No, we cannot irritate Russia.&#8221; Basically, we were left alone against the military aggression of a tough nuclear country led by an inadequate leader seeking imperial revenge.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><span lang=\"en-US\">On March 1, the Russian parliament allowed Putin to send troops to Ukraine. I had no choice but to order the remnants of our troops in Crimea to stand their ground since they could hold a large part of enemy forces. Small units that the General Staff was able to assemble were thrown to the east and north to counter the invasion. I am grateful to the guys who remained faithful to their oath in Crimea. They gave us a month to mobilize, resuscitate the Armed Forces and restore the defense industry. During this time, we have been able to restore power, begin to suppress separatist uprisings in many regions and prepare for an invasion.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><span lang=\"en-US\">Russian plans to destroy Ukraine from within have failed. When they saw that we suppressed virtually all separatist uprisings except in several places in Donetsk and Luhansk regions, they started the war in Donbas.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><span lang=\"en-US\">Under such extreme conditions, in my opinion, we have worked out a model of governance close to an optimal one for Ukraine. After the Prime Minister was appointed, you were dealing exclusively with presidential issues \u2014 security and defense \u2014 while the Prime Minister was in charge of the Cabinet. Don\u2019t you think that this model has proven its effectiveness? Shouldn\u2019t it be restored? Because biggest problems in our history stem from the clash between these two branches.<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><span lang=\"en-US\">You know, it was convenient for me because I was not only an acting president but also the Chairperson of the Verkhovna Rada. Defense, security, and international negotiations was taking all my time. That is why I relied entirely on the Prime Minister and the Cabinet.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><span lang=\"en-US\">And how did you work with MPs?<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><span lang=\"en-US\">You know, I used force, sheer force.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><span lang=\"en-US\">As the Chairperson of the Verkhovna Rada, I had to ignore the rules of procedure. Namely, we sometimes submitted a draft bill for consideration in the morning and passed it in the first and second readings at noon. There were no other options. For example, the law &#8220;On the National Guard&#8221;. I signed it as the author in the morning. At noon, the Parliament approved it in the first and second readings. I immediately signed it as the Chairperson of the Verkhovna Rada and the President. The law was published in the afternoon. This was probably our record.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><span lang=\"en-US\">No time for intrigues in such a situation?<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><span lang=\"en-US\">That was not even an option. Everyone worked under extreme pressure. That is how we managed to ruin Russian plans. Then we began to restore our territorial integrity, began to liberate Donbas. At the same time, a fair and transparent presidential election was held. By the way, it was a unique wartime election. It was important for us that the whole world recognized its results.\u0435\u043d\u0442\u0440<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><span lang=\"en-US\">Do you think that the President, the Parliament, and the Cabinet can interact in such synchrony under normal conditions?<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><span lang=\"en-US\">Having experience with many state institutions, I still believe that our path is to continue the constitutional reform in the direction of a parliamentary republic. A balance between the Parliament and the Cabinet is the key, the President should not interfere but instead deal with issues clearly defined by the Constitution: defense and international affairs.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><span lang=\"en-US\">Like European presidents?<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">Yes. European model<span lang=\"en-US\"> is our way to go<\/span>. <span lang=\"en-US\">Whoever will become president<\/span>, there is <span lang=\"en-US\">always<\/span> a temptation to <span lang=\"en-US\">take over<\/span> the executive branch.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">And this is the main problem. The executive branch is <span lang=\"en-US\">always <\/span>overtaken by the President, broken down<span lang=\"en-US\">,<\/span> and <span lang=\"en-US\">dependent on the President<\/span> who formally <span lang=\"en-US\">is not <\/span>responsible for its work. <span lang=\"en-US\">That leads to conflicts and abuse of power<\/span>. <span lang=\"en-US\">In my opinion, a c<\/span>lassical parliamentary republic is historically and mentally <span lang=\"en-US\">the most<\/span> fitting for our country<span lang=\"en-US\">.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><span lang=\"en-US\">And how would you describe the time of President Poroshenko? The demand of Euromaidan was to change the system, not faces. Has it managed to do that?<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><span lang=\"en-US\">I won\u2019t say that they managed to achieve everything they wanted, but they achieved a lot. Our institutions today are still working despite all attempts to either turn them over or deform them.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><span lang=\"en-US\">You mean, like, anti-corruption bodies?<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><span lang=\"en-US\">International, defense, and, of course, anti-corruption bodies like NABU, NAPC, the Anti-Corruption Court, and SAP \u2014 all of them were created in our time. At the time everyone wondered: &#8220;What are you doing? Asset declarations like you have in Ukraine cannot be found in any European country.&#8221;<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><span lang=\"en-US\">That is true, they are quite different in Europe.<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><span lang=\"en-US\">Corruption is a huge problem for us. This was one of the most dangerous issues for the state. That is why it was better to go to an extreme than to go on corruption too easy.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><span lang=\"en-US\">Why, in your opinion, Poroshenko has failed to win the second term?<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><span lang=\"en-US\">There were mistakes, of course, but the main reason was that he lost the information war. Theses from Russian propaganda that &#8220;the war continues only because it the establishment makes money from this war&#8221; or &#8220;as soon as there will be a new government \u2014 the war will stop immediately&#8221; was made public, and many believed them. These were the core of Zelensky\u2019s campaign: &#8220;I will come and immediately end the war from which the &#8220;old&#8221; government is gaining profit.&#8221; And this hope for a quick end to the war, for a simple solution to difficult problems, the hope for some magician who will come and solve everything, again, as many times before, led us to a dead end from which it is difficult to get out.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><span lang=\"en-US\">If we look at the era of Zelensky, how can we describe the current system of governance? What are its pros and cons?<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><span lang=\"en-US\">It\u2019s a mixture of dilettantism and legal nihilism. On the one hand, President Zelensky has unlimited power because he is the first president whose political force has a majority in the Parliament and can make any decisions. He has complete control over the Cabinet and all law enforcement agencies. He is trying to take over anti-corruption bodies that are supposed to be independent. He wants to take over courts with his judicial reform. This tendency to monopolize power and authoritarianism is very dangerous to the country.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><span lang=\"en-US\">On the other hand, there is a lack of vision, of a strategy for the development of Ukraine, European and Euro-Atlantic integration, how the government should work, and how to fight off the aggression. In other words, there are people who do not know how the system works, people who ignore things that are supposed to balance the system. All actions have to be based on laws and the Constitution. Otherwise, the desire to adjust the Constitution and laws to their own actions will lead to a colossal crisis \u2014 as it was with Kuchma, as it was with Yanukovych.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><strong><span lang=\"en-US\">So where is the ship Ukraine sailing to? What is the trajectory of our flight? What will we be like?<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><span lang=\"en-US\">I do not really like where we are sailing now but I want to say where we should sail. To a European Ukraine, Ukraine that is a member of NATO \u2014 a democratic, civilized, strong, and prosperous state. Those are our primary guidelines. With regard to constitutional changes, we must base them on European traditions and classical models. That is why the transition to a parliamentary model will solve many problems and contradictions.<\/span><\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\"><a href=\"https:\/\/youtu.be\/m7URUYmhUzI\">Full video interview &#8211; here<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>A classical parliamentary republic is historically and mentally the most fitting for our country. \u2014 Oleksandr Turchynov 30 years is a long enough period to look back and analyze what we have achieved and what to do next. 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