Central Election Commission (Ukraine) Explained

Agency Name:Central Election Commission
(Центральна виборча комісія)
Seal:Emblem_of_the_Central_Election_Commission_of_Ukraine.png
Formed:November 1997
Headquarters:1, Lesia Ukrainka Square,
Kyiv, Ukraine, 01196 [1]
Chief1 Name:Oleh Didenko (since 4 October 2019[2])
Chief1 Position:Chairperson of the Commission
Website:Official website

The Central Election Commission of Ukraine (Ukrainian: Центральна виборча комісія України|translit=Tsentralna vyborcha komisiia Ukrainy, commonly abbreviated in Ukrainian as (Tse-Ve-Ka); sometimes referred to as the Central Electoral Commission of Ukraine) is a permanent and independent collegiate body of the Ukrainian state that acts on the basis of the Constitution of Ukraine, the laws of Ukraine and is responsible for organizing the arrangements and the conduct of the presidential and parliamentary elections in Ukraine as well as the local elections at all levels, managing the all-Ukrainian and local referendums according to the procedure and within the legal framework defined by the laws of Ukraine.

Legislative status

The Commission manages the system of election commissions and referendum commissions established to arrange and conduct the presidential and parliamentary elections in Ukraine as well as the all-Ukrainian referendums. The Commission supervises activities and provides the advisory and methodological support to the commissions established to arrange and conduct the local elections at all levels as well as the local referendums.

The Commission discharges its mandate independently, separately from other government authorities, municipalities, officials and public officers.

General Information, Composition and Appointment

In November 1997 a new state institution, the Central Election Commission, was established according to the Constitution requirements. The Law of Ukraine "On the Central Election Commission" stipulates that the Central Election Commission shall be a permanent state body, which, in compliance with the Constitution of Ukraine, ensures the arrangements and the conduct of the presidential and parliamentary elections in Ukraine as well as the all-Ukrainian referendums.

The Central Election Commission also provides advisory-methodological support of elections and local referendums to local councils, village, town, city mayors. It supervises the system of election commissions established to arrange and conduct the presidential and parliamentary elections in Ukraine as well as the all-Ukrainian referendums, coordinates their activities.

The Central Election Commission is an independent state body. In order to perform its functions the Commission is entitled to enable the involvement of public authorities at all levels into the implementation of this extremely important state activity. The Commission performs its duties on the principles of legality, independence, objectivity, competence, professionalism, collegial decision-making, reliability, openness and transparency.

The activities of the Commission are carried out openly and publicly.

The Commission has its own publication - "The Bulletin of the Central Election Commission".

The Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine appoints and terminates the authority of the CEC members upon the proposal of the President of Ukraine. The presidential submission on the CEC members shall take into account the nominee proposals of current parliamentary factions and groups.

Composition

The Commission consists of 17 CEC members (prior to September 2018 15 members).[3] The Commission functions on a regular basis. Member of the Commission is a public officer. Each member is appointed for a 7-year term by the Verkhovna Rada (parliament) of Ukraine. A Commission member may be a citizen of Ukraine, who shall not be under twenty five years old on the appointment date, has the right to vote, has been lived in Ukraine for at least the last five years and commands the official language. The Chairperson of the Commission, the Deputy Chair of the Commission, the Secretary of the Commission, as well as at least five other members of the Commission shall have higher education in the field of law.

Secretariat of the Commission

Appointment

History

The first election commission in Ukraine was created in 1917 as an Electoral Bureau of the General Secretary of Internal Affairs and was headed by Mykhailo Kovenko. It prepared elections to the Ukrainian Constituent Assembly, which were interrupted by the Ukrainian-Soviet War. In 1989 the modern election commission was created under the Cabinet of Ukraine, which in 1997 became an independent body of the Ukrainian government.

Districts

There are different electoral divisions depending on the level of elections. Before the electoral of 1997 and the installation of the Central Election Commission the country consisted of 450 electoral districts (number of parliamentarians in Verkhovna Rada). With the introduction of party voting principle the number of districts changed to 225. Each electoral district includes around 120-180 smaller electoral precincts (dilnytsi).

Beside the national level elections the country conducts local elections as well. Each region (oblast or Autonomous Republic Crimea), district (raion), urban or rural settlement (see Administrative divisions of Ukraine) has its own council (rada) amounting altogether to some 12,088 councils of various size across the nation.[4]

Western Ukraine

Election
year
Zakarpattia Chernivtsi Ivano-Frankivsk Lviv Ternopil Volyn Rivne
districts number districts number districts number districts number districts number districts number districts number
total change total change total change total change total change total change total change
1990 167-177 11 0 430-437 8 0 196-207 12 0 258-281 24 0 355-364 10 0 40-48 9 0 332-341 10 0
1994 167-176 10 1 431-438 8 0 195-206 12 0 260-282 23 1 356-365 10 0 64-72 9 0 333-342 10 0
1998 70-74 5 5 202-205 4 4 84-89 6 6 115-126 12 11 163-167 5 5 19-23 5 4 152-156 5 5
1999 70-74 5 0 202-205 4 0 84-89 6 0 115-126 12 0 163-167 5 0 19-23 5 0 152-156 5 0
2002 70-75 6 1 202-205 4 0 85-90 6 0 116-127 12 0 164-168 5 0 19-23 5 0 153-157 5 0
2004 70-75 6 0 204-207 4 0 85-90 6 0 117-128 12 0 166-170 5 0 19-23 5 0 155-159 5 0
2006 66-70 5 1 207-210 4 0 79-85 7 1 112-125 14 2 165-172 8 3 20-26 7 2 151-157 7 2
2007 66-70 5 0 207-210 4 0 79-85 7 0 112-125 14 0 165-172 8 0 20-26 5 0 151-157 7 0
2010 69-74 6 1 204-207 4 0 84-90 7 0 117-128 12 2 165-169 5 3 19-23 5 2 154-158 5 2
2012 68-73 5 0 201-204 4 0 83-89 7 0 115-126 12 0 163-167 5 0 19-23 5 0 152-156 5 0
Presidential elections

Northern Ukraine

Election
year
Zhytomyr Kyiv Kyiv city Chernihiv Sumy
districts number districts number districts number districts number districts number
total change total change total change total change total change
1990 153-166 14 0 208-224 17 0 1-22 22 0 438-450 13 0 342-354 13 0
1994 154-166 13 1 207-223 17 0 1-23 23 1 439-450 12 1 343-355 13 0
1998 64-69 6 7 90-97 8 9 212-223 12 11 206-211 6 6 157-162 6 7
1999 64-69 6 0 90-97 8 0 212-223 12 0 206-211 6 0 157-162 6 0
2002 64-69 6 0 91-98 8 0 212-223 12 0 206-211 6 0 158-163 6 0
2004 64-69 6 0 91-99 9 1 214-223 10 2 208-213 6 0 160-165 6 0
2006 56-65 10 4 86-94 9 0 218-224 7 3 211-217 7 1 158-164 7 1
2007 56-65 10 0 86-94 9 0 218-224 7 0 211-217 7 0 158-164 7 0
2010 63-68 6 4 91-99 9 0 214-223 10 3 208-213 6 1 159-164 6 1
2012 62-67 6 0 90-98 9 0 211-223 13 3 205-210 6 0 157-162 6 0
Presidential elections

Members

The current Central Election Commission approved by parliament on 4 October 2019 includes 17 members:[5]

Former members

On 5 October 2018 14 new members began to exercise their powers (the Ukrainian parliament had appointed on 20 September 2018[7]):

In April 2014 parliament had already appointed:

As of 20 September 2018 one seat was vacant.[9]

All members (appointed on 20 September 2018 and since) were dismissed by parliament on 13 September 2019.[10]

The Ukrainian parliament dismissed the following 13 members of the Central Election Commission on 20 September 2018:[11]

Former members of the Commission were appointed by the parliament on 8 December 2004. This appointment was an integral part of the legislative package to resolve the presidential election crisis in Ukraine. These members supervised the repeat of the second round of the presidential elections on 26 December 2004.

Members of the Commission as of 1 January 2005 were:

Previous Members

Chairmen

See also

Presidential elections

Parliamentary elections

References

External links

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Official website. Address (bottom of the page) ("Kyiv" spelling). Mar 2017.
  2. Web site: ЦВК очолив Діденко, який був у попередньому складі комісії.
  3. https://en.interfax.com.ua/news/general/532047.html Rada backs increase in composition of CEC to 17 people
  4. http://www.cvk.gov.ua/pls/vm2010/wp001 2010 local elections
  5. Web site: Rada forms new composition of CEC.
  6. Web site: ЦВК очолив Діденко, який був у попередньому складі комісії.
  7. https://en.interfax.com.ua/news/general/532750.html Rada updates CEC composition, appointing 14 new members
  8. https://www.ukrinform.net/rubric-polytics/2552791-slipachuk-elected-head-of-central-election-commission-at-closed-meeting.html Slipachuk elected head of Central Election Commission at closed meeting
  9. The council approved a new composition of the CEC, Ukrayinska Pravda (20 September 2018)
  10. "We are all", "This is a new reality": the CEC reacted to the decision of the Council, Ukrayinska Pravda (13 September 2019)
  11. https://www.unian.info/politics/10268775-verkhovna-rada-dismisses-13-cec-members.html Verkhovna Rada dismisses 13 CEC members
  12. http://www.interfax.co.uk/ukraine-news/mykhailo-okhendovsky-appointed-head-of-central-election-commission/ Mykhailo Okhendovsky appointed head of Central Election Commission
  13. http://www.kyivpost.com/news/nation/detail/54839/ Nation’s law enforcers have dismal track record
  14. Web site: ЦВК очолив Діденко, який був у попередньому складі комісії.