For Peace and Stability (parliamentary group)

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search
For Peace and Stability
Leader Vitaly Hrushevskiy
Yevhen Balytskiy
Oleksandr Prysyazhnyuk
Founded July 2, 2014 (2014-07-02)
Dissolved November 27, 2014 (2014-11-27)
Ideology Patriotism
Democratic socialism
Federalism
Verkhovna Rada
36 / 450
[1]
Politics of Ukraine
Political parties
Elections

For Peace and Stability (Ukrainian: За мир і стабільність) was a Ukrainian parliamentary faction in its national parliament Verkhovna Rada from 2 July 2014 till 27 November 2014.[2][3] The group included 34 MPs.[3]

History

For Peace and Stability was created by MPs Vitaly Grushevskii, Evgeniy Balitskii and Oleksandr Prysiazhniuk.[3][4] Prysiazhniuk had just left the faction of the Communist Party of Ukraine the day before.[5][6] Balitskii and Grushevskii were former MPs of Party of Regions.[7][8] Balitskii and Grushevskii had left the faction of Party of regions on 3 June 2014.[9] Almost all of the other members were also former MPs of Party of Regions and a few former MPs for the Communist Party.[10] Lev Mirimsky of the party Union was also a member of the faction.[10] Mirimsky is one of the five MPs from the 10 MPs elected in the Autonomous Republic of Crimea during the 2012 Ukrainian parliamentary election that became a member of the faction.[10][nb 1]

The parliamentary group was not revived after the 2014 parliamentary elections in Ukraine and thus ceased to exist at 27 November 2014, the first day of the parliament elected in 2014.[2]

Members

Verkhovna Rada
Year
Party-list
Constituency /total
Overall seats won
Seat change
Government Ref
Popular vote
%
Seats /total
2014
36 / 450
[1](Ukrainian)

Party affiliation

Notes

  1. The status of Crimea and of the city of Sevastopol is since March 2014 under dispute between Russia and Ukraine; Ukraine and the majority of the international community consider Crimea to be an autonomous republic of Ukraine and Sevastopol to be one of Ukraine's cities with special status, while Russia, on the other hand, considers Crimea to be a federal subject of Russia and Sevastopol to be one of Russia's three federal cities.[11][12][13]

References

External links

<templatestyles src="Asbox/styles.css"></templatestyles>