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Ukraine's Tymoshenko To Rivals: Oust Me If You Can

YURAS KARMANAU and SIMON SHUSTER   02/24/10 09:52 AM ET   AP

Ukraine Presidential Election

KIEV, Ukraine — Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko challenged her opponents Thursday to oust her in a no-confidence vote, aiming to show they don't have enough votes to do so.

Tymoshenko's defiant call came one day before her rival, Viktor Yanukovych, is due to be inaugurated as president after defeating her by a narrow margin in a Feb. 7 election runoff.

The lack of a coalition strong enough to quell Tymoshenko's resistance to a Yanukovych presidency threatens to extend the kind of political wrangling that has paralyzed Ukraine's political system for several years.

"The country needs clarity on who is answering for the life of the nation, for the assurance of all forms of development, and we as a team are simply obligated to give the nation that clarity," Tymoshenko told a government meeting.

Yanukovych's Party of Regions has proposed a motion in parliament to strip Tymoshenko of her post.

It was forced to retract it Wednesday, despite weeks of negotiations with her allies to form a new coalition against her, but then reintroduced the motion later in the day in an apparent response to Tymoshenko's challenge.

"The Party of Regions does not have the votes to carry out this dismissal," Tymoshenko said, addressing her ministers in a stark red dress instead of the soft tones she is known for wearing.

The deputy head of Yanukovych's party, Anna German, said Yanukovych would never be able to work in tandem with Tymoshenko and would seek to replace her by this spring.

"The coexistence of Yanukovych as president and Tymoshenko as prime minister is impossible," German told The Associated Press on Wednesday. "By this spring, Ukraine will have a new premier who will think not about his own ambitions and of clinging to power, but about the country."

In order for his party to form a majority coalition, Yanukovych will need to strike a deal with his former adversary, the outgoing President Viktor Yushchenko.

Yushchenko and Tymoshenko led mass street protests in 2004 against Yanukovych's rigged election victory that year. Dubbed the Orange Revolution, those demonstrations urged the Supreme Court to overturn Yanukovych's win and call for a revote, which Yushchenko won by a narrow margin in early 2005.

Tymoshenko then became prime minister under Yushchenko, but their partnership broke down amid political maneuvering and recriminations that have caused gridlock in the government for much of Yushchenko's time in office.

He did not make it past the first round of voting in January, and called on his supporters to vote "Against All" – an option in Ukrainian ballots – rather than support either Tymoshenko or Yanukovych in the second round.

Tymoshenko will likewise need to hold onto the support of Yushchenko's party in parliament if the "Orange Coalition" is to survive.

Before the election, that coalition held the majority and was made up of the Tymoshenko's and Yushchenko's parties, as well as the fraction of the chamber's speaker, Volodymyr Lytvyn.

But allegiances appear to have shifted since then as politicians jockey for position in response to Yanukovych's win, and it is unclear whether the Orange Coalition still has a majority in the 450-seat parliament.

Revealing the chamber's current state of confusion, Speaker Lytvyn urged the coalition to prove its existence Wednesday by demonstrating the support of 226 members of parliament.

"Give me 226 signatures confirming any kind of coalition exists, and I will announce that a new, or an old, or a modernized coalition exists," Lytvyn said, according to Interfax news agency.

The collapse of that coalition would be a further reputation of the pro-Western Orange Revolution, which has failed to deliver on promises of economic progress or European integration.

Analysts said its collapse is inevitable.

"For Yanukovych and Tymoshenko to coexist is like a cat and a dog put in the same house," said Mikhail Pogrebinsky, director of the Center of Political Research and Conflictology in Kiev.

"Yanukovych is the winner, and he is the one who will dictate the rules of the game," he said.

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KIEV, Ukraine — Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko challenged her opponents Thursday to oust her in a no-confidence vote, aiming to show they don't have enough votes to do so. Tymoshenko...
KIEV, Ukraine — Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko challenged her opponents Thursday to oust her in a no-confidence vote, aiming to show they don't have enough votes to do so. Tymoshenko...
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01:20 PM on 03/02/2010
Too many stupid comments on her hair or princess leia like its clever. Or she's hot or she's not.
Why bother?
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09:05 AM on 02/25/2010
You have our sympathies Ukrania.
Our Congress wrote the book on political gridlock.
We've been living it for decades.
Welcome to democracy.
I bet you folks thought you were gonna get something done, huh?
You'll get over it.
03:38 AM on 02/25/2010
Hey! Princess Leia called, and she wants her hair and clothes back.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cliffhammond
Onward through the fog!
06:10 AM on 02/25/2010
But Luke, she's your sister.
02:57 AM on 02/25/2010
hello

my name is goyimko

why the ukraine and leichtenstein order the hit of a palestinian in dubai last week?
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henrypapillon
Mitt--free up the last 9 years' taxes
11:53 PM on 02/24/2010
You oust me first.
12:10 AM on 02/25/2010
Like crushing an ant. Or easier.
09:35 PM on 02/24/2010
Doo as I say, not as I doo.
11:09 PM on 02/24/2010
She laid plenty of THAT unto the Ukrainian people.
08:45 PM on 02/24/2010
The president should only be a figure head, the head of the parliament (in the US vernacular the congress) should always be the one that takes the lead, simply because they can more readily be removed when they bugger up and, it keeps them on their toes. They can as the challenge demonstrates be kicked out in a day when the have proven to be liabilities to their own party and to their country. President's are far trickier to remove, once elected their is very little democracy in their decision making and it takes an enormous effort to remove them and then replace them (legally and adhering to the law is the only sound option for their removal) which are substantive reason to ensure the presidents powers are very limited. Always remember it is the people who are the commander in chief not the president.
06:14 PM on 02/24/2010
Meanwhile, Tymoshenko reportedly sent an at-large emissary with the message, "Help me, Obi Wan Kenobe, you're my only hope."
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NYJedi
08:58 PM on 02/24/2010
awesome.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tyrione
06:12 PM on 02/24/2010
Even their Women of State are classically attractive. Regarding the context in which she cites I haven't a clue to make an educated guess to the challenge she just proclaimed.

However, taking her at her words, `` `The country needs clarity on who is answering for the life of the nation, for the assurance of all forms of development, and we as a team are simply obligated to give the nation that clarity,' Tymoshenko told a government meeting,'' all I can say is the man was checkmated in terms of diplomacy.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
jl4141
Unless I'm wrong, I'm never wrong.
05:29 PM on 02/24/2010
I wouldn't kick her out of the izba for eating blini.
07:02 PM on 02/24/2010
Ukrainian nationalists don't eat "blini," they prefer salo (lard) and pyrohy, preferably with sour cream.
09:33 PM on 02/24/2010
Too good! You're making me hungry!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
henrypapillon
Mitt--free up the last 9 years' taxes
11:55 PM on 02/24/2010
The Germans know it as Scmaltz, lard with onion or garlic flavoring spread over bread or crackers, goes great with about 2 liters of 65 German bier.Jah!
05:19 PM on 02/24/2010
She looks like the White Witch of Narnia
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alex98
Dulce bellum inexpertis
05:15 PM on 02/24/2010
Every time I see her cult leader comes to mind ...
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05:11 PM on 02/24/2010
crazy hair do
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FHTB
01:30 AM on 02/25/2010
She looks like someone you wouldn't want to eff with...
05:10 PM on 02/24/2010
Most of the comments here are clueless, many are sexist.

The Constitution of Ukraine says the following
Chapter V, Article 106
The President...
9) appoints the Prime Minister of Ukraine with the consent of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine; terminates the authority of the Prime Minister of Ukraine and adopts a decision on his or her resignation.

In short, as soon as Yanukovych is sworn in, he can legally kick out Tymoshenko.

http://www.rada.gov.ua/const/conengl.htm#r5
09:27 PM on 02/24/2010
s Yanukovych is sworn in, he WILL kick out Tymoshenko on her butt, fake braid or no braid.
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henrypapillon
Mitt--free up the last 9 years' taxes
11:57 PM on 02/24/2010
No fake braid. Strong woman no wear fake braid.
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NYJedi
04:58 PM on 02/24/2010
Princess Leah's cousin is the PM of the Ukraine?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mero909
None of our comments will matter anyway
05:06 PM on 02/24/2010
Cool hair style, I must say.
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NYJedi
08:58 PM on 02/24/2010
It is, but would be even cooler if it detached and doubled as a steering wheel.