EUROPE-ASIA STUDIES
Vol. 63, No. 2, March 2011, 203–228
The Creeping Resurgence of the Ukrainian
Radical Right? The Case of the Freedom Party
ANTON SHEKHOVTSOV
Abstract
In the context of the rise of radical right-wing parties in most European countries, the enduring
absence of a far-right group in the Ukrainian parliament seems paradoxical. However, recent
developments, namely the victory of the far-right ‘Freedom’ Party (All-Ukrainian Union ‘Freedom’,
Vseukrayins’ke ob’’ednannya ‘Svoboda’) in the 2009 Ternopil regional elections seems to attest to the
gradual revival of the radical right in Ukraine. The article considers the far-right legacy in Ukraine and
the reasons why it failed in the post-Soviet period, and then focuses on the history of the Freedom
Party and discusses its prospects at the national level.
THE 2001 WORLD CONFERENCE AGAINST RACISM, Racial Discrimination, Xenopho-
bia and Related Intolerance organised by the United Nations in Durban, South Africa,
resulted in a Declaration that, inter alia, expressed a concern that ‘contemporary forms
and manifestations of racism and xenophobia [were] striving to regain political, moral
and even legal recognition in many ways, including through the platforms of some
political parties and organisations’ (Office of the High Commissioner for Human
Rights 2001). This Declaration highlighted a disturbing trend in European politics that
took shape as early as the mid-1980s, the resurgence of new radical right-wing parties.
Following the evolutionary—or, perhaps, mutational—logic of adaptation to the
continuing process of the democratisation of European societies, this new political
phenomenon has superseded the old far right parties which had persisted desperately in
the ‘hostile’ liberal-democratic environment of the post-war era, and which were, to a
great extent, the direct heirs of the interwar fascist organisations.
Initially, the far-right parties had electoral success in the advanced industrial
European countries, where such parties as the Front National (National Front,
France), Lega Nord (Northern League, Italy), Freiheitliche Partei O¨sterreichs
(Freedom Party of Austria, Austria), Fremskrittspartiet (Progress Party, Norway),
Dansk Folkeparti (Danish People’s Party, Denmark) and some others challenged the
democratic order by their promotion of ethnocratic liberalism.1 Following the series of
1
Roger Griffin (2000, p. 173) defines ethnocratic liberalism as ‘a type of party politics [that]
enthusiastically embraces the liberal system, but considers only one ethnic group full members of civil
ISSN 0966-8136 print; ISSN 1465-3427 online/11/020203-26 ª 2011 University of Glasgow
DOI: 10.1080/09668136.2011.547696
204 ANTON SHEKHOVTSOV
revolutions in the Warsaw Pact member states at the end of the 1980s and the collapse
of the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia, many of the former socialist nations also became
part of the group of European countries characterised by the presence of influential
radical right-wing parties.2
However, in neither Western nor in Eastern Europe has the electoral success of the
far-right parties been homogeneous, and indeed in Eastern Europe, while some
countries have witnessed a growth, others have seemed immune—in terms of electoral
success—to the radical right. In Russia, the misleadingly named radical right-wing
Liberal’no-demokraticheskaya partiya Rossii (Liberal Democratic Party of Russia,
LDPR) led by Vladimir Zhirinovsky was extremely successful in the 1990s, and
although it apparently dropped its nominal opposition to the governing elites after the
rise of semi-authoritarian President Vladimir Putin in 2000, the LDPR still enjoys
about between 8% and 11% of the popular vote. Another far-right organisation, the
Kongress russkikh obshchin (Congress of the Russian Communities), entered the Duma
in 2003 as a part of the Motherland coalition, which managed to gain 9.02% of the
votes. In Poland, the Ruch Odbudowy Polski (Movement for the Reconstruction of
Poland) obtained 5.56% of the votes in the 1997 parliamentary elections, and in 2006,
the far right Liga Polskich Rodzin (League of Polish Families), which polled 7.97% in
the 2005 elections, joined the government of Jarosław Kaczyn´ski as a minor coalition
partner. While the electoral fortunes of the Polish radical right have been volatile, in
Slovakia the Slovenska´ na´rodna´ strana (Slovak National Party) failed to bring its
representatives to the parliament of Slovakia only once during the period 1990–2006.
In the 2006 parliamentary elections, the party won 11.6% of the votes and became a
minor coalition partner of Prime Minister Robert Fico. In Romania the Partidul
Romaˆnia Mare (Greater Romania Party) has never had deputies in the Romanian
government, but the party’s participation in the 2000 and 2004 parliamentary elections
was successful to a considerable degree, as it won 19.48 and 12.99% of the votes
respectively.
In this context, the enduring absence of a radical right-wing group in the
Ukrainian parliament since the reinstatement of independence in 1991 has seemed
paradoxical (Umland 2008a, 2008b).3 Ukraine remains one of the most significant
examples of the electoral failure of the far right at the national level, and this state
society’. On the radical right in Western European countries see Betz (1994); Kitschelt with McGann
(1995); Carter (2005); Givens (2005); Norris (2005).
2
There is disappointingly little research on the far-right parties in post-socialist states. The notable
exception is Mudde (2007), who analyses radical right-wing parties throughout Europe. See also
Mudde (2000) and Minkenberg (2002).
3
Outside the scope of our article is the case of the pro-Russian and ethnic Russian radical parties,
which function in Ukraine. The most prominent pro-Russian party in Ukraine is the Prohresyvna
sotsialistychna partiya Ukrayiny (Progressive Socialist Party of Ukraine, PSPU), which is characterised
by Soviet and pan-Slavic nationalism, radical anti-Western and, particularly, anti-United States
stances, and also promotes the idea of a political union of Russia, Ukraine and Belarus. Due to its
socialist economic positions, the party is considered left-wing, but politically it is clearly of the radical
right-wing. The PSPU’s best electoral result is 4.04% of the popular vote in the 1998 parliamentary
elections. It succeeded in having 14 deputies elected to the Verkhovna Rada under the proportional
electoral system and won three seats in single member constituencies. The PSPU established a
parliamentary group, but this was dissolved in 2001, as several party members left the group.
THE RESURGENCE OF THE UKRAINIAN RADICAL RIGHT 205
of affairs distinguishes the country from the majority of her immediate geographical
and cultural neighbours.4 Although the democratisation process in Ukraine was slow
under Presidents Leonid Kravchuk and Leonid Kuchma, the country did not
become an authoritarian state.5 The Ukrainian transition to democracy was coupled
with and depended on the simultaneous processes of nation building, state creation
and marketisation.6 In the first years of Ukraine’s independence, as Roman
Solchanyk and Paul Kubicek have observed, there were fears that the country would
be seized by violent conflict as a result of the policies of ‘Ukrainisation’ of the
predominantly Russian-speaking regions in the south-eastern part of Ukraine, but
this scenario did not materialise (Solchanyk 1999, p. 282; Kubicek 1999, pp. 29–30).
As regards political parties, even in the period preceding the ‘Orange Revolution’ of
2004, they enjoyed complete freedom of organisation and mobilisation, while the
electorate became structured in socio-demographic terms so that ‘clear political
cleavages have emerged and coalesced along the dimensions of ethno-regional
orientation and, more recently, individual socio-economic resources’ (Birch 2000,
p. 140).
In Ukraine there has been no overtly nationalist group in the parliament (Verkhovna
Rada) since independence, and no Ukrainian radical right-wing political party as such
has ever been elected to the Verkhovna Rada, As Table 1 reveals, the Ukrainian radical
right-wing parties and blocs failed to win parliamentary seats, and the number of
TABLE 1
COMBINED VOTE FOR THE UKRAINIAN RADICAL RIGHT-WING PARTIES AND BLOCS FOR THE PERIOD
1998–2007
Date Electoral law Electoral threshold (%) Number of parties/blocs Right wing vote (%)
1998 Semi-proportional 4 3 3.26
2002 Semi-proportional 4 1 0.04
2006 Proportional 3 2 0.42
2007 Proportional 3 1 0.76
Source: Central Election Commission of Ukraine, available at: http://www.cvk.gov.ua, accessed 29 May
2009.
4
The reasons for the absence of strong far-right parties in Belarus, a close—both historically and
ethno-culturally—neighbour of Ukraine seem explicable. Under the rule of Aleksandr Lukashenka,
who has been the president of the state since 1994, there is little, if any, political space for opposition in
general and political radicalism in particular. Lukashenka pursues an ‘egalitarian nationalist’ agenda,
and political rights and civil liberties remain limited (Leshchenko 2008). The main aim of the
Belarusian extra-parliamentary opposition is to move the country in a democratic direction, rather
than direction towards the radical right.
5
The problem of Ukraine’s slide to authoritarianism under Kuchma is analysed in Birch (1997);
D’Anieri (2001) and Kuzio (2005).
6
See the discussion of Ukraine’s four transitions of nation building, state building, democratisation
and marketisation in Kuzio (1998).
206 ANTON SHEKHOVTSOV
parties that contested the polls decreased over time.7 While the table shows an increase
in electoral support for the radical right after 2002, this was too slight to indicate a
resurgence, even though right-wing candidates did win a few parliamentary seats in
single member constituencies in the course of the 1990s or as members of Viktor
Yushchenko’s national democratic electoral alliance Nasha Ukrayina (Our Ukraine,
NU) and Yuliya Tymoshenko’s Blok Yuliyi Tymoshenko (Bloc of Yuliya Tymoshen-
ko, BYuT) under the semi-proportional and proportional electoral systems in 2002
and 2006.
However, some recent developments associated with the Freedom Party may be
considered a basis for the resurgence of the Ukrainian radical right. The evidence that
attests to their revival relates to the victory in the local elections in the Ternopil region
of Vseukrayins’ke ob’’ednannya ‘Svoboda’ (All-Ukrainian Union ‘Freedom’, hence-
forth, the Freedom Party) on 15 March 2009, and the consequent massive mass media
attention that made the leader of the party, Oleh Tyahnybok, a national sensation.
The Freedom Party obtained 34.69% of the votes and 50 seats out of 120 in the
Ternopil regional council, while its nearest competitor, the Yedynyi tsentr (United
Centre), gained only 14.20%.8 The Freedom Party’s result at the Ternopil regional
elections was the best electoral outcome—either at the regional or national level—for a
far-right party in Ukraine’s history.
Our interpretation of the significance of these results is founded on the thesis,
advanced, in particular, by Herbert Kitschelt. In his analysis of the French National
Front as ‘a prototype of the New Radical Right’, he suggested that a strong showing
in ‘secondary elections’ and the attention of the mass media played a crucial role in
promoting the success of new parties at the national level (Kitschelt with McGann
1995, pp. 99–100). If we adopt this argument the Freedom Party has apparently
achieved the first stage of this trajectory. However, before proceeding to a detailed
discussion of the further prospects of the Freedom Party, I shall first consider two
important aspects of the context of the situation of the Freedom Party, namely the
radical right-wing legacy in Ukraine and the reasons why the Ukrainian far right failed
in the post-Soviet period.
The radical right-wing legacy in Ukraine
The Ukrainian radical right appeared as a reaction to the inability of Ukrainian
nationalists to acquire their own independent state. Ukrainian nationalism, as a
distinct socio-political movement, began to develop in the nineteenth century but the
original nationalist organisations and groups were extremely weak.9 At the beginning
of the twentieth century Ukraine—or rather, the territories that were only later called
7
The radical right-wingers’ results of the 1994 parliamentary elections are insignificant and—to a
high degree—irrelevant to our discussion, as these elections were based on the old Soviet majoritarian
system, which did not allow political parties to play a full-fledged mobilising role in Ukrainian society.
As Anna Makhorkina (2005, p. 254) asserts, ‘only with the introduction of the new semi-proportional
electoral law for the parliamentary elections of 1998, did Ukrainian political parties start to mobilize
the Ukrainian public’.
8
Korrespondent, 20 March 2009, p. 9.
9
The origins of Ukrainian nationalism are considered in Magocsi (2002).
THE RESURGENCE OF THE UKRAINIAN RADICAL RIGHT 207
‘Ukraine’—remained a predominantly agrarian country with largely dormant national
ambitions. Following World War I, the Ukrainian people found themselves torn
between the Soviet Union, Poland, Czechoslovakia and Romania. This ethnic and
territorial chaos was aptly reflected in the political sphere: during the first post-war
years more than 10 different governments claimed to rule over the territories of
modern Ukraine.10
Following the Polish–Ukrainian War of 1918 and 1919, Western Ukraine (Eastern
Galicia, part of Volhynia and minor regions) was annexed by Poland, while Eastern
Ukraine became the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic (Ukrainian SSR). Both
Western and Eastern parts of Ukraine had their nationalist movements. The Soviet
authorities successfully suppressed the Ukrainian nationalists, either moderate or
radical, but in Poland there existed different political nationalist parties that tried to
normalise relations with the Polish state. In terms of ideology, they ranged from
national democracy, represented by the Ukrayins’ke natsional’no-demokratichne
ob’’ednannya (Ukrainian National Democratic Union), to socialism, represented by
the Ukrayins’’ka sotsial’no-radykal’na partiya (Ukrainian Social-Radical Party).
However, there were also legal Ukrainian parties that were less loyal to the Polish
authorities. These parties, in particular the Ukrayins’ka partiya pratsi (Ukrainian
Party of Labour) and Ukrayins’ke selyans’ko-robitnyche sotsialistychne ob’’ednannya
(Ukrainian Peasants-Workers Socialist Association), pursued a national communist
agenda, in which they saw a possibility of satisfying both national and social needs.
In the course of the 1920s, the most radical nationalist organisation in Western
Ukraine was the Ukrayins’ka viis’kova orhanizatsiya (Ukrainian Military Organisa-
tion, UVO) led by Colonel Yevhen Konovalets. It was created in 1920 in Prague by
veterans of the regular military units that fought the Polish army. The aim of the UVO
was the continuation of the national liberation struggle by adopting such terrorist
methods as arson and the destruction of telegraph and telephone communication lines,
bombing, expropriation of state belongings, and political murders (Kyrychuk 2002,
p. 556). Its other activities included espionage for the Abwehr, the German intelligence
organisation that financially supported the UVO in exchange for intelligence on Polish
military structures (Kucheruk 2005, pp. 76–82).
Although originally the UVO was seen as both a military and a political
organisation, its military actions were mostly terrorist, while its political activities
failed altogether. However, in the mid-1920s, Western Ukraine as well as the
Ukrainian nationalist milieu abroad saw the rise of various socio-political clubs and
groups that avoided terrorist activities and were engaged in the elaboration of a
Ukrainian right-wing ideology. The most important radical right-wing ideologue was
Dmytro Dontsov. Like Benito Mussolini, Dontsov was a dissident revolutionary
socialist, but following World War I, he became a mystical theorist of Ukrainian
revolutionary ultra-nationalism. In his Foundations of Our Politics, written in 1921, he
praised the Ukrainian nation, which he considered part of the European civilisation,
and simultaneously attacked Russia which allegedly endangered European nations.
Dontsov foresaw an imminent war between Europe and Russia and argued
10
On the history of Ukraine see Magocsi (1996); Subtelny (2000); Lindheim and Luckyj (1996) and
Reid (1997).
208 ANTON SHEKHOVTSOV
that Ukraine should become a European outpost in this struggle (Dontsov 2001,
pp. 106–62).
In 1926, Dontsov published his magnum opus, Nationalism, in which he expounded
the ideology of Ukrainian nationalism (Dontsov 1926). Although frequently referring
to works by such thinkers as Friedrich Nietzsche, Georges Sorel and Charles Maurras,
Dontsov nevertheless managed to create an indigenous fascist doctrine, in which
European revolutionary ultra-nationalist thought was introduced into the Ukrainian
context. Following the publication of Nationalism, Dontsov set to further turn
nationalist socio-political organisations in Western Ukraine in a fascist direction and
he personally translated Mussolini’s Dottrina del Fascismo into Ukrainian, in addition
to a few chapters from Adolf Hitler’s Mein Kampf. Dontsov also published a number
of brochures featuring biographies of the above-mentioned fascist leaders.11
The need to combine political functions with subversive and military activities
against Poland, Romania and Czechoslovakia (which occupied the Western Ukrainian
territories) resulted in the integration of the UVO and minor radical right-wing groups
into the illegal Orhanizatsiya ukrayins’kykh natsionalistiv (Organisation of Ukrainian
Nationalists, OUN) in 1929.12 Yevhen Konovalets became the chief leader of the
OUN, ‘a spiritual and political movement born from the inner nature of Ukrainian
Nation at the moment of its intensive struggle for the foundations and goals of
creative existence’.13 In terms of doctrine, the OUN was indebted to the works of
Dmytro Dontsov (who, however, never joined the organisation), as well as some
ideologues within the OUN, in particular Mykola Stsibors’kyi, Volodymyr Martynets
and Yuliyan Vassyyan. Taking into consideration the emerging consensus in ‘fascist
studies’, which reflects the growing academic acceptance of the generic interpretation
of fascism as a form of revolutionary ultranationalism, the ideology of the OUN can
be considered fascist.14
Although the OUN paid much attention to the ideological side of its struggle and
endeavoured to infiltrate legal political parties, universities, and other structures, it
carried on terrorist activities, which were previously associated with the UVO. Among
the most notorious killings conducted by the OUN were the assassinations of Aleksei
Mailov, the attache´ at the Soviet consulate in Lviv in 1933, of Ivan Babii, the respected
director of the Lviv Ukrainian Gymnasium in 1934, and of Bronisław Pieracki, the
Polish Minister of the Interior in 1934.
In 1940, following the murder of Konovalets by a Soviet agent in 1938 and due to
the operational and generational conflicts, the OUN split into two factions. One
faction was led by Andrii Mel’nyk while the other, even more radical group, was
headed by Stepan Bandera. On 30 June 1941, Bandera’s OUN declared the
independence of Ukraine with Yaroslav Stets’ko as the prime minister. The
11
A number of contemporary political activists criticised Dontsov for his aim of promoting fascism
in the socio-political life in Western Ukraine. In particular, the influential Ukrainian social democrat
Volodymyr Levyns’kyi considered Dontsov’s radical right-wing propaganda a ‘national crime’. See
Levyns’kyi (1936).
12
On the OUN see Armstrong (1963); Motyl (1980) and Lagzi (2004). The case of the OUN is also
briefly discussed in Shekhovtsov (2007).
13
Rozbudova natsiyi, March–April 1929, p. 131.
14
For discussion of the consensus in ‘fascist studies’ see Griffin (1998) and Griffin et al. (2006).
THE RESURGENCE OF THE UKRAINIAN RADICAL RIGHT 209
declaration placed high hopes on the Nazis and assumed that ‘the newly formed
Ukrainian state [would] work closely with the National-Socialist Greater Germany,
which, under the leadership of its leader Adolf Hitler, [was] forming a new order in
Europe and the world, as well as helping the Ukrainian People to free itself from
Muscovite occupation’ (Romanyshyn 2006, p. 76). However, the Nazis did not
support the idea of Ukraine’s independence and arrested both Bandera and Stets’ko.
They were sent to the Sachsenhausen concentration camp and released only in 1944.
In 1942, Taras Bul’ba-Borovets’ launched the Ukrayins’ka povstans’ka armiya
(Ukrainian Insurgent Army, UPA), a group of Ukrainian nationalist partisans—
hijacked by Bandera’s OUN in 1943—that fought against the Nazi and Soviet forces,
as well as being involved in murdering Poles, Jews, Russians and even Ukrainians who
were not willing to cooperate with the UPA (Burds 1997; Rudling 2006, 2011; Marples
2007). In 1943, while Bandera and Stets’ko were held in the Sachsenhausen
concentration camp, the OUN convened the Third Special Congress that elected
Roman Shukhevych a Supreme Commander of the UPA. After their release in 1944,
Bandera and Stets’ko attempted to restore their ideological influence within the UPA
which resulted in a protracted conflict between the hard-core adherents of Bandera
and the other factions, who eventually left Bandera’s OUN to form their own faction
of the OUN in 1954–1956 (Kas’yanov 2005, pp. 462–67). The UPA continued its
struggle against Soviet law enforcement up until the early 1950s but then was
suppressed. Many fighters of the UPA and Bandera’s OUN were sent to Gulag prison
camps, while other members of these organisations had to emigrate to Western
Europe, Canada and the USA.
Although small Ukrainian nationalist groups, such as the Natsional’nyi front
(National Front) or Ukrayins’ka helsins’ka hrupa (Ukrainian Helsinki Group), did
appear in the Ukrainian SSR in the 1960s and afterwards, they were generally national
democratic in their ideological orientation ‘with a concentration upon cultural and
linguistic issues, human rights and national oppression’ (Kuzio 1997, p. 213).
Aged wine into new bottles: the Ukrainian radical right in the post-Soviet period
Already in the late 1980s, Western Ukraine was beginning to witness a weak rise of the
radical right. As might be expected, these far-right groups demanded Ukraine’s
liberation from the Soviet rule. Ironically, however, Ukraine became an independent
state in 1991 not because of ultra-nationalist activities, but due to the peaceful demise
of the Soviet Union. In the post-communist but ‘pre-Orange’ period, the radical right-
wing milieu in Ukraine was dominated by three major political organisations, the
Vseukrayins’ke politychne ob’’ednannya ‘Derzhavna samostiinist’ Ukrayiny’ (All-
Ukrainian Political Union ‘State Independence of Ukraine’, DSU), Konhres
ukrayins’kykh natsionalistiv (Congress of Ukrainian Nationalists, KUN) and
Ukrayins’ka natsional’na asambleya (Ukrainian National Assembly, UNA).15
The DSU was established in April 1990 by former anti-Soviet dissidents and
veterans of the nationalist struggle. Former member of the Ukrainian Helsinki Group,
15
Detailed analysis of the Ukrainian radical right in the 1990s can be found in Kuzio (1997). See also
Wilson (1997); Solchanyk (1999) and Kubicek (1999).
210 ANTON SHEKHOVTSOV
Ivan Kandyba, headed the organisation. Ideologically, the DSU openly propagated
the idea of establishing a national dictatorship and adhered to the fascist legacy of the
OUN’s ideologists Dontsov, Stsibors’kyi and Bandera. Only ethnic Ukrainians could
join the organisation, and only Ukrainians were considered an indigenous ethnic
group in Ukraine (Ukrainians and Crimean Tatars in the case of Crimea).
Since the DSU had been founded prior to the demise of the Soviet Union, it suffered
a strategic crisis after Ukraine declared independence on 24 August 1991, as the urge
towards a literal ‘state independence of Ukraine’ lost its urgency. Consequently, the
DSU adopted an approach that involved opposing politics as such: the organisation
called the Act of Declaration of Independence of Ukraine ‘a useless scrap of paper’
and decided to boycott the presidential elections held in December 1991, as the leaders
believed there was no independent Ukraine (Golobuts’kyi & Kulyk 1996, p. 109). On
23 March 1993, the DSU was officially registered as a political party, but, that year, it
also suffered an organisational crisis, as Kandyba left the DSU to become leader of the
recently established Orhanizatsiya ukrayins’kykh natsionalistiv v Ukrayini (Organisa-
tion of Ukrainian Nationalists in Ukraine) and tried to dissolve the DSU. As a result
of this conflict, in early 1994, the Ukrainian writer Roman Koval’ became chairman of
the party, and under his leadership it was radicalised even further. In the 1994 and
1998 parliamentary elections, the DSU failed to win seats in single member
constituencies. The party chose not to contest the 2002 parliamentary elections and
in 2003 the Supreme Court of Ukraine annulled the registration of the party as it failed
to meet the regulations of Ukrainian law.
The DSU was not the only radical right-wing party to involve former members of
the OUN and UPA. In 1991, Yaroslava Stets’ko, the widow of Yaroslav Stets’ko,
former member of Bandera’s OUN and leader of the Anti-Bolshevik Bloc of Nations,
returned to Ukraine after 47 years spent abroad. The following year, she founded and
became chairperson of the KUN, a party formed on the basis of the former e´migre´
circles of Bandera’s OUN. Although the KUN nominally remained loyal to the
revolutionary nationalist doctrine of Bandera and Yaroslav Stets’ko, its actual
ideology was far less radical than that of the DSU. Roman Zvarych, who was born
into a family of Ukrainian e´migre´s in the United States and was a member of the
e´migre´ OUN diaspora, became deputy head of the KUN and was responsible for its
ideology. At that time, he could be considered a national democrat, whose worldview
had been shaped less by his presumably fragmented relations with the OUN, than by
the Western democratic discourse and his work at Columbia and New York
Universities. Consequently, he tried to democratise the KUN and move it away from
the ideological basis of the Orhanizatsiya ukrayins’kykh natsionalistiv (banderivtsi)
(OUN-B), to which the party—through Yaroslava Stets’ko—was actually a legitimate
heir (Kuzio 1997, p. 220).16 Therefore, the KUN accepted and was inclined to
participate in parliamentary politics, and was also willing to cooperate with different
political forces, not necessarily of a nationalist or radical right-wing nature.
In 1994, the KUN won five seats in single member constituencies, but Yaroslava
Stets’ko could not contest the parliamentary elections, as her status as an
16
Zvarych was removed from his position as deputy head of the KUN in 1994 and joined the
national democratic party Narodnyi Rukh Ukrayiny (People’s Movement of Ukraine, Rukh).
THE RESURGENCE OF THE UKRAINIAN RADICAL RIGHT 211
Honorary Citizen of Ukraine did not qualify her to stand for office. However,
when she later obtained a full passport she was elected to the Verkhovna Rada in
1997. The KUN’s participation in the 1998 elections was twofold: first, they ran
candidates in single member districts and obtained three seats; and second, they
formed an electoral alliance, the Natsional’nyi front (National Front), with two
minor nationalist parties. However, although the alliance polled 23.75% and
20.86% of the public vote in Ivano-Frankivs’k and Ternopil regions respectively, it
won only 2.71% of the votes at the national level. In 2002, the KUN joined the
political bloc NU led by Viktor Yushchenko, and three members of the KUN were
elected to the Verkhovna Rada.
Another prominent Ukrainian radical right-wing party, the UNA, emerged from a
union of small nationalist organisations and groupuscules that was formed on 30 June
1990 on the principles of Dmytro Dontsov’s doctrine. The following year, the UNA
elected Yurii Shukhevych, son of Roman Shukhevych, its chairman, and founded a
paramilitary wing of the organisation, the Ukrayins’ka natsional’na samooborona
(Ukrainian National Self-Defence, UNSO). In the period 1992–1994, members of the
UNA-UNSO participated in the armed conflicts in Transdniestria, Georgia, and the
Russian Federation (Chechen Republic), where they fought against the Moldovan and
Abkhaz separatists and Russian federal forces respectively. In September 1994,
Shukhevych left the party in protest at the increasing ‘pan-Slavisation’ of the UNA’s
ideology and returned only in 2005.
While the UNA was successful in provoking mass disturbances and conflicts with
Ukrainian law enforcement agencies, it appeared to be extremely weak in the electoral
sphere. Although it was officially registered only at the end of 1994, nevertheless it
participated in the 1994 parliamentary elections, which were held in March, and won
one seat in a single member district. The following year, the party’s registration was
annulled, but it managed to re-register on 29 September 1997. The 1998 parliamentary
elections turned out to be disastrous for the UNA, as it failed to win any seats in the
single member constituencies and gained only 0.39% of the votes. In 2002, the UNA
gained even fewer votes (0.04%), but managed to win a seat in a Lviv single member
district.
There are several factors that can explain the failure of the Ukrainian radical right
in the ‘pre-Orange’ period. First, by the time Ukraine became independent in 1991,
many of OUN’s original goals that been achieved and the radical right-wing project of
national liberation struggle became largely irrelevant. As a result of territorial changes
in the Soviet period, an independent post-Soviet Ukraine became the largest country
located wholly within Europe. Moreover, the Ukrainian language, which can be
considered one of the most distinctive identity markers of the Ukrainian nation,
perceived in ethno-cultural terms, became the only official state language, (although
Russian language is considered a mother tongue for about 29.6% of the Ukrainian
population (All-Ukrainian Population Census 2001)).
Second, large, territorially confined parts of Ukrainian society are highly negatively
disposed to the Ukrainian far right. There is an ethno-cultural cleavage between
Ukrainian-speaking Ukrainians, Russian-speaking Ukrainians and Russians (Wilson
1997, p. 198; Kubicek 1999, p. 43; Umland 2008b, p. 34). This cleavage is reflected in
geographical terms and—more importantly—in terms of administrative division.
212 ANTON SHEKHOVTSOV
Thus, for the most part, the first group lives in western and central regions, while the
second and third groups live in eastern and southern regions.17 Traditionally and
historically, the last two groups have strong cultural and family ties with Russia. The
aggressive Ukrainian nationalism of the far rightists, who generally demonise Russia,
is unacceptable for these groups. They also consider the radical right-wingers’ homage
to the OUN and UPA fighters inadmissible, in particular due to the fact that their
relatives eventually fought on different sides during World War II.
Third, the radical right-wing parties failed to modernise their doctrines in
accordance with new developments and retained the atavistic ideology of the original
OUN and Dontsov’s works written in the 1940s and 1950s. In particular the far-
rightists had nothing to offer to Ukrainian citizens in the largely ‘Russified’ eastern
and southern regions. The only major radical right-wing party that endeavoured to
reform the ideological legacy of the interwar Ukrainian nationalism was the UNA.
This party created a weird mixture of Ukrainian imperialism and pan-Slavic
nationalism that could theoretically find a positive response throughout Ukraine
(Kuzio 1997, pp. 231–33; Solchanyk 1999, p. 292), but the militarist image and violent
behaviour of the UNA deterred larger parts of the Ukrainian population from
supporting the party.
Fourth, the radical right-wing parties demonstrated a lack of unity. In the course of
the 1990s, there were several political parties and organisations that laid claims to the
legacy of the OUN, but they could not overcome the contradictions that dated back to
the splits within the original OUN. Even the DSU and KUN, which were both
founded on the basis of Bandera’s faction, spoke different ideological languages and
disagreed on political strategies. The radical right-wing parties did manage to form
electoral alliances before the 1998 parliamentary elections, but they competed with
each other for the support of the same groups of the population and thus dispersed the
radical right-wing vote.
Fifth, the Ukrainian political spectrum was based on an ideological polarisation
that did not offer a distinct niche for the radical right. The first evidence of ideological
polarisation came from the 1994 parliamentary elections, which revealed the
Ukrainian political spectrum to be divided between the two extremes of the Europe-
leaning national democrats and the Russia-leaning communists (Whitmore 2004,
pp. 37–38). Moreover, the national democrats included hard-core nationalists, who
took the far right votes away from the radical right. This was especially the case for the
2002 parliamentary elections when the KUN joined the mainstream right-wing
alliance NU.
Sixth, in Ukraine, a worsening socio-economic situation was strongly correlated
with ‘a decline in civic and political activity, including mobilisation around nationalist
causes’ (Kubicek 1999, p. 42). Besides, Ukrainian blue-collar workers, whose
economic status deteriorated with the breakdown of the industrial sector in the
course of the 1990s, pinned their hopes on communist and socialist parties. Thus,
Ukraine did not witness a ‘proletarisation’ of the electoral base of the radical right-
17
The division of Ukraine into two, three or four large ethno-cultural regions is an obvious, but
valid, generalisation. For a more detailed analysis of Ukrainian regions see Rodgers (2006).
THE RESURGENCE OF THE UKRAINIAN RADICAL RIGHT 213
wing parties that characterises political developments in Western and Eastern Europe
(Betz 1994).
From social nationalism to ‘freedom’
The Sotsial-natsional’na partiya Ukrayiny (Social-National Party of Ukraine, SNPU),
which changed its name to the Freedom Party in 2004, was launched in Lviv on 13
October 1991. Several small nationalist organisations contributed to the formation of
the SNPU, namely the Varta rukhu (Guard of the Movement) led by Yaroslav
Andrushkiv and Yurii Kryvoruchko, Students’ke bratstvo L’vova (Lviv Student
Fellowship) led by Oleh Tyahnybok, and Molodizhna orhanizatsiya ‘Spadshchyna’
(Organisation of Ukrainian Youth ‘Legacy’) led by Andrii Parubii.
According to the political programme of the SNPU, the party ‘aimed at assuming
power in Ukraine in order to build a new state and a new society’.18 Six of the points in
the party programme referred to Russia, which was believed to be the cause of all the
troubles in Ukraine. In terms of ideology, the SNPU claimed that its social
nationalism was founded on the work Two Revolutions, written by Yaroslav Stets’ko
under the pseudonym ‘Z. Karbovych’, who argued that a Ukrainian revolution had to
combine two revolutions, a national and a social one (Karbovych 1951, pp. 6–8). The
official symbol of the SNPU was a Wolfsangel (Wolf’s hook). Although its original
meaning was not associated with National Socialism, the Wolfsangel—due to its
employment by several SS Divisions—had become a symbol of many post-war
European neo-Nazi organisations. The SNPU modified the symbol by mirroring it
(just as they seemed to mirror ‘National Socialism’), so that it looked like a letter ‘N’
with a vertical line ‘j’ in the middle of the letter. According to the SNPU’s leaders, the
symbol meant ‘the Idea of the Nation’. The nation as such was—and still is—seen by
the party’s ideologists as a ‘community of blood and spirit’.19
The SNPU came to public prominence in 1993 when it declared that members of a
group called the Lviv Student Fellowship had formed paramilitary ‘popular guard
units’ intended to protect demonstrators and prevent provocations during the opening
of the September parliamentary sitting in Kyiv (Streshnev 2006).20 The next day after
the opening, members of the ‘popular guard units’, dressed in black uniforms, incited
riots in front of the Ukrainian parliament.21 Afterwards, the ‘guard units’ joined the
SNPU, which resulted in the expulsion of the Lviv Student Fellowship from the Union
of Ukrainian Students.
In 1994, the SNPU participated in the parliamentary and regional elections and
obtained no seats in parliament, although it did obtain four seats in the Lviv regional
council.22 In spite of its participation in the elections the party was officially registered
only on 16 October 1995. At the presentation ceremony, held in November 1995, the
18
‘Prohrama Sotsial-Natsional’noyi Partiyi Ukrayiny’, available at: http://www.vatra.org.ua/sotsial-
natsionalizm/prohrama-sotsial-natsionalnoyi-partiyi-ukrayiny.html, accessed 9 June 2009.
19
‘Istoriya VO ‘‘Svoboda’’’, available at: http://www.svoboda.org.ua/pro_partiyu/istoriya/, accessed
10 June 2009.
20
‘Guard unit’ is a literal translation of German ‘Schutzstaffel’ (SS), the name of the major Nazi
organisation in Hitler’s Germany.
21
Nash vzglyad v budushchee, July–August 2006, p. 4.
214 ANTON SHEKHOVTSOV
leaders of the SNPU revealed their racist and anti-Russian agenda in the following
statement:
In view of the prospects of mass degradation of people and entire nations, we are the last
hope of the white race, of the humankind as such. . . . We must resolutely separate ourselves
from the North-Eastern neighbour, not only because it is aggressive or can grab us but, first
of all, because it brings into our life, into the psychology of our people, qualities which are
different from European values. (Streshnev 2006)
During the second half of the 1990s, the SNPU recruited Nazi skinheads and
football hooligans.23 At the same time, the party decided to reorganise its ‘popular
guard units’ to form the Tovarystvo spryyannya zbroinym sylam ta viiskovo-mors’komu
flotu Ukrayiny ‘Patriot Ukrayiny’ (Society of Assistance to Armed Forces and Navy of
Ukraine ‘Patriot of Ukraine’), headed by Andrii Parubii. However, although the
‘Patriot of Ukraine’ was formed in 1996, it was not until 1999 that it became a full-
fledged organisation. Its first convention took place in Lviv in December 1999 and was
celebrated by a night-time torch procession through the city streets.
In 1998, the party formed an electoral alliance Menshe sliv (Fewer Words) with the
DSU. The 1998 parliamentary elections proved to be disastrous for the alliance, as it
gained only 0.16% of the votes and ranked 29th out of the 30 parties involved in the
elections. Even in the Lviv region, where the SNPU had four council members, the
party polled only 0.65%.24 However, Oleh Tyahnybok won a parliamentary seat in
one of the Lviv region single member districts. (The party’s former ideologist Yurii
Kryvoruchko also won a parliamentary seat in another single member district, but, by
the time of the elections, he had left the SNPU and had contested as an independent
candidate.) Tyahnybok joined the national democratic parliamentary group of the
Rukh and became a member of the Budget Committee of the Verkhovna Rada.
Tyahnybok’s incumbency earned him prestige among the party members and, after his
settlement in Kyiv in 1998, he was nominated head of the SNPU’s Kyiv local
organisation.
In 2000, the party established contacts with the Euronat, an association of the
European radical right-wing parties. Jean-Marie Le Pen, the leader of the French
National Front, participated in the sixth party convention, held on 21 May 2000.25
The electoral success of Tyahnybok and the development of the external relations
notwithstanding, the party suffered a dramatic organisational decline in the beginning
of the 2000s. It chose to contest the 2002 parliamentary elections solely in single
member districts, and, again, only Tyahnybok won a seat. More to the point, he ran
not as a member of the SNPU, but as a non-party candidate nominated by the
electoral alliance NU led by Viktor Yushchenko, who started drawing radical right-
22
‘Istoriya VO ‘‘Svoboda’’’, available at: http://www.svoboda.org.ua/pro_partiyu/istoriya/, accessed
10 June 2009.
23
Nash vzglyad v budushchee, July–August 2006, p. 4.
24
Unless otherwise stated, all the electoral data in this article is taken from the website of the Central
Election Commission of Ukraine, available at: http://www.cvk.gov.ua, accessed 29 May 2009.
25
’Istoriya VO ‘‘Svoboda’’’, available at: http://www.svoboda.org.ua/pro_partiyu/istoriya/, accessed
10 June 2009.
THE RESURGENCE OF THE UKRAINIAN RADICAL RIGHT 215
wingers into his political project (Central Election Commission of Ukraine 2002).
After his re-election, Tyahnybok joined the parliamentary group of the NU and
became a member of the Budget Committee of the Verkhovna Rada again.
In 2003, the SNPU initiated the process of reorganisation and ‘respectabilisation’.
On the one hand, the relevance of this process was conditioned by the sweeping
democratisation of certain powerful political elites that paralleled Yushchenko’s
electoral rise. On the other hand, the SNPU was sure that it would achieve political
success by taking the model of the European radical right-wing parties, such as the
French National Front or Freedom Party of Austria, as a blueprint. Analysing that
period retrospectively, Tyahnybok argued:
We felt that those methods of propaganda and agitation which we implemented had become
increasingly outdated and not as effective as they had been in the beginning of the 1990s. We
felt a certain passivity among our members, a certain loss of spiritual unity within the
organisation, and we began to understand that in order to be successful in today’s state, to
play an active role among the political elites, we had to change both internally and externally.
(Gaivanovich 2004)
On 14 February 2004, the party held its ninth convention, which adopted the
following important decisions. First, Oleh Tyahnybok would resign from his post as
head of the Kyiv local organisation and become head of the party. Due to his
charismatic personality and owing to the withdrawal of the other founding leaders
from the SNPU, Tyahnybok managed to consolidate power in his hands and exert
Bolshevik-like control over the party. Second, the party changed its name to the All-
Ukrainian Union ‘Freedom’. We can only conjecture whether the party borrowed part
of its new name from the Freedom Party of Austria, but this assumption is highly
probable, since the party was trying to model itself on its West European ‘brothers in
arms’. Third, the Freedom Party abandoned the modified Wolfsangel as its party
symbol, and adopted the image of a right hand showing three fingers. In a 2004
interview, Tyahnybok himself admitted that popular perception of the party’s ideas
had been impeded by a ‘somewhat inadequate symbol and party name’ (Gaivanovich
2004). Fourth, the convention disbanded the Patriot of Ukraine, as this paramilitary
organisation as such and its overtly racist stances in particular posed a threat to the
new ‘respectable’ image of the Freedom Party.26 Fifth, the Freedom Party moderated
its radical right-wing positions. However, as the party’s leaders covertly decided, this
moderation would affect only its public rhetoric, accessible to external observers, while
the ideological foundations of the party would remain unchanged (Odnorozhenko
2007).27
26
The Kharkiv local organisation of the Patriot of Ukraine refused to disband and renewed its
membership in 2005. The following year, it managed to register as a regional social organisation, but,
from then on, it had no organisational ties with the maternal party.
27
Here we find what Roger Eatwell (1992, p. 174), among others, termed as a distinction between the
esoteric and exoteric ideological appeals of the radical right: ‘The former refers to the ideological
nature of discussion among converts, or in closed circles. The latter refers more to what it is considered
wise to say in public’. The Freedom Party used both esoteric and exoteric doctrines as early as in the
1990s, when it first had a separate political programme for internal use (‘Prohrama Sotsial-
Natsional’noyi Partiyi Ukrayiny’, available at: http://www.vatra.org.ua/sotsial-natsionalizm/prohra-
216 ANTON SHEKHOVTSOV
The Freedom Party in the ‘Orange’ period and afterwards
Five months after the Freedom Party convention, which had allegedly decided to
make the organisation more respectable, Tyahnybok publicly proved the party’s
allegiance to its esoteric radical nationalist stances. While making a speech at the
Yavoryna Mountain during a rally at the grave of a UPA commander, Tyahnybok
appealed to both former UPA fighters and party activists:
The enemy came and took their [UPA’s] Ukraine. But they [UPA fighters] were not afraid;
likewise we must not be afraid. They took their automatic guns on their necks and went into
the woods. They got them ready and fought against the Moskali, Germans, Zhydy, and other
scum, who wanted to take away our Ukrainian state! And therefore our task—for every one
of you: the young, the old, the grey-headed and the youthful—we must defend our native
land! . . .
These young men and you, the grey-headed, are the very combination, which the moskal’s’ko-
zhydivs’ka mafia ruling Ukraine fears most.28
Since Tyahnybok participated in Viktor Yushchenko’s presidential campaign, his
speech at the Yavoryna Mountain was widely publicised by Yushchenko’s political
opponents. Consequently, Yushchenko demanded apologies from Tyahnybok and
warned him of possible expulsion from the NU parliamentary group. The leader of the
Freedom Party formally apologised but was expelled nevertheless and retracted his
apology (Tyahnybok 2004).29 In summer 2004, the Public Prosecutor’s Office in the
Ivano-Frankivs’k region opened a criminal case against Tyahnybok on charges of
inciting ethnic hatred. Different courts continued the case for several months, but
eventually Tyahnybok was acquitted on 31 March 2005 (The Stephen Roth Institute
2005). Tyahnybok’s expulsion from the NU group notwithstanding, the Freedom
Party continued to support Yushchenko for president during the ‘Orange Revolution’.
After the leaders of the ‘Orange’ alliance had accused their opponents of falsification
of the election results, the Freedom Party called for civil disobedience against ‘the
usurpation of power by the gangster junta’.30
While a member of the Verkhovna Rada in the period 2002–2006, Tyahnybok
submitted 36 motions for debate, but the parliament adopted only four of them. In the
majority of his motions he opposed the introduction of the Russian language as the
second official state language, proposed recognition of the fighting role of the OUN
ma-sotsial-natsionalnoyi-partiyi-ukrayiny.html, accessed 9 June 2009) from the one submitted to the
Ministry of Justice of Ukraine for the official registration of the SNPU.
28
‘Povnyi tekst vystupu Oleha Tyahnyboka na gori Yavoryna’, available at: http://www.tiahnybo-
k.info/diyalnist_vystyp/dokument000036.html, accessed 12 June 2009. ‘Moskali’ is a derogatory name
for Russians, while ‘Zhydy’ is a derogatory name for Jews. ‘Moskal’s’ko-zhydivs’ka’ is a compound
adjective formed by these two derogatory nouns.
29
It is interesting to note that, although they expelled Tyahnybok in July 2004, he officially left the
parliamentary group only on 10 September 2004.
30
‘Zayava VO ‘‘Svoboda’’ z privodu pomaranchevoyi revolyutsiyi’, available at: http://www.
tiahnybok.info/dokumenty_zayava/dokument000072.html, accessed 12 June 2009. On the ‘Orange
Revolution’ see D’Anieri and Kuzio (2007); Harasymiw with Ilnytzkyj (2007); Bredies et al. (2007a,
2007b, 2007c), Kuzio (2007).
THE RESURGENCE OF THE UKRAINIAN RADICAL RIGHT 217
and UPA during World War II, called for the lustration of former communist officials,
security service officers and undercover agents, and demanded the prohibition of
communist ideology. None of these motions was adopted.
In spring 2005, Tyahnybok became involved in further anti-Semitic activity when he
signed a so called ‘Letter of 100’ that petitioned President Yushchenko, the Chairman
of the Verkhovna Rada and the Head of the Supreme Court ‘to stop the criminal
activity of the organised Jewry’, which was allegedly trying to undermine Ukrainian
sovereignty (The Stephen Roth Institute 2005). The same year, the Freedom Party also
focused its attention on the issue of immigration. Partially, this development was
motivated by the 2005 riots in France, and the Freedom Party even issued a
declaration on ‘the racial and ethnic disturbances in France’, in which it condemned
‘the suicidal immigration policies’ of the country and demanded, in particular, the
strengthening control of Ukrainian eastern and southern borders, the tightening of
immigration laws, and the cessation of ‘the criminal activities of ethnic mafia
groupings’ (Tyahnybok 2005). The Freedom Party’s focus on the immigration issue
was an obvious attempt to follow the ‘fashion’ of the West European radical right-
wing parties. At the end of 2005, the Lviv local organisation of the Freedom Party
organised a press conference of minor functionaries of the French National Front.
They took the opportunity to blame ‘uncontrolled immigration from Africa to France’
for the rise of the organised crime, drug trafficking, and gangsterism. They also set
forth the doctrine of the National Front and declared that the Freedom Party was the
only party in Ukraine whose ideological foundations corresponded to the ideas of ‘a
Europe of nations’.31
In 2006, for the first time, the Freedom Party flexed its renewed organisational and
ideological muscles at parliamentary, regional and city council elections. The party
announced the document ‘Programme of the Protection of Ukrainians’ as its political
programme for the parliamentary elections. The document featured seven points:
‘Genocide of Ukrainians in the twentieth century: overcoming the consequences and
rendering justice’, ‘The OUN-UPA: recognition and gratitude’, ‘The [Ukrainian]
Language: protection and dissemination’, ‘Media space: liberating from invasion and
security of the state’, ‘Migration: right to the Fatherland’, ‘Energy policy: inde-
pendence and security’, and ‘Society: social and national justice’.32
Apart from the Freedom Party, only two radical right-wing parties contested the
2006 parliamentary elections, the KUN and UNA. However, the KUN’s
candidates were included in the NU list, and only the UNA was a direct rival
of Tyahnybok’s party. In the parliamentary elections, the Freedom Party gained
only 0.36% of the votes and ranked 18th out of 45 parties. However, the regional
and city council elections in western Ukraine were more successful for the party
(see Table 2).
By the time of the elections of 30 September 2007, two important developments
had taken place within the radical right-wing in Ukraine. First, the UNA decided to
31
’Nashi pobratymy—Natsional’nyi Front Zhana-Mari Le Pena’, available at: http://www.tiahny-
bok.info/diyalnist_podiya/dokument000330.html, accessed 13 June 2009.
32
‘Prohrama zakhystu ukrayintsiv’, available at: http://www.svoboda.org.ua/pro_partiyu/prohra-
ma/pzu/, accessed 13 June 2009.
218 ANTON SHEKHOVTSOV
TABLE 2
THE FREEDOM PARTY’S RESULTS IN THE 2006 REGIONAL AND CITY COUNCIL ELECTIONS
Lviv regional council Lviv city council Ternopil city council
% Seats % Seats % Seats
5.62 10 6.69 9 4.2 4
Sources: Avksent’yev et al. (2007, pp. 136–37); ‘Sklad deputatas’koho korpusu L’vivs’koyi oblasnoyi
rady’, Vholos pro polityku, 29 March 2006, available at: http://www.vgolos.com.ua/politic/2924.html?page¼
295, accessed 13 June 2009; ‘Ternopil’shchina postvyborcha: vid prognoziv do real’nosti’, Zakhidna informatsiina
korporatsiya, 6 April 2006, available at: http://zik.com.ua/ua/news/2006/04/06/24726, accessed 13 June 2009.
ignore the elections, officially as part of its protest against political corruption, but
also probably because it had not been unable to raise sufficient funds for
electioneering. Second, at the end of 2006, the Prosecutor General’s Office opened
a criminal case against Oleksii Ivchenko, the KUN’s leader and former head of the
national joint-stock company Naftogaz Ukrayiny (Naftogas of Ukraine), on charges
of embezzlement and abuse of his official position. Consequently, the NU dropped
Ivchenko from its party ticket in spring 2007, and then, almost a month before the
elections, the KUN decided to withdraw from the electoral alliance and not to
contest the elections at all. As a result, the Freedom Party enjoyed the privileged
position of being the only far-right party to participate in the 2007 parliamentary
elections. However, although this helped the party to double its vote compared with
the previous elections it still won only 0.76% of the popular vote and was ranked
eighth out of 20 parties.
This limited electoral success notwithstanding, the Freedom Party enthusiastically
embraced the overall outcome of the parliamentary elections. On 9 February 2008
they held a party conference, at which it was announced that the organisation
would participate in all the presidential, parliamentary, regional and city council
elections throughout Ukraine.33 This strategy seemed natural and consistent, as it
was the only opportunity for an extra-parliamentary party to retain the attention
of the mass media space and mobilise its support base outside the Western
Ukrainian regions.
The first opportunity to test the new strategy in Central Ukraine came with the
elections to the Kyiv city council and for the position of Mayor of Kyiv that took
place on 25 May 2008. The Freedom Party ran its electoral campaign under the slogan
‘Ukrainian rule to the capital city!’ and distributed booklets containing the party’s
project for a new Constitution of Ukraine, written under the direction of Oleksandr
Shevchenko, a Professor at Kyiv University, which had been sanctioned by the
eighteenth party convention on 5 August 2007. Interestingly, the message of the
Freedom Party’s campaign in Kyiv, a largely ‘Russified’ city as regards the language
spoken at home and between different ethno-cultural groups, was articulated less in
ethnic nationalist terms and more on a strong anti-establishment, populist and
33
‘Istoriya VO ‘‘Svoboda’’’, available at: http://www.svoboda.org.ua/pro_partiyu/istoriya/, accessed
10 June 2009.
THE RESURGENCE OF THE UKRAINIAN RADICAL RIGHT 219
anti-corruption rhetoric.34 The party’s candidate for mayor, Tyahnybok, stood no
chance of winning the elections and eventually polled only 1.37% of the vote.35
Nevertheless, the Freedom Party profited from the individual electoral campaign of its
leader, increasing its vote in the city council election to 2.08%, compared with the
1.25% it polled in Kyiv in the 2007 parliamentary elections (BBC Ukrainian 2008).
A year later, however, the Freedom Party achieved much greater political success—
although only at the regional level— obtaining 34.69% of the popular vote in the
Ternopil regional council elections, held on 15 March 2009. Tyahnybok’s associates
secured 50 seats out of 120, and Oleksii Kaida, head of the secretariat of the Freedom
Party, was nominated chairman of the council. It was the first time the party had
contested the elections in the Ternopil region, and—in comparison to the 2007
parliamentary elections, when it gained 3.44% of the votes in this region—the
Freedom Party demonstrated a tenfold increase in popular support.
Le Pen and the National Front general delegate Bruno Gollnisch congratulated
Tyahnybok on the victory in the regional elections during the latter’s visit to
Strasbourg on 24–25 March 2009. In Strasbourg, Tyahnybok also had a chance to
meet MEPs from such radical right-wing parties as the Freedom Party of Austria,
Natsionalen sayuz ‘Ataka’ (National Union ‘Attack’, Bulgaria), Vlaams Belang
(Flemish Interest, Belgium), Forza Nuova (New Force, Italy) and Fiamma Tricolore
(Tricolour Flame, Italy).36
In January 2010, however, Tyahnybok failed to repeat his party’s success in
Ternopil region, obtaining only 4.89% of the votes in the first round of the 2010
presidential elections in the region. This failure resulted from two main factors. First,
taking into account obvious differences between parliamentary and presidential
elections, most radical-nationalist voters decided to support Yushchenko who had
better chances of winning than Tyahnybok and whose praise of the OUN-UPA and
attitudes towards anti-multiculturalist ‘Ukrainisation’ of the country did not differ
essentially from those of Tyahnybok. Second, Tyahnybok’s electoral campaign on the
whole was extremely weak,37 most likely because of insufficient financial resources.
Even so, the Freedom Party, embodied by Tyahnybok, almost doubled its vote on the
national level—as compared with the 2007 parliamentary elections—gaining 1.43% of
the votes.
The Freedom Party’s prospects at the national level
It is no exaggeration to assert that, at the time of writing, the Freedom Party has
established itself as a rather successful regional party. Its dramatic, although
fluctuating, progress in the Ternopil region and previous showing in the Lviv city
34
According to the 2005 public opinion poll, Russian language was spoken at home by 39.9% of
Kyiv’s residents. A total of 12.3% of the residents spoke mostly Russian, while 23.6% spoke both
Russian and Ukrainian at home. See Razumkov Centre (2005).
35
Korrespondent.net, 28 May 2008, available at: http://korrespondent.net/kyiv/476205, accessed 15
June 2009.
36
Vseukrains’ke Ob’ednannya ‘Svoboda’, April 2009, p. 2.
37
‘Aktyvna i minlyva L’vivshchyna’, Deutsche Welle, 18 January 2010, available at: http://www.dw-
world.de/dw/article/0,,5142470,00.html, accessed 14 March 2010.
220 ANTON SHEKHOVTSOV
and regional council elections indicate that in Western Ukraine the party has become a
strong political actor. The question, however, remains whether the Freedom Party will
be able to transcend traditional regional boundaries and become established at the
national level. Here I shall analyse this problem by employing a theoretical model that
features three interdependent elements: first, ‘interest aggregation’ or societal demands
and the Freedom Party’s ability to aggregate them; second, the ‘legitimacy’ of the
party with respect to the political culture and party system; and third, the
‘organisational efficiency’ of the party.
According to an October 2008 opinion poll, in contemporary Ukraine, there are
eight political, social and economic problems considered most urgent by more than
30% of Ukrainian citizens: increases in prices (70.1%); the government’s indifference
to public opinion (56.6%); corruption at the top of government (47.8%); low wages
(40.2%); the government’s failure to secure implementation of the law (38.0%); the
absence of a social safety net for elderly people, low-income groups and large families
(31.4%); unemployment (31.2%); and the absence of mechanisms of common civic
influence over decision-making (30.5%) (Razumkov Centre 2008a, 2008b).
First, the Freedom Party has a limited ability to aggregate societal demands insofar
as it has neglected socio-economic issues since its foundation in the early 1990s. In
doing so, the party follows—even if unintentionally—the pattern of the majority of
Western European radical right-wing parties for which the economic positions play a
subordinate role (Betz 2003, pp. 76–77). According to Cas Mudde (2007, p. 120),
‘populist radical right parties use their economic program to put into practice their
core ideological positions (nativism, authoritarianism, and populism)’. This is exactly
the case of the Freedom Party. It used the ‘economic plank’ of its 2003 political
programme to promote its anti-Russian and anti-communist agenda, as well as
economic protectionism, while its 2007 pre-election programme ignored economic
issues altogether.38 Moreover, the Freedom Party expresses its readiness to sacrifice
‘social justice’, which has allegedly been an important element of its doctrine since the
times of the SNPU, for the pursuit of a ‘Greater Ukraine’. When asked how the party
might fund one of its would-be projects, namely the resumption of Ukraine’s
membership in the nuclear club, Andrii Ill’yenko, deputy head of the Kyiv’s party
local organisation, replied that, for these purposes, Ukraine could reduce social
welfare!39
At the same time however, the Freedom Party has indeed been efficient in
reflecting the protest attitudes of Ukrainian citizens and their concerns over political
corruption. The party leaders consider their radical right-wing project a political
alternative to ‘the crisis of parliamentarianism and seizure of power by the oligarchic
clans, who deprived the people of any possibility to influence the processes in the
country’ (Petrunya 2008). According to the Freedom Party, one of the instruments
for fighting political corruption would be the implementation of lustration policies,
which would purge the Ukrainian political system and administrative machine of
38
‘Prohrama VO ‘‘Svoboda’’’, available at: http://www.svoboda.org.ua/pro_partiyu/prohrama/,
accessed 17 June 2009; Holos Ukrainy: hazeta Verkhovnoi Rady Ukrainy, 20 September 2007, p. 5.
39
Comments made by Andrii Ill’yenko at a formal public meeting with a group of students, 15 May
2009, Kyiv, Ukraine.
THE RESURGENCE OF THE UKRAINIAN RADICAL RIGHT 221
‘komunisty-kadebisty-kuchmisty’ (communists, KGB agents, and adherents of
Kuchma). Another instrument would be polygraph testing of government employees
and candidates for elective office. Furthermore, they argue, the ethnic composition
of government office-holders at all levels should conform to the ethnic composition
of a given region. As it might be expected, the Freedom Party calls for a return to
the Soviet policy of registering citizens’ ethnicity in internal passports and birth
certificates.40
Without focusing on the proposed controversial instruments of fighting the political
corruption and alienation from politics, it can be argued that the Freedom Party’s
employment of populist anti-establishment strategies plays a crucial role in voter
mobilisation.41 This may be corroborated by examining the background of social
attitudes, against which the Freedom Party won the Ternopil regional council
elections in March 2009 (see Figure 1).
As Figure 1 shows, the Ukrainian parliament and the ruling elites never enjoyed
strong public support. In 2008, their support dropped to 1.4% and continued to
decline in March 2009 to 0.6%, while dissatisfaction with the performance of the
Verkhovna Rada dramatically rose to 69.3% in 2008 and to 70.3% in March 2009. The
decline of trust in the parliament can be attributed to the inability of the ruling elites to
provide an adequate response to the 2008–2009 global financial crisis. Moreover, in
September 2008, two ‘Orange’ coalition parliamentary groups, Nasha Ukraina—
Narodna samooborona (Our Ukraine—People’s Self-Defence, NU-NS) and the BYuT,
started clashing with each other over the scope of presidential powers, and Prime
Minister Tymoshenko was accused of colluding with the ‘anti-Orange’ Partiya rehioniv
(Party of Regions, PoR). Andrii Parubii, a former leader of the SNPU, who switched
to the NU after the ‘Orange Revolution’, added fuel to the fire by claiming: ‘We will
soon witness the betrayal of national interests by the new coalition [of the BYuT and
PoR]’.42 In Western Ukraine, the alleged collusion of these two forces and the
ambiguous gas agreements reached by Tymoshenko in Moscow resulted in a loss of
public trust in the BYuT, which had won the 2007 early parliamentary elections in the
majority of the Western Ukrainian regions. Tyahnybok himself acknowledged the role
that Tymoshenko played in the Freedom Party’s landslide victory in the Ternopil
region: ‘It was Tymoshenko’s friendship with the ‘‘Russian tsars’’ Medvedev and
Putin that impacted most on Galician voters. It was the worst blow for them, which
backfired on the Tymoshenko bloc and helped us’ (Open Society Foundation 2009).
Second, a radical right-wing party’s success always depends on the domestic
political environment, which can be permissive or restrictive to the radical nationalist
cause (Art 2006; Eatwell 2003; Mudde 2007, pp. 243–48), and important aspects of the
political environment are political culture and the party system. Is Ukrainian political
culture conducive or hostile to the radical right? To answer this question, I shall
40
Holos Ukrainy: hazeta Verkhovnoi Rady Ukrainy, 20 September 2007, p. 5.
41
Corruption remains a significant problem for Ukraine. According to the 2008 Corruption
Perceptions Index report issued by Transparency International, Ukraine ranked 134th out of 180
countries, thus showing the worst result in at least 10 years (Transparency International 2008).
42
‘BYuT and Regions have divided posts in new cabinet—Our Ukraine lawmaker claims’, Zakhidna
informatsiina korporatsiya, 8 September 2008, available at: http://zik.com.ua/en/news/2008/09/08/
149203, accessed 19 June 2009.
222 ANTON SHEKHOVTSOV
Source: Adapted from ‘Chi pidtrymuyete Vy diyal’nist’ Verkhovnoyi Rady Ukrayiny? (dynamika, 2000–
2009)’, Razumkov Centre, 27 February–5 March 2009, available at: http://www.uceps.org/ukr/
poll.php?poll_id=68, accessed 19 June 2009.
FIGURE 1. PUBLIC SUPPORT OF THE PERFORMANCE OF THE VERKHOVNA RADA (%)
consider the thesis according to which the existence of a political culture permissive to
the radical right is conditioned by the prior existence of a strong nationalist
subculture. In this view, when radical right-wing parties emerge they are viewed
as part of a nationalist tradition rather than completely novel political actors
(Art 2006, p. 10).
In interwar Ukraine, as briefly outlined earlier, there was a strong fascist subculture
represented by the OUN and the intellectual milieu around the organisation. It may be
argued therefore that the Freedom Party is part of the existing nationalist tradition
and, therefore, could be seen as a legitimate political actor. Furthermore, we should
acknowledge that the claims to the OUN’s legacy made by the post-Soviet Ukrainian
radical right-wing parties are reasonable not only in organisational and ideological
terms, but also in terms of political culture. However, in assessing these claims one
cannot ignore the fact that the OUN’s activities were virtually limited to the Western
Ukrainian regions and therefore the political culture in Western Ukraine may be more
permissive to the Freedom Party’s agenda than that in the other regions. This
assumption receives some support from empirical studies (see Figure 2).
To a certain degree, Figure 2 confirms the argument of Andreas Umland (2008b,
p. 34), who asserts that one of the factors, which reduces the Ukrainian radical right-
wingers’ chances of success, is ‘the division of Ukraine into the Western part, on the
one hand, and the Eastern and Southern parts, on the other, . . . where the nature of
Ukrainian nation and its interests are perceived differently’. Taking this assumption
into consideration, it should be added that positive popular attitudes towards national
radicalism in the south-eastern part of Ukraine (7.1% on average) do not necessarily
imply positive attitudes towards radical ethnic Ukrainian nationalism, espoused by the
THE RESURGENCE OF THE UKRAINIAN RADICAL RIGHT 223
Source: Adapted from ‘U politychnomu spektri vyriznyayut’sya okremi, bil’sh abo mensh samostiini
techiyi. Skazhit’’, bud’’ laska, yak Vy stavytesya do navedenykh ideologichnykh techii? (regional’nyi
rozpodil)’, Razumkov Centre, 19–25 June 2008, available at: http://www.uceps.org/ukr/poll.php?poll_
id=375, accessed 20 June 2009.
FIGURE 2. POPULAR ATTITUDES TOWARDS NATIONAL RADICALISM IN DIFFERENT PARTS OF
UKRAINE (%)
Freedom Party and the likes. On the contrary, in case of eastern and southern regions
it is more correct to speak of radical pan-Slavic, Neo-Eurasianist or (pro-)Russian
nationalism.
As far as the Ukrainian party system is concerned, in comparison to the ‘pre-
Orange’ period, when the polarised party system was restrictive to the radical right, it
may be argued that contemporary developments in Ukrainian politics indicate that the
party system is currently rather conducive to the Freedom Party. Since the KUN and
UNA withdrew from the 2007 early parliamentary elections and practically did not
participate in the electoral process afterwards, Tyahnybok’s party is now the only
organisation active in the radical right-wing niche within the party system of
contemporary Ukraine. This niche has evidently become available in the years
following the ‘Orange revolution’. The ‘Orange’–‘anti-Orange’ confrontation notwith-
standing, during the period 2005–2009, the Ukrainian party system has been
characterised by centripetal party competition. The gradual decline of the pro-
presidential NU (as well as now former President Yushchenko himself) and the 2008–
2009 negotiations on a grand coalition of the BYuT and PoR have raised the spectre
of a two-party-system. According to Kitschelt, such developments may be considered
as one of the conditions for the rise of far-right parties. In particular, he argues that
‘the radical right can establish itself most successfully where conventional mainstream
parties have ‘‘converged’’ in their policies on positions that are distant from those held
by potential radical right voters’ (Kitschelt 2007, p. 1184). However, after Yushchenko
failed to be re-elected as president in 2010, it may be that he will draw radical right-
wing votes away from the Freedom Party, as he has evidently become more radicalised
to the right during and after the presidential campaign. On 22 January 2010,
224 ANTON SHEKHOVTSOV
Yushchenko posthumously awarded the ‘Hero of Ukraine’ to Stepan Bandera. This
act of his as outgoing president drew sharp criticism from, among others, the
European Parliament, Polish President Lech Kaczyn´ski, the Simon Wiesenthal Center
and the Anti-Defamation League, but was embraced by Ukrainian radical nationalists
and a large number of national democrats. Yushchenko’s controversial move can be
seen as an attempt at building a new base of supporters, partially ‘stolen’ from the
Freedom Party (European Parliament 2010; Kaczyn´ski 2010; Simon Wiesenthal
Center 2010; Anti-Defamation League 2010).
However, the most important problem of the Freedom Party concerns its
organisational efficiency. Although the party has been in existence since the early
1990s, it suffered a severe organisational crisis in the early 2000s and eventually lost
most of its members. By the 2004 convention, which reorganised the SNPU into the
Freedom Party, there were less than 1,000 members. In 2009, the party declared a
membership of 15,000,43 and although it seems to be an exaggeration, there is no
doubt that the party has steadily grown in number since 2004. However, if we do take
the declared membership at face value—making necessary allowance for the fact that
the number of active members is considerably less—it is still too small for the efficient
operation of the party. First of all, it is indubitable that ‘the greater the number of
party members is, the greater will be their ability to mobilise potential radical right
voters’ (Art 2008, p. 423). This is especially the case for the Freedom Party: since it
does not have enough funding to efficaciously promote its agenda through the mass
media or hire professional political advisers, the whole burden of electioneering falls
on the rank and file. In this situation, the party is limited in its possibilities to compete
with major political parties like the BYuT or PoR, which are officially backed by
Ukrainian business oligarchs.
Funding is an urgent problem of the Freedom Party. According to Tyahnybok, in
2006, the party established an ‘economic council’, which consists of representatives of
small and medium-sized businesses. The majority of them are members of the party
and provide much of the financial support for the organisation.44 This allows the party
to be financially independent, but a serious question remains whether this
independence can indeed meet all the needs of the Freedom Party.45
Another organisational problem of the Freedom Party is practical leadership and
party management at the local level. Oleh Tyahnybok is obviously a charismatic and
pragmatic leader, but he cannot clone himself to fill in the leadership gaps in the
regions. The Freedom Party claims to have local organisations in all the Ukrainian
administrative regions, but virtually none of them has a leader able to combine high
managerial competence and authority. On the one hand, this situation allows
43
Comments made by Andrii Ill’yenko at a formal public meeting with a group of students, 15 May
2009, Kyiv, Ukraine; ‘Istoriya VO ‘‘Svoboda’’’, available at: http://www.svoboda.org.ua/pro_partiyu/
istoriya/, accessed 10 June 2009.
44
Korrespondent, 14, 17 April 2009.
45
Quite naturally, various sources assert that the Freedom Party was covertly funded by the business
magnates and/or politicians close to the now former President Yushchenko’s administration, who were
willing to reduce the popular support for the BYuT in Western Ukraine. (At the time of writing,
however, this information cannot be substantiated.) If it is true, funding from these sources is
apparently very limited.
THE RESURGENCE OF THE UKRAINIAN RADICAL RIGHT 225
Tyahnybok to avoid factionalism, ‘a perennial problem for far-right parties’ (Marcus
2000, p. 35). Yet, on the other hand, the absence or poverty of efficacious practical
leadership in the regions impairs the party’s chances of mobilising voters at the
national level.
At present, the Freedom Party remains a regional party. In the European context,
there is only one rather successful regional far-right party, the Northern League,
which can be appropriately compared to the Freedom Party.46 Both parties maintain
their regional strongholds, ‘Padania’ and Western Ukraine, and—due to their
exclusionary nationalist rhetoric—receive an icy welcome in the Mezzogiorno and
south-eastern Ukraine respectively. Unlike the Freedom Party, however, the
Northern League is an organisationally strong body that can compensate for its
electoral vulnerability resulting from its regional status with operational efficiency
(Bull & Gilbert 2001). At the same time, the Freedom Party is evolving, and its
electoral record reveals a slow but steady annual increase in popular support. The
enduring political crisis in Ukraine as well as the global financial crisis play into
Tyahnybok’s hands, as do the ideological convergence of the mainstream political
actors and the Freedom Party’s privileged status of the only active radical right-wing
party in the country. Considering the low threshold required for parliamentary
representation in Ukraine, there is a strong and disturbing possibility that the
Freedom Party will set up the first overtly nationalist parliamentary group in the
Verkhovna Rada, thus constituting a new landmark of the resurgence of the radical
right in Ukraine.
University of Northampton
References
All-Ukrainian Population Census 2001, State Statistics Committee of Ukraine (2001) ‘Linguistic
Composition of the Population’, available at: http://www.ukrcensus.gov.ua/eng/results/general/
language/, accessed 3 June 2009.
Anti-Defamation League (2010) ‘ADL Calls On New Ukrainian President To Withdraw ‘‘Hero’’ Title
Bestowed By Predecessor On Nazi Collaborators’, 11 March, available at: http://www.adl.org/
PresRele/HolNa_52/5714_52.htm, accessed 14 March 2010.
Armstrong, J. A. (1963) Ukrainian Nationalism (New York, Columbia University Press).
Art, D. (2006) ‘The European Radical Right in Comparative-Historical Perspective’, American
Political Science Association, Philadelphia, 31 August–3 September, available at: http://ase.
tufts.edu/polsci/faculty/art/europeanRadicalRight.pdf, accessed 24 November 2010.
Art, D. (2008) ‘The Organizational Origins of the Contemporary Radical Right: The Case of Belgium’,
Comparative Politics, 40, 4, pp. 421–40.
Avksent’yev, M., Aizvazovs’ka, O., Belyi, D., Besedina, Y. & Bohrentsova, N. (2007) Ukrayina: rik
pislya vyboriv. Monitorinh regioniv (Kyiv & Lviv, Vydavnytstvo ‘Ms’).
BBC Ukrainian (2008) ‘Ofitsiiny rezultaty vyboriv do Kyivrady’, 28 May, available at: http://www.
bbc.co.uk/ukrainian/domestic/story/2008/05/080528_kyivrada_elex_results_sp.shtml, accessed 15
June 2009.
46
The Vlaams Blok (Flemish Bloc) was another successful regional radical right-wing party, but the
seat distribution rules in the Ukrainian parliament and the Belgian Chamber of Representatives are too
different to allow meaningful comparison. In Belgium, there are 11 electoral districts. For each of
them, the number of seats in the Chamber of Representatives is proportional to the population of a
given district. Eventually, the Flemish Bloc was not ‘obliged’ to have any electoral support outside
Flanders to enter the parliament.
226 ANTON SHEKHOVTSOV
Betz, H.-G. (1994) Radical Right-Wing Populism in Western Europe (New York, St. Martins Press).
Betz, H.-G. (2003) ‘The Growing Threat of the Radical Right’, in Merkl, P. H. & Weinberg, L. (eds)
(2003) Right-Wing Extremism in the Twenty-First Century (London, Frank Cass Publishers).
Birch, S. (1997) ‘Nomenklatura Democratization: Electoral Clientelism in Post-Soviet Ukraine’,
Democratization, 4, 4, pp. 40–62.
Birch, S. (2000) Elections and Democratization in Ukraine (Basingstoke, Macmillan).
Bredies, I., Umland, A. & Yakushik, V. (eds) (2007a) Aspects of the Orange Revolution III: The
Context and Dynamics of the 2004 Ukrainian Presidential Elections (Stuttgart & Hannover,
ibidem).
Bredies, I., Umland, A. & Yakushik, V. (eds) (2007b) Aspects of the Orange Revolution IV: Foreign
Assistance and Civic Action in the 2004 Ukrainian Presidential Elections (Stuttgart & Hannover,
ibidem).
Bredies, I., Umland, A. & Yakushik V. (eds) (2007c) Aspects of the Orange Revolution V: Institutional
Observation Reports on the 2004 Ukrainian Presidential Elections (Stuttgart & Hannover, ibidem).
Bull, A. C. & Gilbert, M. (2001) The Lega Nord and the Northern Question in Italian Politics
(Houndmills & New York, Palgrave).
Burds, J. (1997) ‘AGENTURA: Soviet Informants’ Networks and the Ukrainian Rebel Underground
in Galicia, 1944–1948’, East European Politics and Societies, 11, 1, pp. 89–130.
Carter, E. L. (2005) The Extreme Right in Western Europe: Success or Failure? (Manchester,
Manchester University Press).
Central Election Commission of Ukraine (2002) ‘Tyahnybok Oleh Yaroslavovych’, available at: http://
www.cvk.gov.ua/pls/vd2002/WEBPROC3V?kodvib¼400&kodkand¼3380, accessed 11 June 2009.
D’Anieri, P. (2001) ‘Democracy Unfulfilled: The Establishment of Electoral Authoritarianism in
Ukraine’, Journal of Ukraine Studies, 26, 1–2, pp. 13–36.
D’Anieri, P. & Kuzio, T. (eds) (2007) Aspects of the Orange Revolution I: Democratization and Elections
in Post-Communist Ukraine (Stuttgart & Hannover, ibidem).
Dontsov, D. (1926) Natsionalizm (Lviv, Nove zhyttya).
Dontsov, D. (2001) ‘Pidstavy nashoyi polityky’, in Dontsov, D. (2001) Tvory, Vol. 1 (Lviv, Kal’variya).
Eatwell, R. (1992) ‘Towards a New Model of Generic Fascism’, Journal of Theoretical Politics, 4, 2,
pp. 161–94.
Eatwell, R. (2003) ‘Ten Theories of the Extreme Right’, in Merkl, P. H. & Weinberg, L. (eds) (2003)
Right-Wing Extremism in the Twenty-First Century (London, Frank Cass Publishers).
European Parliament (2010) ‘Resolution on the situation in Ukraine’, 25 February, available at: http://
www.europarl.europa.eu/oeil/file.jsp?id¼5839482, accessed 14 March 2010.
Gaivanovich, I. (2004) ‘Oleh Tyahnybok: ‘‘Mne by ne khotelos’, chtoby moi vzglyady i moya pozitsiya
navredili Yushchenko’’’, Ukrainskaya Pravda, 31 March, available at: http://pravda.com.ua/rus/
news/2004/03/31/4377947/, accessed 7 January 2011.
Givens, T. E. (2005) Voting Radical Right in Western Europe (New York, Cambridge University Press).
Golobuts’kyi, O. & Kulyk, V. (1996) ‘Derzhavna Samostiinist’ Ukrayiny’, in Yakushyk, V. (ed.) (1996)
Politychni partiyi Ukrayiny (Kyiv, Kobza).
Griffin, R. (ed.) (1998) International Fascism: Theories, Causes and the New Consensus (London,
Arnold).
Griffin, R. (2000) ‘Interregnum or Endgame? The Radical Right in the ‘‘Post-Fascist’’ Era’, Journal of
Political Ideologies, 5, 2, pp. 163–78.
Griffin, R. (ed.) (2007) Modernism and Fascism: The Sense of a Beginning under Mussolini and Hitler
(Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan).
Griffin, R., Loh, W. & Umland, A. (eds) (2006) Fascism Past and Present, West and East. An
International Debate on Concepts and Cases in the Comparative Study of the Extreme Right
(Stuttgart & Hannover, ibidem).
Harasymiw, B. in collaboration with Ilnytzkyj, O. S. (eds) (2007) Aspects of the Orange Revolution II:
Information and Manipulation Strategies in the 2004 Ukrainian Presidential Elections (Stuttgart &
Hannover, ibidem).
Kaczyn´ski, L. (2010) ‘Os´ wiadczenie ws. nadania Stepanowi Banderze tytułu Bohatera Ukrainy’, 4
February, available at: http://www.prezydent.pl/aktualnosci/najnowsze-informacje/art,1173,
oswiadczenie-ws-nadania-stepanowi-banderze-tytulu-bohatera-ukrainy.html, accessed 4 March
2010.
Karbovych, Z. (1951) ‘Dvi revolyutsiyi (Z privodu herois’koyi smerti hen. Tarasa Chuprynky)’, Surma,
27 April, pp. 6–8.
Kas’yanov, G. (2005) ‘Druhyi rozkil OUN: dviikari’, in Kul’chyts’kyi, S. (ed.) (2005) Orhanizatsiya
Ukrayins’kykh Natsionalistiv i Ukrayins’ka povstans’ka armiya: Istorychni narysy (Kyiv, Naukova
dumka).
THE RESURGENCE OF THE UKRAINIAN RADICAL RIGHT 227
Kitschelt, H. (2007) ‘Growth and Persistence of the Radical Right in Postindustrial Democracies:
Advances and Challenges in Comparative Research’, West European Politics, 30, 5, November,
pp. 1176–206.
Kitschelt, H. with McGann, A. (1995) The Radical Right in Western Europe: A Comparative Analysis
(Ann Arbor, University of Michigan Press).
Kubicek, P. (1999) ‘What Happened to the Nationalists in Ukraine?’, Nationalism and Ethnic Politics,
5, 1, pp. 29–30.
Kucheruk, A. (2005) Ryko Yaryi—zagadka OUN (Lviv, Piramida).
Kuzio, T. (1997) ‘Radical Nationalist Parties and Movements in Contemporary Ukraine before
and after Independence: The Right and Its Politics, 1989–1994’, Nationalities Papers, 25, 2,
pp. 211–42.
Kuzio, T. (ed.) (1998) Contemporary Ukraine: Dynamics of Post-Soviet Transformation (Armonk, M.E.
Sharpe).
Kuzio, T. (2005) ‘Regime Type and Politics in Ukraine under Kuchma’, Communist and Post-
Communist Studies, 38, 2, pp. 167–90.
Kuzio, T. (ed.) (2007) Aspects of the Orange Revolution VI: Post-Communist Democratic Revolutions in
Comparative Perspective (Stuttgart & Hannover, ibidem).
Kyrychuk, Y. A. (2002) ‘Teror i teroryzm u Zakhidniy Ukrayini’, in Smoliy, V. A. (ed.) (2002)
Politychnyi teror i teroryzm v Ukrayini, XIX–XX st.: Istorychni narysy (Kyiv, Naukova dumka).
Lagzi, G. (2004) ‘The Ukrainian Radical National Movement in Inter-War Poland—The
Case of Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists’, Regio–Minorities, Politics, Society, 1,
pp. 194–206.
Leshchenko, L. (2008) ‘The National Ideology and the Basis of the Lukashenka Regime in Belarus’,
Europe-Asia Studies, 60, 8, pp. 1419–33.
Levyns’kyi, V. (1936) Ideolog fashyzmu: zamitky do ideologii Dmytra Dontsova (Lviv, Nakladom
Hromads’koho golosu).
Lindheim, R. & Luckyj, G. S. N. (1996) Towards an Intellectual History of Ukraine: An Anthology of
Ukrainian Thought from 1710 to 1995 (Toronto, Toronto University Press in association with the
Shevchenko Scientific Society).
Magocsi, P. R. (1996) A History of Ukraine (Toronto, University of Toronto Press).
Magocsi, P. R. (2002) The Roots of Ukrainian Nationalism: Galicia as Ukraine’s Piedmont (Toronto,
University of Toronto Press).
Makhorkina, A. (2005) ‘Ukrainian Political Parties and Foreign Policy in Election Campaigns:
Parliamentary Elections of 1998 and 2002’, Communist and Post-Communist Studies, 38, 2,
pp. 251–67.
Marcus, J. (2000) ‘Exorcising Europe’s Demons: A Far-Right Resurgence?’, The Washington
Quarterly, 23, 4, pp. 31–40.
Marples, D. R. (2007) Heroes and Villains: Creating National History in Contemporary Ukraine
(Budapest, Central European University Press).
Minkenberg, M. (2002) ‘The Radical Right in Postsocialist Central and Eastern Europe: Comparative
Observations and Interpretations’, East European Politics & Societies, 16, 2, pp. 335–62.
Motyl, A. J. (1980) The Turn to the Right: The Ideological Origins and Development of Ukrainian
Nationalism, 1919–1929 (Boulder, East European Monographs).
Mudde, C. (2000) ‘In the Name of the Peasantry, the Proletariat, and the People: Populisms in Eastern
Europe’, East European Politics & Societies, 15, 1, pp. 33–53.
Mudde, C. (2007) Populist Radical Right Parties in Europe (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press).
Norris, P. (2005) Radical Right: Voters and Parties in the Electoral Market (New York, Cambridge
University Press).
Odnorozhenko, O. (2007) ‘‘‘Svoboda’’ versus ‘‘Patriot Ukrayiny’’’, available at: http://www.
patriotukr.org.ua/index.php?rub¼stat&id¼265, accessed 12 June 2009.
Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (2001) ‘Declaration of the 2001 World Conference
against Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance Declaration’,
available at: http://www.un.org/WCAR/durban.pdf, accessed 7 January 2011.
Open Society Foundation (2009) ‘Oleg Tyahnybok: Tymoshenko’s friendship with ‘‘Russian tsars’’—
Medvedev and Putin—has ruined her reputation’, 18 March, available at: http://www.deputat.
org.ua/eng/vr_interview_1275.htm, accessed 19 June 2009.
Petrunya, A. (2008) ‘Andrei Il’enko: ‘‘Natsizm—eto antipod liberal’noi tsivilizatsii’’’, Stolichnye
Novosti, 29 July–25 August, available at: http://cn.com.ua/N515/politics/exclusive1/index.html,
accessed 19 June 2009.
Razumkov Centre (2005) ‘Yakoyu movoyu Vy rozmovlyayete vdoma? (Kyiv)’, available at: http://
www.uceps.org/ukr/poll.php?poll_id¼391, accessed 15 June 2009.
228 ANTON SHEKHOVTSOV
Razumkov Centre (2008a) ‘Nazvit’ naibil’sh ser’yozni sotsial’no-ekonomichni problemy krayiny,
shcho potrebuyut’ pershocherhovoho vyrishennya’, available at: http://www.uceps.org/ukr/
poll.php?poll_id¼151, accessed 17 June 2009.
Razumkov Centre (2008b) ‘Nazvit’ naibil’sh ser’yozni suspil’no-politychni problemy krayiny, shcho
potrebuyut’ pershocherhovoho vyrishennya’, available at: http://www.uceps.org/ukr/poll.php?
poll_id¼152, accessed 17 June 2009.
Reid, A. (1997) Borderland: A Journey Through the History of Ukraine (London, Weidenfeld and
Nicolson).
Rodgers, P.W. (2006) ‘How Many Ukraines? Regionalism and the Politics of Identity’, in Rodgers,
P. W. (2006) Nation, Region and History in Post-Communist Transitions: Identity Politics in
Ukraine, 1991–2006 (Stuttgart & Hannover, ibidem).
Romanyshyn, O. (ed.) (2006) 65-ta richnytsya progoleshennya Aktu vidnovlennya Ukrayins’koyi
Derzhavy 30 chervnya 1941 roku. Zbirnyk materyaliv i dokumentiv (Kyiv, Ukrains’ka Vydavnycha
Spilka).
Rudling, P. A. (2006) ‘Theory and Practice: Historical Representation of the Wartime Activities of the
OUN-UPA (Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists-Ukrainian Insurgent Army)’, East European
Jewish Affairs, 36, 2, pp. 163–91.
Rudling, P. A. (2011, forthcoming) ‘Anti-Semitism and the Extreme Right in Contemporary Ukraine’,
in Mammone, A., Godin, E. & Jenkins, B. (eds) (forthcoming) Mapping the Extreme Right in
Contemporary Europe: From Local to Transnational (New York & Oxford, Berghahn Books).
Shekhovtsov, A. (2007) ‘By Cross and Sword: ‘‘Clerical Fascism’’ in Interwar Western Ukraine’,
Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions, 8, 2, pp. 271–85.
Simon Wiesenthal Center (2010) ‘Wiesenthal Center Blasts Ukrainian Honor For Nazi Collaborator’,
28 January, available at: http://www.wiesenthal.com/site/apps/nlnet/content2.aspx?c¼lsKWL
bPJLnF&b¼4441467&ct¼7922775, accessed 14 March 2010.
Solchanyk, R. (1999) ‘The Radical Right in Ukraine’, in Ramet, S. P. (ed.) (1999) The Radical Right in
Central and Eastern Europe since 1989 (University Park, Pennsylvania State University Press).
The Stephen Roth Institute for the Study of Contemporary Antisemitism and Racism (2005) ‘Republic
of Ukraine 2005’, available at: http://www.tau.ac.il/Anti-Semitism/asw2005/ukraine.htm, ac-
cessed 12 June 2009.
Streshnev, T. (2006) ‘Partiya ‘‘Svoboda’’: ‘‘Ariitsy’’ na marshe. Chast’ pervaya’, Ukraina kriminal’naya,
16 January, available at: http://www.cripo.com.ua/?sect_id¼1&aid¼13272, accessed 10 June 2009.
Subtelny, S. (2000) Ukraine: A History, 3rd edn (Toronto, University of Toronto Press).
Transparency International (2008) Transparency International, Corruption Perceptions Index 2008,
available at: http://www.transparency.org/policy_research/surveys_indices/cpi, accessed 19 June
2009.
Tyahnybok, O. (2004) ‘Zaraz u politytsi tendentsiya zvodyt’sya do togo, shcho uspishnishim bude toi,
khto efektyvnishe i efektnishe ‘‘kyne’’ svogo partnera’, Zakhidna informatsiina korporatsiya, 25
July, available at: http://zik.com.ua/ua/news/2004/07/25/2593, accessed 12 June 2009.
Tyahnybok, O. (2005) ‘Zayava z privodu rasovo-etnichnykh zavorushen’ u Frantsiyi’, available at:
http://www.tiahnybok.info/dokumenty_zayava/dokument000283.html, accessed 12 June 2009.
Umland, A. (2008a) ‘Die andere Anomalie der Ukraine: ein Parlament ohne rechtsradikale
Fraktionen’, Ukraine-Analysen, 41, pp. 7–10.
Umland, A. (2008b) ‘Kraine slabye’, Korrespondent, 23, 21 June.
Whitmore, W. (2004) State Building in the Ukraine: The Ukrainian Parliament, 1990–2003 (London,
RoutledgeCurzon).
Wilson, A. (1997) Ukrainian Nationalism in the 1990s: A Minority Faith (Cambridge & New York,
Cambridge University Press).