As his popularity fades Volodymyr Zelensky culls his cabinet

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  1. !ping UKRAINE

    >ON WEDNESDAY UKRAINEā€™S parliament convened to approve an unexpected wave of resignations. It was the start of President Volodymyr Zelenskyā€™s first major wartime shake up, a merry-go-round of promotions and dispatches to irrelevance. The president had wanted a quick show to bamboozle his way to the headlines. The result, which saw even members of his own party mocking the proceedings, and three of the seven votes failing, hinted at increasing dysfunction within the government.

    >Those lined up for dismissal included heavyweights. Two deputy prime ministers, Iryna Vereschuk and Olga Stefanishyna. The justice minister, Denys Maliuska. The charismatic, ponytailed head of the ministry of strategic industries, Oleksandr Kamyshin. Environment minister, Ruslan Strilets, and the head of the State Property Fund, Vitalii Koval. Perhaps the best known of those departing is Dmytro Kuleba, the long-time foreign minister. Explaining his reshuffle, Mr Zelensky said the country needed a ā€œnew structure.ā€ He will not have missed the massive drop in government popularity registered by polls in recent months. With elections cancelled during the war, this was one of the only levers he could pull.

    >Tensions between the president and his foreign minister have been growing since the start of full-scale invasion in 2022. Before then, the two menā€™s careers dovetailed. Mr Zelensky pulled the nerdy diplomat from relative obscurity in 2019, first making him deputy prime minister, then foreign minister. A sharp communicator with rounded glassesā€”more Harry Potter than John Lennonā€”and Vivienne Westwood ties, Mr Kuleba became respected among foreign diplomats in Kyiv and in the West. But in the end his sophisticated diplomacy did not always align with the raw and emotional rhetoric of his boss.

    >To the presidentā€™s office, the complaint was that Mr Kuleba avoided getting his hands dirty. ā€œThey think he just liked to collect victories,ā€ says one MP from the presidentā€™s bloc. ā€œHe doesnā€™t see things through.ā€

    >Insiders suggest Mr Kulebaā€™s fate was sealed in April when Andriy Sybiha, rumoured to be his replacement, was moved from the presidentā€™s office to become a deputy minister. Several sources close to the president suggested that pressure from Americaā€™s State Department prevented the switch from happening then. With election season underway in America, the focus is now elsewhere, one source notes.

    >American pressure does however appear to be behind another change in Mr Zelenskyā€™s top team, with Rostyslav Shurma, an influential but controversial presidential adviser, stepping away from his backroom role. Oleksandr Kamyshin, the outgoing minister of strategic industries, is expected to take over part of Mr Shurmaā€™s portfolio. In normal times, the move from minister to presidential adviser could be seen as a demotion. Insiders say that in a time of the increased power of the presidential office, the opposite is true. Two sources suggest that Herman Smetanin, the 32-year-old head of Ukraineā€™s state defence company is likely to replace Mr Kamyshin at the ministry.

    >Given the centralisation that has already happened during wartime, the ministerial changes are unlikely to have a serious impactā€”either on the government or the front lines in eastern Ukraine, which are looking increasingly precarious. Several sources, however, describe the changes as a further consolidation of power around Volodymyr Zelenskyā€™s influential chief of staff Andriy Yermak. ā€œThey had loyal people around them,ā€ says Yaroslav Zhelezhnyk, an opposition MP. ā€œBut they now have even more loyal ones.ā€ ā– 

  2. According-Barracuda7 on

    This are not going well for Ukraine right now and there really isnā€™t a short term solution right now.

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