Creation In January 2001,
President Leonid Kuchma dismissed Tymoshenko from the post of Deputy Prime Minister for fuel and energy sector in the
cabinet of
Viktor Yushchenko. Following this, and during the
Ukraine without Kuchma-protests, Tymoshenko began the loose organisation the
National Salvation Committee The
Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe noted at the time that there were physical assaults and harassment of candidates and campaign workers associated with the BYuT, and other opposition parties leading up to the March 2002 election. The BYuT itself complained of campaign-related violations including "an informal 'media blackout,' [and] negatively slanted coverage". •
Fatherland Party (''Partiya Bat'kivshchyna
), also rendered as All-Ukrainian Union "Fatherland" (Vseukrajins’ke Ob’ednannja Bat’kivščyna'') (13 berths) •
Ukrainian Republican Party "Sobor" (
Ukrajins’ka Respublikanska Partija Sobor) (3 berths) •
Ukrainian Social Democratic Party (
Ukrajins’ka Social-Demokratyčna Partija) (3 berths) •
Ukrainian Republican Party (
Ukrajinska Respublikanska Partija) (1 berth) • Non-partisan (2 berths) ;Top 10 members The bloc won 7.2% of the popular vote and 22 out of 450 seats. This result was better than expected, because BYuT had limited access to the media and limited support from local authorities. The alliance supported
Viktor Yushchenko during the
Ukrainian presidential election of 2004, and played an active role in the widespread acts of civil non-violent protest that became known as the Ukrainian
Orange Revolution. In January 2005, Tymoshenko became
Prime Minister of Ukraine under Yushchenko's presidency. The party had lost a few seats in 2002 and 2003, but doubled to 40 members of parliament in September 2005.
Electoral breakthrough The BYuT entered the
parliamentary elections on 26 March 2006, with only
Fatherland and
Ukrainian Social Democratic Party after both republican parties left the alliance. Nonetheless, BYuT moved into second place with 22.27% – the party went through a schism before the 2006 elections. The majority of the party led by Anatoliy Mativienko aligned with
Our Ukraine Bloc, while others left the party and stayed with BYuT. After the 2006 elections,
Levko Lukyanenko managed to reinstate the original Ukrainian Republican Party. ;Top 10 members It was widely expected that a coalition between supporters of the
Orange Movement would form Ukraine's next government, but after three months of negotiations and a failure to reach an agreement the proposed coalition collapsed following the decision of the
Socialist Party of Ukraine to support the formation of the "anti-crisis coalition" with
Party of Regions and the
Communist Party of Ukraine. During the
2007 parliamentary elections, the BYuT consisted of: •
All-Ukrainian Union "Fatherland" •
Ukrainian Social Democratic Party •
Reforms and Order Party The
Ukrainian Republican Party "Sobor" was part of the
Our Ukraine–People's Self-Defense Bloc in this election. ;Top 10 members In the parliamentary elections on 30 September 2007, the bloc won 156 of 450 seats (and thus 30.71% of the total votes Most of this vote swing came as a result of consolidation in regions where BYuT had already been the leading party. Statistics published by
Ukraine's Central Electoral Commission indicate that most of the swing came from minor parties with some voters turning away from the
Socialist Party and to a lesser extent
Our Ukraine. On 15 October 2007, Our Ukraine–People's Self-Defense Bloc and the Yulia Tymoshenko Bloc agreed to form a majority coalition in the new parliament of the 6th
convocation. On 29 November, a coalition was signed between the Yulia Tymoshenko Bloc and
Our Ukraine–People's Self-Defense Bloc (OU-PSD) which together had received 45% of the national vote. During the
2008 Ukrainian political crisis the BYuT–OU-PSD coalition faltered. There were negotiations between BYuT and
Party of Regions to form a coalition but after
Volodymyr Lytvyn was elected
Chairman of the Verkhovna Rada (parliament) on 9 December 2008, he announced the creation of a coalition between his
Lytvyn Bloc, BYuT and OU-PSD. Following negotiations, the three parties officially signed the coalition agreement on 16 December. It was unsure if this coalition would stop the snap election although Speaker Volodymyr Lytvyn predicted that the Verkhovna Rada would work until the next scheduled
elections in 2012.
President Viktor Yushchenko's decree to dissolve the Verkhovna Rada (parliament) – made during the 2008 Ukrainian political crisis – was never put into action.
Return to opposition In October 2009, BYuT endorsed
Yulia Tymoshenko, then incumbent
Prime Minister, as their candidate for the
2010 Presidential election. She was not elected. In the second round of the election she lost to
Viktor Yanukovich while gaining 45.47% of the votes; Yanukovich got 48.95% of the votes so Tymoshenko lost by 3.48%. After the fall of the
second Tymoshenko Government on 3 March 2010 (seven BYuT lawmakers had supported the motion of no confidence) BYuT moved into opposition. On 11 March 2010 BYuT appealed to the
Central Election Commission of Ukraine to terminate the parliamentary mandates of six parliamentarians who had joined
the new parliamentary coalition. Ten representative of BYuT joined the coalition supporting the
Azarov Government as an independent MP in April 2010. On 16 March, a shadow government including BYuT was established. It late May 2010, BYuT deputies had to submit new applications for faction membership. On 26 June 2010 the Political Council Presidium of
All-Ukrainian Union "Fatherland" expelled
Oleksandr Feldman, a Verkhovna Rada deputy of the BYuT faction, from the party because he had joined the coalition supporting the Azarov Government the previous month. On 21 September 2010, another 28 members of the faction were officially expelled because they had joined the majority coalition. On 16 November 2010, the ByuT faction was officially renamed "Bloc Yulia Tymoshenko-
Batkivschyna". By late 2010 the BYuT faction consisted of 113 lawmakers of the original 156 elected in September 2007. Most who left BYuT had become members of the "Stability and Reforms" coalition supporting the Azarov Government (17 of these became founding members of
Reforms for the Future in February 2011). Four joined the
Party of Regions faction in October 2010 (followed by five others in March 2011). In early February 2011 seven more deputies were expelled from the faction. On 2 February 2011 party-leader Tymoshenko claimed members of the "Bloc Yulia Tymoshenko-Batkivschyna"-faction had been offered money and places in the election list of the
Party of Regions and have been blackmailed into voting for laws introduced by the Azarov Government. In 2011, the faction of BYuT lost 11 more deputies. On 29 December 2011, it consisted of 102 deputies.
Ukrainian President Yanukovych and the Party of Regions have been accused of trying to create a "controlled democracy" in Ukraine, and as a means to this tried to "destroy" main opposition party BYuT, but both have denied this charges.
Dissolution In November 2011, the participation of blocs of political parties in
parliamentary elections was banned. "Fatherland" and
Reforms and Order Party (with
People's Movement of Ukraine) announced to compete one single party list during the
parliamentary elections in March 2012. On 7 April 2012
Arseniy Yatsenyuk announced his party
Front for Change would join them on this (single) party list. On 15 March 2012, the
Ukrainian Social-Democratic Party was expelled from the bloc for alleged "cooperation with the
presidential administration and
the ruling regime"; the day before the Ukrainian Social Democratic Party party-leader
Natalia Korolevska had been expelled from the "Bloc Yulia Tymoshenko-
Batkivschyna"-faction. The Ukrainian Social-Democratic Party had stated in December 2011 "that we are doing nothing that can harm the Bloc of Yulia Tymoshenko... Our task is to collect the most votes in parliament at the 2012 parliamentary elections". On 22 March 2012 the Ukrainian Social-Democratic Party was renamed
Party of Natalia Korolevska "Ukraine – Forward!". "Fatherland" became the "umbrella" party with an election list that included members of
Reforms and Order Party,
People's Movement of Ukraine,
Front of Changes,
For Ukraine,
People's Self-Defense,
Civil Position and
Social Christian Party. In July 2012, members of the
Mejlis of the Crimean Tatar People joined this list. During the election the list won 62 seats and 25.55% of the votes under the proportional party-list system (falling from 30.71% in
2007 for BYuT The party lost about 2 million voters compared with BYuT's results in the
previous election. By late November 2012 the BYuT faction consisted of 97 lawmakers of the original 156 elected in September 2007. == Ideology ==