Elections in Ukraine are held to choose the
President (
head of state) and
Verkhovna Rada (
legislature). The
Ukrainian constitution does not allow holding
Verkhovna Rada elections while martial law is in effect. The president is elected for a five-year term. The Verkhovna Rada has 450 members and is also elected for a five-year term, but may be dissolved earlier by the president in the case of a failure to form a government. The next election to the Verkhovna Rada,
set to be held after the end of martial law due to the Russo-Ukrainian War, will be, for the first time, with different regional
open lists (with again an
electoral threshold of five percent) and a return, and thus abolition of the
constituencies with
first-past-the-post voting, to only one national constituency. From
2012 until the
2019 Ukrainian parliamentary election the Verkhovna Rada was elected using a
mixed election system. Half of the representatives were elected from national
closed party lists distributed between the parties using the
Hare quota with a 5% threshold. The remaining half were elected from
constituencies using
first-past-the-post voting. This system was adopted for the
2012 elections and was also used for the
2014 election, as a new draft law moving to electing all members using
open party lists failed to gather necessary support in the Rada. According to current law, the next election to the Verkhovna Rada Ukraine's election law forbids outside financing of political parties or campaigns. Presidential candidates must have had residence in Ukraine for the past ten years prior to election day. Since late February 2016 a party congress is allowed to remove any candidate from its party list before the Central Election Commission recognizes him or her elected. Meaning that parties after elections can prevent their candidates to take a seat in parliament that they were entitled to due to their place on the party list. A party is (since late February 2016) also allowed to excluded people from its electoral list of the last parliamentary elections. In Ukraine political campaigning outside election campaign periods is prohibited.
Local elections Under the
Constitution of Ukraine, the term of office of the heads of villages and towns and the council members of these villages and towns is five years.
Past legislation The parliamentary election law has been changed four times from 1991 to 2015. Before 1998 all the members of the Parliament were elected by single-seat
constituencies (from each electoral district). In 1998 and in 2002 half of the members were elected by
proportional representation (faction vote) and the other half by single-seat constituencies. In the
2006 and
2007 parliamentary election, all 450 members of the Verkhovna Rada were elected by
party-list proportional representation with
closed lists (the same goes for local elections). In the
2010 Ukrainian local elections four years was set for the office of the heads of villages and towns and the council members of these villages and towns. ==Voting patterns==