From September until November 2001, Yatsenyuk served as an acting
Minister of Economy of
Crimea, and from November of the same year until January 2003, served as the official Minister of Economy of Crimea. Yatsenyuk then headed talks about Ukrainian membership in the
World Trade Organization. For example he signed the
U.S. – Ukraine WTO Bilateral Market Access Agreement, a precursor agreement that paved the way to the full accession of Ukraine on 16 May 2008. From 20 September 2006, he served as the first vice-president of the Head of
Secretariat of the President of Ukraine, and the representative of the president in the
Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine.
Foreign Minister of Ukraine (2007) Yatsenyuk was proposed for the post of foreign minister by the
president of Ukraine,
Viktor Yushchenko. Yatsenyuk was confirmed by the
Verkhovna Rada (parliament) on 21 March 2007 with 426 votes (from 450 maximum). In his April 2007 remarks made to the
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace he commented that the Ukrainian transition to a
market economy was a success. In July 2007 while he was still foreign minister, Yatsenuk started the
Open Ukraine Foundation, which he intended to become an international foundation for the "strengthening and development of Ukraine's reputation in the world." On 4 December 2007, Yatsenyuk was elected the chairman of the Parliament. His candidacy was the only one in the ballot, and he obtained 227 votes in favor (from the democratic coalition; opposition abstained from the voting). In early 2008, Yatsenyuk co-wrote along with Tymoshenko and Yushchenko the so-called "letter of three" to NATO, in which they asked for a
Membership Action Plan with a view to joining the Alliance. At the beginning of 2008 the work of the Rada was blocked for two months due, according to at least one observer, to this letter. (the vote was proposed by opposition party
Party of Regions). On 12 November 2008, a total of 233 of 226 required deputies satisfied the resignation statement of Yatsenyuk and thus dismissed him from his post of Chairman of the Verkhovna Rada. The voting was carried out through the parliaments voting system and not by means of secret ballots, as stipulated by the parliamentary regulations. After his dismissal Yatsenyuk told journalists that he will form a new political force "for change in the country." On 21 November 2008, Yatsenyuk was also dismissed by
President Viktor Yushchenko from the
National Security and Defense Council.
2010 presidential campaign . On 16 December 2008, Yatsenyuk announced plans to create a political party on basis of the
Front of Changes public initiative. In an interview with
Den on 4 February 2009, he claimed to have no allies among the contemporary politicians. Polls held in the last months of 2008 suggested a political party led by Yatsenyuk would pass the 3 percent election threshold in a
Ukrainian parliamentary election. On 5 April 2009, Yatsenyuk announced his candidacy for
President of Ukraine in the
next presidential election. During the election, campaign fellow candidate
Serhiy Ratushniak repeatedly insulted Yatsenyuk because of his alleged Jewish roots. Among other things, Ratushniak called Yatsenyuk an "impudent little Jew" who was "successfully serving the thieves who are in power in Ukraine and is using criminal money to plough ahead towards Ukraine's presidency." Yatsenyuk's presidential campaign was estimated to cost about $60–$70 million. On 13 January 2010, Yatsenyuk stated that his election campaign had cost ₴80 million and that "The number of my advertising posters is ten times less than that of all of my political opponents"; Yatsenyuk claimed that funds from his election budget were mainly spent on his appearances on television. After the elections, Yatsenyuk wanted to dissolve the
Verkhovna Rada because, in his view, it would prevent him from working. He also stated in November 2009 that the
Yulia Tymoshenko Bloc and the
Party of Regions were "almost a single whole". In late November 2009, he stated he was not interested in "using his votes as bargaining material" for a high political post. On 21 February 2010, President Yanukovych offered three candidates for
Prime Minister of Ukraine:
Serhiy Tihipko, Yatsenyuk and
Party of Regions lawmaker
Mykola Azarov. However, Yatsenyuk declined this proposal to hold a high post in the new cabinet after the
Ukrainian parliament adopted an
amendment on 9 March 2010, which enabled independent lawmakers to take part in forming a majority coalition, instead of only parliamentary factions; Yatsenyuk disapproved of this amendment. Instead he called for
early parliamentary elections: "Unconstitutional attempts by parliamentarians to form a coalition and a government would deepen the political crisis and the crisis of statehood as such". To be premier in a coalition with
communists was unacceptable for Yatsenyuk. Yatsenyuk formed an oppositional government in March 2010, next to another oppositional government headed by
Bloc Yulia Tymoshenko, opposing the Azarov Government. In April 2010, Yatsenyuk was officially chosen as party leader of
Front for Change; by that time the public initiative had become a political party also.
Parliament faction leader at a press conference of Yatsenyuk in
Mykolaiv During the
October 2012 Ukrainian parliamentary election, Yatsenyuk competed on a party list based on the party
All-Ukrainian Union "Fatherland". Yatsenyuk stressed in April 2012 "Front of Changes existed and will exist" but also hinted the same month the alliance could lay basis for one single party. The party competed on one single party under "umbrella" party
"Fatherland", together with several other parties, during the October 2012 parliamentary elections. During the election, this list won 62 seats (25.55% of the votes) under the proportional party-list system and another 39 by winning 39 simple-majority constituencies; a total of 101 seats in Parliament. Yatsenyuk headed this election list because "Fatherland"-leader
Yulia Tymoshenko was imprisoned. Yatsenyuk was elected leader of the parliamentary faction of "Fatherland" on 12 December 2012. On 15 June 2013, his Front for Change (party) merged into "Fatherland".
Prime minister First term (February–August 2014) Yatsenyuk was designated as the new prime minister of the
Yatsenyuk Government following the
2014 Ukrainian revolution that removed former president
Viktor Yanukovych from power. After his appointment, Yatsenyuk started to distance himself and his government from
Russia, which accepted
Crimea as an integral part of the Russian Federation after a disputed referendum there in response to the insurrection on Maidan Square and the ouster of Yanukovych. He described his government as being on a "kamikaze" mission. On 21 March 2014, Ukraine signed the political part of the
Association Agreement with European Union with the economical part of the treaty to be signed after the
presidential election in May 2014. The day before, Yatsenyuk was replaced (due to his new position) as his party's faction leader in parliament by
Sergei Sobolev. Earlier that day the coalition supporting his
Yatsenyuk Government had collapsed, after parliament failed to pass legislation to increase military financing and regulate energy matters. Yatsenyuk had told parliament "History will not forgive us ... how are we to pay wages, how are we tomorrow morning going to send fuel for armoured vehicles, how will we pay those families who have lost soldiers, to look after the army?" During his announcement of resignation in parliament Yatsenyuk hinted that the coalition had collapsed because politicians did not want to be seen involved in making
budget cuts and had thus placed "political interest above the fate of the country"; according to him this was "a moral and an ethical crime". However, his resignation had yet to be officially accepted by
parliament and they did not do this the day after his resignation. Instead MPs decided that their next meeting will be on 31 July 2014. On 25 July 2014, the remainder of Cabinet had appointed Deputy Prime Minister for Regional Policy –
Minister of Regional Development, Construction and Housing and Communal Services of Ukraine Volodymyr Hroisman as acting prime minister. On 31 July 2014, the Verkhovna Rada declined his resignation because only 16 (of the 450) MPs voted for his resignation. In September 2014, Yatsenyuk started the new party
People's Front. The party won 82 seats in the August
2014 Ukrainian parliamentary election.
Second term (August 2014 – April 2016) and Arseniy Yatsenyuk Yatsenyuk was confirmed as prime minister at the first session of the new parliament by 341 votes. In July 2015 Yatsenyuk announced with Canadian prime minister
Steven Harper the successful conclusion of the
Canada-Ukraine Free Trade Agreement. February 2016 saw the start of Yatsenyuk's downfall as the prime minister of Ukraine after economy minister
Aivaras Abromavičius announced his resignation claiming the government did not have a real commitment to fight
corruption. On 16 February 2016, President
Petro Poroshenko asked Yatsenyuk to resign and later on the same day, the Ukrainian parliament voted to find the work the Ukrainian cabinet was doing under Yatsenyuk unsatisfactory, but rejected calls for a vote of no confidence. On 17 and 18 February 2016, Fatherland and Self Reliance left the coalition supporting Yatsenyuk's government, meaning the coalition became 5 deputies short of the 226 needed. On 10 April 2016, Yatsenyuk announced that he would report to parliament on 12 April and resign as prime minister. But parliament did not hold a vote on his resignation that day because (Yatsenyuk's party)
People's Front and
Petro Poroshenko Bloc could not agree on the forming of a new government. On 14 April 2016, parliament did hold a vote on his resignation resulting in Yatsenyuk being replaced by the new prime minister,
Volodymyr Groysman, and his
Groysman government.
Post-premiership 2017 On 2 December 2016
Oleksandr Onyshchenko, former Ukrainian MP, told
The Independent that he had organized and funded a smear campaign against Yatsenyuk and his government (in Onyshchenko's own words, with "$30 million" of unclear origin). According to Onyshchenko, then-President Poroshenko had initiated this anti-Yatsenyuk defamation campaign, and benefited from it politically. In August 2017, Yatsenyuk acquired 30% of
Goldberry LLC, the owner of
Espreso TV. In December 2017, Yatsenyuk sold his share of the Espresso TV channel to an American company. In 2020, using the Index for Monitoring Reforms, compared the performance of the last four Ukrainian Cabinets. VoxUkraine claimed that Yatsenyuk's second government had made the most progress in governmental reforms, including anti-corruption ones, as laws on a number of anti-corruption bodies were adopted at that time. During the
Prelude to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Yatsenyuk called Russia the "biggest threat" and criticized Zelenskyy's handling of the crisis. On the July 2022 signing of the
Black Sea Grain Initiative, Yatsenyuk told
Times Radio that "I don't trust any kind of deal signed with the Russian Federation, we had dozens of different deals, and they always violate them." And within hours after Defence Minister
Sergei Shoigu's signature on the UN-brokered deal to resume Ukraine's Black Sea grain exports, a missile had hit the
Port of Odesa. In his August 2022
Times Radio interview Yatsenyuk alleged that the
Russian Armed Forces intended to use the winter weather against Ukraine. At the time, Russia controlled almost half of the Ukrainian energy supply when the Russian seizure of the
Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant was added to their control of the
Naftogaz supply. ==Political positions==