Serhiy Ratushniak

Summary

Serhiy Mykolayovych Ratushnyak (Ukrainian: Сергій Миколайович Ратушняк; born February 17, 1961) is a former[2] long-term Mayor of Uzhhorod, former People's Deputy of Ukraine and he was a self-nominated candidate in the 2010 Ukrainian presidential election.[3] During the election Ratushnyak received 0.12% of the votes.[4]

Serhiy Ratushnyak
Mayor of Uzhhorod
In office
1994–2002
In office
2006–2010
People's Deputy of Ukraine
In office
2002–2006
Personal details
Born
Serhiy Mykolayovych Ratushnyak

(1961-02-17) 17 February 1961 (age 63)[1]
Uzhhorod, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union
Political partyIndependent, former parties include: Hromada, For United Ukraine, Our Ukraine, Regions of Ukraine, People's Party[1]

Biography edit

Ratushniak was born in Uzhhorod, Ukrainian SSR.[1] He entered politics in 1994 after creating RIO, a syndicate of enterprises engaged in beverage sales, the production of cured meats and taxi service. Ratushnyak was charged in 2000 with embezzlement, but released after the charges were dropped.[5]

Ratushniak was elected Mayor of Uzhhorod in the 1994 Mayoral elections with 70% of the vote.[6] In 1998 he registered as a candidate for the 1998 Ukrainian parliamentary election, but his registration was revoked shortly before the election.[6] In the 1998 Uzhhorod Mayoral elections he was reelected with 77% of the vote.[6] Ratushniak was a member of the Zakarpattia Oblast Council from July 2000 to April 2002.[6] In the 2002 Ukrainian parliamentary election he was elected to parliament in constituency 70 as a self-nominated candidate, he simultaneously was reelected as Mayor, but he choose to be a People's Deputy of Ukraine.[6] In parliament he joined various factions: "Democracy", "Democratic Initiatives", For United Ukraine, Our Ukraine, Regions of Ukraine until in 2005 he settled on People's Party.[6] In the 2006 Mayoral elections he was reelected Mayor of Uzhhorod as a candidate of this party.[6] He headed the Zakarpattia Oblast regional People's Party organisation until September 2009.[6]

In the 2010 Ukrainian presidential election Ratushniak was a self-nominated candidate.[3] In August 2009, Ratushnyak was alleged to have beaten a female campaigner of fellow presidential candidate, Arseniy Yatseniuk (Front of Change)[7] A criminal case was soon opened against Ratushniak, he was accused of hooliganism, abuse of office and the violation of racial and national equality of citizens,[8] Ratushniak denies the claims.[9] Ratushniak was not previously known to be anti-Semitic.[9] Following his nomination Ratushniak told a local paper that the Jews were to blame for all his country's troubles.[9] Ratushnyak has also called Yatsenyuk "a nasty Jew mason"[5] and 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".[9] The mayor told the Associated Press in a telephone interview: "Is everybody obliged to love Jews and Israel? If I don't like Jews and Israel, does that make me an anti-Semite?".[9] In late December 2009, Ratushniak called on President Viktor Yushchenko to declare war on Somalia; referring to the taking hostage of Ukrainian sailors by Somali pirates.[10] Ratushniak also stated that Americans should atone for killing native Indians before meddling in Ukraine's internal affairs.[10] His election platform included taxing the rich, develop nuclear arms and oblige all Ukrainians to learn another foreign language, apart from Russian.[11] After the first round of the 2010 Ukrainian presidential election where Ratushniak gained only 0.12% of the votes[4] he called upon his voters to support Yulia Tymoshenko against Viktor Yanukovych in the second round: "She will be accepted by the international community and European governments, while every second of those will shut the door in front of Yanukovych."[12]

During the 2010 Mayoral elections, Ratushniak ended in second place.[2]

Ratushniak tried to return to national politics in the 2012 Ukrainian parliamentary election by trying to win, as an independent candidate, single-member districts number 68 (first-past-the-post wins a parliament seat) located in Uzhhorod; but he became second in this district with 19.51% of the votes.[13]

In the 2014 Ukrainian parliamentary election Ratushniak stood again as an independent candidate in the same single-member districts as in 2012; but this time he placed fifth with 7.71% of the votes (winner Robert Horvat of Petro Poroshenko Bloc got 21.58%).[14]

In the 2015 Uzhhorod Mayoral elections Ratushniak as an independent candidate failed win.[15][16] Bohdan Andriyiv (of Revival) won the elections with 58.57% of the votes, Ratushniak received 30.9% of the votes.[15]

Ratushniak did not take part in the 2019 Ukrainian parliamentary election.[17] He had intended to run again in constituency 68, but his candidature was not approved by the Central Election Commission of Ukraine "due to an unmotivated long stay outside Ukraine."[6]

Ratushniak was again a candidate in the 2020 Uzhhorod Mayoral elections.[6] He finished third with 18% of the votes.[18]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c (in Ukrainian) "Ратушняк Сергій Миколайович". zakarpattya.net.ua (in Ukrainian).
  2. ^ a b "Мером Ужгорода обрано Віктора Погорєлова - ZAXID.NET" (in Ukrainian). Archived from the original on 2010-11-10. Retrieved 2011-01-15.
  3. ^ a b Central Election Commission registers Uzhgorod mayor as presidential candidate, Kyiv Post (November 13, 2009)
  4. ^ a b (in Ukrainian) ЦВК оприлюднила офіційні результати 1-го туру виборів, Gazeta.ua (January 25, 2010)
  5. ^ a b Political Pulse: Presidential field takes shape, Kyiv Post (November 11, 2009)
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Eternal candidate: Serhiy Ratushnyak will run for the mayor of Uzhhorod again, Depo.ua (11 September 2020) (in Ukrainian)
  7. ^ Mayor of Uzhhorod alleged to have beaten girl campaigner of Front of Changes, Kyiv Post (August 7, 2009)
  8. ^ Ratushnyak: I'm not xenophobic, but ‘It is not my fault that these Ukrainian billionaires are of Jewish origin', Kyiv Post (August 14, 2009)
  9. ^ a b c d e Anti-Semitic Ukraine mayor to run for president, Jerusalem Post (November 17, 2009)
  10. ^ a b Uzhgorod mayor: We should declare war on Somali, Kyiv Post (December 30, 2009)
  11. ^ Rough-edged Ratushnyak goes nowhere on national platform, Kyiv Post (January 14, 2010)
  12. ^ "Ратушняк призвал своих сторонников поддержать Тимошенко". korrespondent.net.
  13. ^ (in Ukrainian)Single-mandate constituency № 69, Central Election Commission of Ukraine
  14. ^ (in Ukrainian) Candidates and winner for the seat in constituency 68 in the 2014 Ukrainian parliamentary election Archived 2014-12-24 at archive.today, RBK Ukraine
  15. ^ a b Vidrodzhennia Party's Andriyiv wins Uzhgorod mayoral election, Interfax-Ukraine (16 November 2015)
  16. ^ Small biography on Serhiy Mykolayovych Ratushnyak, Civil movement "Chesno" (in Ukrainian)
  17. ^ "Електоральна пам'ять". ukr.vote.
  18. ^ (in Ukrainian) In the second round for Uzhhorod the current mayor and "servant of the people" will fight, Ukrayinska Pravda (3 November 2020)