Ukrainian Elections Show Hope for Western Aid Money: Former US Official

© Sputnik / Ramil Sitdikov / Go to the mediabankUkraine's two largest parties each have the support of just over 20 percent of the population, former Assistant Secretary of the Treasury noted
Ukraine's two largest parties each have the support of just over 20 percent of the population, former Assistant Secretary of the Treasury noted - Sputnik International
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The number of elected parties into the new Ukrainian parliament possibly reflects hopes by the Ukrainian politicians to secure a part of Western aid money flowing into Ukraine, former Assistant Secretary of the Treasury Paul Craig Roberts told RIA Novosti.

WASHINGTON, October 27 (RIA Novosti) — The number of elected parties into the new Ukrainian parliament possibly reflects hopes by the Ukrainian politicians to secure a part of Western aid money flowing into Ukraine, former Assistant Secretary of the Treasury Paul Craig Roberts told RIA Novosti.

"Both Poroshkenko and Yatsenyuk are Washington's stooges, and we can conclude that the Ukrainian people have elected Washington's candidates," Roberts said on Sunday. "It seems that Ukrainians concluded that the flow of aid into Ukraine depends on electing Washington"s candidates," he added.

Roberts stressed that Ukrainian parliamentary election "was about bringing foreign money to Ukraine."

"Ukrainians voted for the two candidates most closely connected to Washington's money," he asserted.

The Petro Poroshenko Bloc is leading Ukraine's snap parliamentary elections on Sunday with around 23 percent of the ballot as seven political parties have passed the vote threshold in Ukrainian snap elections on Sunday, according to three exit polls.

Poroshenko's bloc is closely followed by Prime Minister Arseny Yatseniuk's People's Front with some 21.3 percent, the Samopomich (Self-Help) party headed by mayor of Lviv Andriy Sadovy is in the third place with 13.2 percent.

"The far-right party, Svoboda, the militias of which appear to be a main source of violence against the Russian populations in eastern and southern Ukraine, is supported by less than 6 percent of those who voted. In contrast the party of overthrown president Yanukovych was supported by 8 percent of those who voted," Roberts underlined.

"Svoboda was instrumental in fomenting the street violence that led to the fall of Yanukovych's democratically elected government and yet Svoboda's support is less than that of the government that Svoboda helped to overthrow," he added.

Roberts emphasized that Ukraine's two largest parties each have the support of just over 20 percent of the population. "This is not a resounding endorsement," he concluded.

Early parliamentary elections were held in Ukraine on Sunday. Ukrainians went to the polls to vote in 423 members of parliament — 225 of them from party lists and 198 in single-candidate constituencies. The electoral threshold has been set at five percent.

The law on the special status of parts of the Donetsk and Luhansk regions, adopted by Ukraine as part of the Minsk agreements reached in September, stipulates that local elections are to take place on December 7. However, the Donetsk and Luhansk people's republics, laying claims to the whole territory of respective Ukrainian regions, intend to hold their own elections. The two self-proclaimed republics will choose their leaders and parliaments on November 2.

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