Civil Network OPORA analyzed how many deputies of Oblast and city councils managed to be re-elected in 2020.

Oblast Councils

In total, of the 1,659 Oblast council deputies, as little as 477 had been the elects in the previous convocation, according to the Central Election Commission. Thus, in 2020, 28.75% of deputies only were re-elected to Oblast councils.

However, in different regions of Ukraine, the “success stories” of the deputies varied. Thus, the most conservative Oblast council in this regard was in Ivano-Frankivsk where 44% of the deputies from the previous convocation were re-elected in 2020. The data is more modest in Zhytomyr, Khmelnytskyi, and Cherkasy Oblast councils – 37.5%.

On the other hand, under 25% of deputies were re-elected to 4 of 22 Oblast councils: Poltava – 23.8%, Vinnytsia – 22.6%, Zaporizhzhia – 21.4%, and Dnipropetrovsk – only 20%.

At the same time, in numerical terms, Kharkiv Oblast council had the most of re-elected new deputies – 38.

Oblast Council

% of re-elected

Ivano-Frankivsk

44.1

Zhytomyr

37.5

Khmelnytskyi

37.5

Cherkasy

37.5

Transcarpathia

32.8

Rivne

31.8

Kharkiv

31.7

Sumy

29.7

Ternopil

29.7

Chernihiv

29.7

Kirovohrad

28.1

Kyiv

27.4

Lviv

27.4

Odesa

27.4

Volyn

25

Mykolayiv

25

Kherson

25

Chernivtsi

25

Poltava

23.8

Vinnytsia

22.6

Zaporizhzhia 

21.4

Dnipropetrovsk

20

City Councils of Oblast Centers

The situation is similar with the re-election of deputies for city councils in Oblast centers. Here, 30.8% of deputies, 385 persons of 1,248 ran for re-election (for Kyiv Oblast, we accounted for Bila Tserkva, for Donetsk Oblast – for Kramatorsk).

The highest trust levels are enjoyed by city council deputies of Ivano-Frankivsk – 47.6% of deputies come from the previous convocation. The numbers are slightly lower in Sumy city council – 45.2%, Dnipro city council – 43.75%, and Odesa city council – 40.6%.

Again, the city councils that have been updated the most are in Poltava – only 14.3% of deputies from the previous convocation, Cherkasy – 14.3%, and Mykolayiv – 11.1%.

In numerical terms, the leaders in the number of re-elected deputies are found in the capital city – 46 of the 120 mandates.

City Council

% of re-elected

Ivano-Frankivsk

47.6

Sumy

45.2

Dnipro

43.8

Odesa 

40.6

Lviv

39.1

Kyiv

38.3

Kropyvnytskyi

35.7

Vinnytsia

31.5

Zhytomyr

31

Ternopil

31

Zaporizhzhia

29.7

Rivne

28.6

Khmelnytskyi

28.6

Chernivtsi

28.6

Chernihiv 

28.6

Kramatorsk

28.6

Kharkiv 

27.4

Uzhgorod

26.3

Lutsk

26.2

Bila Tserkva

23.8

Kherson

22.2

Poltava

14.3

Cherkasy

14.3

Mykolayiv 

11.1

City Councils in Ukraine’s Cities

In addition, OPORA analysts examined the changes in the membership of councils in 141 cities in Ukraine, from the former category of “Oblast capital status cities.” Of the 5,089 incumbent deputies, 1,464 (28.8%) used to be the deputies in the previous convocation.

In total, 50% and above of the deputies were re-elected to five city councils: Druzhkivka (Donetsk region) – 55.9%, Izmail (Odesa region) – 55.3%, Marhanets (Dnipropetrovsk region), Truskavets (Lviv region), and Ochakiv (Mykolaiv region) – 50% in each.

On the other hand, under 10% of deputies won the elections for the second time in four cities: Kryvyi Rih (Dnipropetrovsk Oblast) – 9.3% (5 deputies), Uman (Cherkasy Oblast) – 7.9% (3), Selidove (Donetsk Oblast) – 7.7% (2), and Mohyliv-Podilskyi (Vinnytsia Oblast) – 2.9% (one deputy only – Bznuni Karen Burtelovych).

More detailed lists of all cities and the indicators thereon are available at the link.

For information. The data used by the Civil Network OPORA in the report were collected in machine-assisted way from the website of the Central Election Commission for 2015 and 2020 . The method could have impacted their completeness and accuracy.