Poltava Oblast Council
Legislature of Poltava Oblast, Ukraine
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Poltava Oblast Council (Ukrainian: Полтавська обласна рада) is the regional oblast council (parliament) of the Poltava Oblast (province) located in central Ukraine.
Poltava Oblast Council | |
|---|---|
| Type | |
| Type | |
| Houses | 1 |
| Leadership | |
Oleksandr Bilenky | |
| Structure | |
| Seats | 84 |
Political groups | Government (51)
Opposition (34)
|
| Elections | |
Last election | 25 October 2020[1] |
| Meeting place | |
| Poltava, Poltava Oblast | |
| Website | |
| http://www.oblrada.pl.ua/ | |
Council members are elected for five year terms. In order to gain representation in the council, a party must gain more than 5 percent of the total vote.[2]
Recent elections
2020
Distribution of seats after the 2020 Ukrainian local elections[3]
- 16 Trust
- 14 Servant of the People
- 13 For the Future
- 12 Fatherland
- 11 Opposition Platform — For Life
- 9 Native City
- 9 European Solidarity
Election date was 25 October 2020[4]
2015
Distribution of seats after the 2015 Ukrainian local elections
- 15 Solidarity
- 13 Fatherland
- 8 Radical Party
- 8 UKROP
- 8 Social-Democratic Party
- 7 Svoboda
- 7 Agrarian Party
- 6 Native City
- 6 Opposition Bloc
- 6 Revival
Election date was 25 October 2015[5]
Chairmen
Regional executive committee
- Panteleymon Zhuchenko (1937–1938)
- Ivan Martynenko (1938–1941, 1943–1950)
- Alexei Koval (1950–1953)
- Nikolai Rozhanchuk (1953–1955)
- Andrei Cherchenko (1955–1959)
- Alexander Muzhitsky (1959–1962)
- Nikolai Kirichenko (1962–1963)
- Maxim Onipko (1963–1964, industrial)
- Stepan Boyko (1963–1964, agrarian)
- Stepan Boyko (1964–1974)
- Grigory Pudenko (1974–1978)
- Grigory Ustimenko (1978–1984)
- Alexei Myakota (1984–1988)
- Ivan Gopey (1988–1992)
Regional council
- Alexei Myakota (1990–1991)
- Ivan Gopey (1991–1994)
- Mykola Zaludyak (1994–1998)
- Oleksandr Poliievets (1998–2002)
- Yevhen Tomin (2002)
- Volodymyr Hryshko (2002–2006)
- Volodymyr Marchenko (acting, 2006)
- Oleksandr Udovichenko (2006–2010)
- Volodymyr Marchenko (2010)
- Ivan Momot (2010–2014)
- Petro Vorona (2014–2015)
- Oleksandr Bilenkyi (since 2015)