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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  



1.1  Formation  





1.2  Fall  







2 Composition  





3 References  














Marchuk government






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Marchuk Government

4th Cabinet of Ukraine (since 1991)
Date formed8 June 1995
Date dissolved27 May 1996
People and organisations
Head of stateLeonid Kuchma
Head of governmentYevhen Marchuk
Deputy head of government
  • Petro Sabluk
  • Mykhailo Zubets
  • Ivan Kuras
  • Roman Shpek
  • Viktor Pynzenyk
  • Vasyl Yevtukhov
  • Oleksandr Yemets
  • Anatoliy Kinakh
  • Status in legislatureMajority
    History
    Outgoing election27 March 1994
    Incoming formationSecond Masol government
    Outgoing formationFirst Lazarenko government
    PredecessorVitaliy Masol
    SuccessorPavlo Lazarenko

    The Marchuk government was formed on 8 June 1995 under the leadership of Yevhen Marchuk. It was the first of two governments (along with the First Lazarenko government) to be appointed directly by President Leonid Kuchma. It was the fourth cabinet formed since Ukraine's independence from the Soviet Union, after the Fokin government, Kuchma government, and Second Masol government.

    History

    [edit]

    Formation

    [edit]

    The Marchuk government was appointed directly by President Leonid Kuchma on 3 March 1995 in an acting capacity,[1] and was subsequently appointed in a full capacity as Prime Minister on 8 June 1995 after the collapse of the Second Masol government.[2] Having previously been appointed as First Deputy Prime Minister of Ukraine, Marchuk was the first of two prime ministers to be appointed directly by the President, along with Pavlo Lazarenko. Marchuk's government also had decreased powers after the 1995 Ukrainian constitutional agreement [uk].[3]

    Fall

    [edit]

    Soon after the government's establishment, tensions between Marchuk and Kuchma began to increase as Marchuk prepared for a presidential campaign of his own against Kuchma in 1999. Kuchma cited in his dismissal of Marchuk the worsening state of Ukraine's economy, Marchuk's focus on bolstering his political image, the fact that deputies are forbidden from holding political office, but this was regarded by Marchuk's allies as an effort to push him out of power.[4]

    Composition

    [edit]

    President Leonid Kuchma appointed each member of the Marchuk government by presidential decree, bypassing the process of nominating them through the Verkhovna Rada.

    On 1 December 1995, Serhii Poliakov [uk] became Minister of the Coal Industry.[5] Mykhailo Zubets [uk] also became Deputy Prime Minister for the agro-industrial complex on 29 March 1996.[6]

    Logo Office Incumbent[7]
    Prime Minister Yevhen Marchuk
    First Deputy Prime Minister Pavlo Lazarenko
    Deputy Prime Minister (Agro-industrial complex)
  • Mykhailo Zubets
    (from 29 March 1996)
  • Deputy Prime Minister (Humanitarian policy) Ivan Kuras
    Deputy Prime Minister (Economic policy) Roman Shpek
    Deputy Prime Minister (Economic reforms) Viktor Pynzenyk
    Deputy Prime Minister (Fuel-energy complex) Vasyl Yevtukhov
    Deputy Prime Minister (Political and legal issues) Oleksandr Yemets
    Deputy Prime Minister (Industrial policy) Anatoliy Kinakh
    Minister of Internal Affairs Yuriy Kravchenko
    Minister of Foreign Affairs Hennadiy Udovenko
    Minister of Foreign Economic Relations and Trade Serhii Osyka
    Minister of Finance Petro Hermanchuk
    Minister of Defence Valeriy Shmarov
    Minister of Social Policy Arkadii Yershov
    Minister of Justice Serhiy Holovatyi
    Minister of Healthcare Yevhen Korolenko
    Minister of Education Mykhailo Zghurovskyi
    Minister of Energy and Electrification Oleksii Sheberstov
    Minister of the Coal Industry
  • Serhii Poliakov
    (from 1 December 1995)
  • Minister of Forestry Valerii Samoplavskyi
    Minister of Fisheries Mykola Shvedenko
    Minister of Industry Valerii Mazur
    Minister of Economy Vasyl Hureiev
    Minister of Transport Ivan Dankevych
    Minister of Press and Information Affairs Mykhailo Onufriichuk
    Minister of Communications Valerii Yefremov
    Minister of Agriculture and Food Pavlo Haidutskyi
    Minister of Environmental Protection and Nuclear Safety Yuriy Kostenko
    Minister of Culture and the Arts Dmytro Ostapenko
    Minister of Youth and Sports Valeriy Borzov
    Minister of Emergency Situations Volodymyr Kholosha
    Minister of Statistics Mykola Borysenko
    Minister of Labour Mykhailo Kaskevych
    Minister of Nationality and Migration Volodymyr Yevtukh
    Minister of Mechanical Engineering, the Military-Industrial Complex, and Conversion Valerii Maliev
    Minister of the Cabinet of Ministers Valeriy Pustovoitenko

    References

    [edit]
    1. ^ "УКАЗ ПРЕЗИДЕНТА УКРАЇНИ про призначення Є. Марчука прем'єр-міністром України" [ACT OF THE PRESIDENT OF UKRAINE on the appointment of Ye. Marchuk as Prime Minister of Ukraine]. President of Ukraine. 3 March 1995. Retrieved 4 September 2023.
  • ^ "УКАЗ ПРЕЗИДЕНТА УКРАЇНИ про призначення Є. Марчука прем'єр-міністром України" [ACT OF THE PRESIDENT OF UKRAINE on the appointment of Ye. Marchuk as Prime Minister of Ukraine]. President of Ukraine. 3 March 1995. Retrieved 4 September 2023.
  • ^ Kapsamun, Ivan (7 August 2023). "«Спокійна сила»" ["Quiet Power"]. The Day (Kyiv) (in Ukrainian). Retrieved 4 September 2023.
  • ^ "Ukraine President Fires Premier Over Economy". Los Angeles Times. 28 May 1996. Retrieved 4 September 2023.
  • ^ "Поляков Сергій Васильович" [Poliakov, Serhii Vasylovych]. Chesno (in Ukrainian). Retrieved 4 September 2023.
  • ^ "Зубець Михайло Васильович" [Zubets, Mykhailo Vasylovych]. Chesno (in Ukrainian). Retrieved 4 September 2023.
  • ^ Acts of the President of Ukraine, No. 511/95–No. 535/95, 664/95–665/95, 691/95–694/95, 883/95, 886/95, 935/95, 222/96–223/96

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Marchuk_government&oldid=1178705799"

    Categories: 
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    This page was last edited on 5 October 2023, at 10:12 (UTC).

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