First Tymoshenko Government | |
---|---|
10th cabinet of Ukraine (since 1990) | |
Date formed | February 4, 2005 |
Date dissolved | September 8, 2005 |
People and organisations | |
Head of state | Viktor Yushchenko |
Head of government | Yulia Tymoshenko |
Deputy head of government | Anatoliy Kinakh |
No. of ministers | 22 |
Member party |
Yulia Tymoshenko Bloc NUNS Socialist Party of Ukraine PPPU |
Opposition party | Communist Party of Ukraine |
Opposition leader | Petro Symonenko |
History | |
Predecessor | First Yanukovych government |
Successor | Yekhanurov government |
The first Tymoshenko Government was appointed on February 4, 2005 by 373 Parliamentarians of the Verkhovna Rada (Ukrainian Parliament). It was supported (also by) opposition factions' Parliamentarians, including three Communists, 18 Social Democratic Party of Ukraine (united) members, 46 Regions faction members.
On September 8, 2005, Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko sacked the entire government after both Deputy Prime Minister Mykola Tomenko and presidential chief of staff Oleksandr Zinchenko spoke out that the government was "riddled with corruption".
Increased salaries, pensions, scholarships;
Fulfilled one of the paragraphs of social program from Yushchenko’s election agenda on support for new families: in 2005 a social aid for a newborn child was increased 12 times;
“Contraband stop” campaign was launched. The campaign was accompanied by eradication of shadow schemes in business;
Call for nationalization and re-privatization of more than 3000 enterprises. Eventually the government nationalized and then re-privatized country’s biggest metallurgical plant “Kryvorizhstal”. In October 2005 it was sold for $4 billion to a new owner, which was an impressive amount compared to $8.5 billion received by the government from privatization between 1991 and 2004;
On June 16, 2005 president Viktor Yushchenko, speaker of the Verkhovna Rada Volodymyr Lytvyn and Yulia Tymoshenko signed a memorandum on guarantees of ownership rights and ensuring lawfulness for their implementation. According to Yushchenko, “Ukrainian government brought murky privatization practice to the end”;
In April–May 2005 Ukraine faced so called “meat, sugar and petrol crises” when prices for the abovementioned products went up by 30-50% over a couple of weeks. These crises allegedly resulted from a cartel conspiracy and it took Tymoshenko’s government about 1.5 months to get the prices down to the initial level with the help of “goods intervention” mechanism;