Pro-Russia party likely winner in Ukraine

Outcome deals rebuke to West-leaning leaders

Published: Monday, March 27 2006 12:00 a.m. MST

Pro-Moscow opposition leader Viktor Yanukovych and his wife, Lyudmila, leave a polling station in Kiev, Ukraine.

Sergei Chuzavkov, Associated Press

Enlarge photo»

KIEV, Ukraine — A pro-Russia party won the largest chunk of votes in Ukraine's parliamentary elections Sunday, nationwide exit polls indicated, dealing a stinging rebuke to President Viktor Yushchenko's West-leaning administration.

Polling stations shut after 15 hours, but voters who had waited in long lines and managed to get inside before the official closing time were allowed to cast ballots, choosing from more than 45 parties that sought seats in the 450-member parliament.

Viktor Yanukovych, a pro-Moscow opposition leader who lost to Yushchenko in the 2004 presidential election forced by the Orange Revolution street protests, declared his party the winner on Sunday.

"The Party of the Regions has won a convincing victory," Yanukovych said after three exit polls put his party in a comfortable first place. "We are ready to undertake responsibility for forming the Cabinet and we are calling on everyone to join us."

The polls gave Yanukovych's party anywhere from 27.5 percent to 31 percent, followed by Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko's bloc with about 23 percent, and Yushchenko's Our Ukraine bloc with between 14 percent and 16 percent.

Yushchenko's job was not at stake, but the vote was the first since constitutional reforms trimmed presidential powers and gave broader authority to parliament, including the right to name the prime minister and much of the Cabinet.

The victory by Yanukovych's party could potentially give him say over those choices, although he would not have the majority needed to act without parliamentary allies.

There were also indications Yushchenko and Tymoshenko, the flamboyant heroine of the Orange Revolution's protests, might be willing to try to patch over their differences so they could form a governing coalition. But many analysts were skeptical that would happen.

Yushchenko also seemed to hint he might even consider working with Yanukovych.

The president's party has suffered from disillusionment over a sharp economic slowdown and the infighting among former Orange revolution allies. But Yushchenko insisted before voting ended that no matter how his party did, the election was still a victory because it was the most democratic election ever held in Ukraine.

"I feel great. It's the kind of feeling you have before a victory," said Yushchenko, who wore an orange tie and stood beside his Chicago-born wife, Kathy, as he voted at Kiev's Independence Square. "Democratic elections always mean victory."

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