Following the winter holiday break, the Ukrainian parliament—the Verkhovna Rada—reconvened and, on January 16, passed perhaps the most controversial set of bills in the country’s history. These bills were subsequently signed into law by President Viktor Yanukovych on January 17. The controversial legislation allows the authorities not only to disperse protesters, but also to substantially curtail democracy. Moreover, Yanukovych fired Chief of Staff Serhiy Lyovochkin, who was believed to have opposed the use of force against protesters (http://www.unian.ua/news/61786.... The draconian laws may provide Yanukovych with a minor advantage over opposition parties in the 2015 presidential race. But damage from their passage seems to far exceed this gain as the legislation may spur further deteriorating of democratic governance institutions and thus trigger the further escalation of Ukraine’s political crisis.
The anti-protest laws were passed unexpectedly by the pro-Yanukovych Rada majority, right after a vote on the 2014 State Budget Law, using a simple show of hands instead of the normal electronic voting procedure, which opposition deputies had earlier tried to physically obstruct (http://www.kommersant.ua/doc/2.... The laws forbid virtually all types of tactics that Maidan protesters have been employing successfully: wearing protective gear, helmets and camouflage at rallies; driving cars in protest convoys known as Automaidan; as well as occupying public and civic office buildings. Another law passed that day virtually acquitted the officials and police responsible for the violent November 30, 2013 Maidan crackdown.
These new laws sparked an outcry in Ukraine and a cascade of negative reactions internationally (http://maidantranslations.word.... Former Fatherland party deputy Anatoliy Hrytsenko announced on January 17 that he would leave the Rada in protest over the passage of the undemocratic laws (http://www.unian.ua/news/61772.... One Party of Regions (PR) representative hinted the laws might be put to another vote (http://uapress.info/uk/news/sh..., while PR defector Inna Bohoslovska suggested half of the party’s deputies were “outraged” about being manipulated and not knowing what they had voted for (http://www.pravda.com.ua/news/....
While a society-wide Ukrainian “Solidarity” movement is yet to emerge, radicalism and discontent have been growing. Nonetheless, the current situation in Ukraine after a long holiday season is marked by a worsening position among all the key players. The Maidan protesters have come under growing pressure from the authorities. Their protest camp in Kyiv and the occupied buildings around Independence Square experienced periodic disruptions in utility services during January 5–6, while traffic police and the courts harassed leaders of the Automaidan car rallies in legally dubious ways (http://www.pravda.com.ua/news/.... The impression of a looming crackdown by the authorities point has been growing.
The continued stalemate is also clearly weakening the government’s public support and its negotiating position with Moscow. On January 15, President Yanukovych asked Deputy Prime Minister Yuriy Boiko to speed up joint projects with Russia (http://www.president.gov.ua/ne... sign that they have little chance of being implemented unless Kyiv allows for Russian takeovers of Ukrainian businesses. That same day, Yanukovych also met with Prime Minister Mykola Azarov, emphasizing the need for social spending increases and insisting on a swift passage of the State Budget Law (http://www.president.gov.ua/ne.... The State Budget was, thus, hastily agreed to by the Rada Committee overnight and passed without any questions or comments in the parliament. But the maneuver cast doubt on the wisdom of accepting the Russian financial support and fueled rumors of Yanukovych’s “unwritten covenants” in the Russian debt deal.
In 1857, in an unfinished poem (http://litopys.org.ua/shevchen..., famous Ukrainian poet Taras Shevchenko condemned Tsarist Russia’s suppression of Ukrainian liberties and prophesized the eventual emergence of a Ukrainian George Washington, who would arrive “with a new and righteous law.” Ukrainians still have a long and laborious road ahead to fulfill Shevchenko’s prediction, though their growing determination and ability to learn from their mistakes give reason to be optimistic.