Ukraine PM Yulia Tymoshenko resists calls to concede presidential election and resign
By APThursday, February 11, 2010
Ukraine PM Tymoshenko resists calls to concede
KIEV, Ukraine — Ukraine’s embattled Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko appeared in public for the first time in days Thursday but still resisted calls to concede defeat in the presidential election and resign her post.
Tymoshenko, looking tense but determined, appeared before the media for the first time since Sunday’s election to chair a government meeting. She did not comment on the elections directly but took a swipe at the pro-Russian opposition leader Viktor Yanukovych, who defeated her by a margin of 3.5 percentage points, according to the final preliminary vote count.
Her refusal to admit defeat signals that Tymoshenko is digging in for a long power struggle with Yanukovych.
“It is already obvious today that nobody from Yanukovych’s team has any intention of raising social standards,” Tymoshenko told the government meeting. “Already, after the election, we are starting to discover huge pre-election deceptions and people should factor that into their future political calculations.”
Yanukovych’s victory was a repudiation of the 2004 Orange Revolution, when Tymoshenko and the outgoing President Viktor Yushchenko led weeks of mass demonstrations against the rigged election won by Yanukovych.
The Supreme Court eventually ordered a revote, which Yushchenko won, unseating Yanukovych and pushing him into the opposition.
But Yanukovych has capitalized on the vicious antagonism between Yushchenko and Tymoshenko that ensued soon after they took power. Their bickering has often paralyzed the government over the past five years and prevented the Orange leaders from staving off an economic collapse last year.
Yanukovych’s Party of Regions is now attempting to form a new coalition in parliament.
Thousands of his supporters continued to rally outside the Central Election Commission on Thursday in an attempt to forestall any attempt by Tymoshenko to call her own supporters into the streets. It is not clear that many would follow that call by Tymoshenko.
“I came to the (2004) demonstrations. But that won’t happen again,” Stanislav Krasnov, a 52-year-old security guard, told The Associated Press. “No one will come out onto the streets for her now. She’d be standing here by herself.”
Analysts say Tymoshenko’s strategy now appears aimed at undermining Yanukovych’s attempts to consolidate power and enact legislation.
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Associated Press Writers Peter Leonard and Yuras Karmanau contributed to this report.