Redbrickbear said:
sombear said:
Redbrickbear said:
sombear said:
Redbrickbear said:
sombear said:
In 2014 the polls in the east clearly showed they did not want to join Russia.
It was always a pro-Russian region but still interested in saying in Ukraine.
The protests/riots in Kyiv seemed to have changed that..
[However, the Euromaidan, or Revolution of Dignity, which began in the fall of 2013 and ended with President Yanukovych fleeing to Russia on or about February 24, 2014, upset Crimea's political equanimity. Anti-Maidan street demonstrations began, with some publicly calling for Russia to intervene and take Crimea under its wing.
Such sentiments spread among Crimeans with unnatural speed…
Referendum and Annexation:
A much-disputed referendum took place in Crimea and Sevastopol in March 2014, barely a month after the Euromaidan ejected Yanukovych. With high voter turnout, the official tally was 95 percent in favor of Crimea integrating with Russia…]
Further proof is that unbeknown to most, pro-Russian political parties never did well in the east.
The riots changed nothing. The referendums were jokes.
Party of Regions is the political party that Zelensky banned for being "pro-Russian"
It did well in the East and South electorally
yanukovych had is best percentage support in Donbas and Crimea
You either didn't know (which I suspect and understand) or purposefully got this all wrong, which, despite all our debates, is not like you.
Just a few key points. (Sorry, I'm late for dinner!)
Party of Regions was not considered one of the true pro-Russia parties until the very end.
VY ran strongly pro-West campaign.
1. Party of Regions was always the party favored by the ethnic Russian or Russian speaking population of Ukraine
It's electoral strong holds on election maps show which areas were more interested in friendly relations with Moscow.
Of course the party itself never advocated merging these regions with Russia but it's a good indicator of generally support for pro-Russian relations
2. That just brings up another question on why Zelensky the great "hero of democracy" banned the party when it was never a secessionist party.
3. Yanukovych ran a neutral campaign. Closer economic relations with the EU. But keeping relations good with Russia and no NATO membership.
(A reasonable political compromise position and yet still DC wanted him overthrown)
Yushchenko wants the Ukraine to join Nato, but Yanukovych's Regions party, which carries the vote in Crimea an autonomous republic of Ukraine on the northern coast of the Black Sea wants to keep Nato out, and a referendum on keeping Russian as an official language there.
If Ukraine joins Nato, the presence of Russia's large naval fleet in the Crimea would be in jeopardy, and the area would come under Nato command.]
Fair response. In my rush, if I wasn't clear, my main point was that if you study Ukrainian history, there are clear pro-Russian parties. They worked very hard to grow in the east but failed miserably.
Yes, POR was strong in the east. But, again, it was nowhere near a pro-Russian party.
As for the ban, again, read up on it. It's a poor analogy, but it's almost like comparing today's democrats with the old southern democrats, but even oceans wider apart. The POR of 2023 truly was POR in name only. All the traditional PORs moved to different parties. Russian seps basically just assumed the name. It became barely an asterisk. A tiny group of agitators whose platform was simply to support Russia.
As for VY, it was complicated. Remember, his predecessor openly supported joining NATO, and Russia said or did little about it (BTW, exhibit #1123 proving none of this was ever about NATO). VY took more of a middle ground, and most observers thought it was a political calculation, but regardless, that's what he did. He mostly spoke highly of NATO and emphasized alliances with NATO but opposed joining.
VY mostly aligned with the west throughout his career and far more so during his last campaign. That is why it was so shocking when he did his infamous 180.