>Earlier in the day, a cross-party group of 48 lawmakers submitted a different bill to the Verkhovna Rada, Ukraine’s parliament, aimed at restoring the independence of the NABU and SAPO.
>”Tomorrow (the bill) can be voted on,” Yaroslav Yurchyshyn, head of the parliamentary committee on freedom of speech, wrote on Facebook. “Your move, Mr. President.”
It will be interesting to see the outcome of this first bill’s vote. The members know that their previous actions were wildly unpopular. I believe only 26 members voted against the original legislation, and the bill to restore independence has 48 draftees/supporters, so it seems some of them have reversed themselves?
Stuff like this really makes Ukrainians and Ukraine supporters feel like the clown face paint meme. I literally feel sick seeing the hubris of these people testing how much their citizens can stomach before taking to the street.
why the fuck did he accept it first, then
Does anti Graft mean anti corruption?
Three years. For three years, he has fought. For three years, he has sacrificed. For three years, he has given his all and risked all to help Ukraine. One mistake and all of sudden that means nothing?! Maybe he shouldn’t have bothered.
*me waving to all the people on here saying “tHe WaR iS lOsT!!” just a couple days ago*
Remember how pernicious Russian propaganda is? Yeah…
Russian bots, trolls and propagandist have ammunition for next few weeks.
So this strikes me as granting power to rid the agencies of corruption before restoring their autonomy. In Ukraine the Latest they mentioned a PM caught red handed with bribes for anti-draft activities, literally throwing the money out the window of her house as agents arrived. Then for two years no movement has been made on prosecution and she’s still an active PM. If these anti corruption bodies were so effective than can someone explain that situation to me?
I guess we will have to see if Zelensky walks it back after making the necessary moves to restore the integrity of those institutions. If not than I would be concerned.
Anyone have an insight?
the method, I guess, was messy…
Should have been first done as making THIS law to replace the organizations… but, again, bare minimum: Zelensky is listening to the people.
Benefit of the Doubt: This was the plan all along and it was easier to do this due to the compromised agencies…. I’ve giving a lot of leeway on that, the optics are bad despite the end result being “Meh”
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Why make a completely predictable mess first?
Well wtf was the point of that 😂
>Earlier in the day, a cross-party group of 48 lawmakers submitted a different bill to the Verkhovna Rada, Ukraine’s parliament, aimed at restoring the independence of the NABU and SAPO.
>”Tomorrow (the bill) can be voted on,” Yaroslav Yurchyshyn, head of the parliamentary committee on freedom of speech, wrote on Facebook. “Your move, Mr. President.”
It will be interesting to see the outcome of this first bill’s vote. The members know that their previous actions were wildly unpopular. I believe only 26 members voted against the original legislation, and the bill to restore independence has 48 draftees/supporters, so it seems some of them have reversed themselves?
Stuff like this really makes Ukrainians and Ukraine supporters feel like the clown face paint meme. I literally feel sick seeing the hubris of these people testing how much their citizens can stomach before taking to the street.
why the fuck did he accept it first, then
Does anti Graft mean anti corruption?
Three years. For three years, he has fought. For three years, he has sacrificed. For three years, he has given his all and risked all to help Ukraine. One mistake and all of sudden that means nothing?! Maybe he shouldn’t have bothered.
*me waving to all the people on here saying “tHe WaR iS lOsT!!” just a couple days ago*
Remember how pernicious Russian propaganda is? Yeah…
Russian bots, trolls and propagandist have ammunition for next few weeks.
So this strikes me as granting power to rid the agencies of corruption before restoring their autonomy. In Ukraine the Latest they mentioned a PM caught red handed with bribes for anti-draft activities, literally throwing the money out the window of her house as agents arrived. Then for two years no movement has been made on prosecution and she’s still an active PM. If these anti corruption bodies were so effective than can someone explain that situation to me?
I guess we will have to see if Zelensky walks it back after making the necessary moves to restore the integrity of those institutions. If not than I would be concerned.
Anyone have an insight?
the method, I guess, was messy…
Should have been first done as making THIS law to replace the organizations… but, again, bare minimum: Zelensky is listening to the people.
Benefit of the Doubt: This was the plan all along and it was easier to do this due to the compromised agencies…. I’ve giving a lot of leeway on that, the optics are bad despite the end result being “Meh”
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