Odesa Oblast Council
Odesa Oblast Council | |
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Type | |
Type | |
Houses | 1 |
Leadership | |
Hrihoriy Didenko, Servant of the People | |
Structure | |
Seats | 84 |
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Political groups | Government (57)
Opposition (27)
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Elections | |
Last election | 25 October 2020[2] |
Meeting place | |
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Odesa, Odesa Oblast | |
Website | |
https://oblrada.od.gov.ua/ |
The Odesa Oblast Council (Ukrainian: Одеська обласна рада) is the regional oblast council (parliament) of the Odesa Oblast located in Southern Ukraine.
Council members are elected for five year terms. In order to gain representation in the council, a party must gain more than 5 percent of the total vote.[3]
Recent elections
2020
Distribution of seats after the 2020 Ukrainian local elections
Election date was 25 October 2020[4]
Note: The faction Opposition Platform — For Life ceased to exist on 26 March 2022.[5] 18 deputies joined the newly formed deputy group "Our House Ukraine".[5]
2015
Distribution of seats after the 2015 Ukrainian local elections
- 23 Opposition Bloc
- 22 Solidarity
- 12 Trust the Deeds
- 11 Fatherland
- 8 Revival
- 8 Our Land
Election date was 25 October 2015[6]
Chairmen
Regional executive committee
- Yakov Pakhomov (1932–1933)
- Fyodor Golub (1933–1935)
- Pyotr Boyko (1935–1937)
- Nikolai Volkov (1937, acting)
- Philip Shevtsov (1937, acting)
- Grigory Galchenko (1937–1938)
- Nikifor Kalchenko (1938–1941)
- Iosif Gorlov (1944–1946)
- Konstantin Karavayev (1946–1953)
- Nikolai Gureev (1953–1954)
- Alexander Fedoseev (1954–1958)
- Mikhail Khorunzhiy (1958–1963)
- Mikhail Khorunzhiy (1963–1964, agrarian)
- Konstantin Kovalenko (1963–1964, industrial)
- Mikhail Khorunzhiy (1964–1969)
- Andrei Dudnik (1969–1971)
- Viktor Pokhodin (1971–1985)
- Andrey Pecherov (1985–1990)
- Anatoliy Butenko (1990–1991)
- Rouslan Bodelan (1991–1992)
Regional council
- Rouslan Bodelan (1990–1998)
- Yuriy Kazakov (1998–2000)
- Serhiy Hrynevetsky (2000–2002)
- Volodymyr Novatskyi (2002–2005)
- Serhiy Hrynevetsky (2005)
- Fedor Vlad (2005–2006)
- Mykola Skoryk (2006–2010)
- Mykola Pundyk (2010–2013)
- Mykola Tindyuk (2013–2014)
- Oleksiy Honcharenko (2014)
- Mykhailo Shmushkovych (2014–2015)
- Anatoliy Urbanskyi (2015–2019)
- Serhiy Paraschenko (2019–2020)
- Hryhorii Didenko (since 2020)
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