Foreign electoral district of Ukraine

Foreign electoral district of Ukraine electoral district, which unites electoral precincts, that are situated outside the territory of Ukraine, and which comprises all polling station located inside embassies and consulates of Ukraine and inside military bases abroad, where there are Ukrainian peacekeeping contingents (Kosovo and DR Congo).[1] The responsibilities of district election commission for the Foreign electoral district are carried out by the Central Election Commission. In this district only nationwide votings are held, i.e. presidential and parliamentary elections, as well as nationwide referendums. Local elections are not held there.

Foreign electoral precincts of Ukraine
Foreign electoral precincts of Ukraine in Europe

Polling station on ships under the flag of Ukraine, which are being deployed in the day of voting, and the polling station at Vernadsky Research Base in Antarctica, despite actually being outside the territory of Ukraine, are included into usual electoral districts on the territory of Ukraine. A polling station on a ship is included in the district where its port of registry is located,[doc 1] and the polling station at the polar station is included in the district #223 (Kyiv, Shevchenkivskyi District) where the headquarters of the National Antarctic Scientific Center of Ukraine are located.[doc 2][2]

Among diplomatic missions of Ukraine there are not only embassies and consulates, but also missions to international organizations and honorary consulates, but there are no polling stations in them. Apart from embassies and consulates, there is a polling station at the Branch office of the Embassy of Ukraine in Argentina, which is located in the city of Santiago, Chile.

Any citizen of Ukraine without criminal record can apply to be a member of precinct election commission in the Foreign electoral district, with exception to candidates and their representatives, governments officials, including staff of diplomatic missions.[law 1]

In November 2011 the new version of the Law of Ukraine "On Elections of People's Deputies of Ukraine" was adapted, in which the Foreign electoral district was abolished, and all its polling station abroad were evenly distributed among electoral districts in the city of Kyiv. However, in April 2012 Constitutional Court of Ukraine recognized this innovation unconstitutional on a basis that adding foreign polling stations to electoral districts in Kyiv impedes the full reflection of the will of voters who live in Kyiv,[doc 3] so later the Foreign electoral district was brought back to the law.[law 2]

Number of voters and their turnout

As of the day of voting in the first round of 2019 Ukrainian presidential election, there were 552,357 eligible voters (around 1.55% of all eligible voters) in the Foreign electoral district, of them 268 were on the military base in Goma, DR Congo, and 42 on military base in Novo Selo, Kosovo.[1] As of the day of voting of 2019 Ukrainian parliamentary election, there were 102 polling stations in 72 countries of the World, including 5 in Germany, 4 in the United States, Poland and Italy, and 3 in Canada, Spain, Turkey and China.[3][4] The Consulate-general of Ukraine in Milan is the only place in the Foreign electoral district where there are two polling stations.

The Foreign electoral district differs from usual electoral districts by its pretty low turnout (around 10-15% compared to over 50% on the territory of Ukraine, however voters in countries where there is well organized Ukrainian community show a bit higher turnout),[5][6] because of enormous areas of voting precincts which make many voters unable to get to the polling station, and even if they do, they have to stand in very long queues to vote.[7][8] Also, there is an opinion that only a small portion of Ukrainian citizens abroad are included in the lists of voters in Foreign electoral district, due to quite complicated procedure of applying for consular registration and due to many Ukrainians hiding the fact of their staying abroad from Ukrainian authorities.[9][10] Also, to vote in the Foreign electoral district, a person has to visit an embassy or consulate twice: once to register and once to vote.[11]

Differences from usual electoral districts

Electoral process on the Foreign electoral district differs from that in the electoral districts on the territory of Ukraine in many ways. Among differences there are:

  • Electoral districts on the territory of Ukraine were formed in a way that approximately equal number of voters resided in each of them. At the moment of formation of today's electoral districts in 2012, the average number of voters in each district was 161,140.[doc 4] Foreign electoral district with its 552,357 voters clearly does not follow this rule.
  • During parliamentary elections, voters in each electoral district on the territory of Ukraine not only get a ballot with a list of parties elected nationwide, but also get a ballot with a list of candidates to represent their electoral district in the parliament (Ukraine has mixed system of voting, where 225 MPs are elected via nationwide list of parties and 225 are elected one from each electoral district). Voters in Foreign electoral district are only given a ballot with a list of parties.
  • Local elections (elections of city, town and village mayors, elections of village, town, city, district and region councils etc.) are not held in the Foreign electoral district.
  • The Central Election Commission perform the duties of district election commission in the Foreign electoral district, in particular appoints members of precinct election commissions, receives protocols of votes count from them and registers the observers.[law 3]
  • Some role in organizing electoral process in the Foreign electoral district is also played by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, such as taking part in formation of staff of precinct commissions,[law 4] maintains the list of voters in the Foreign electoral district,[doc 5] transfers voting ballots and other voting documentation from Central commission to precinct ones and vice versa.[law 5][doc 6]
  • Just as on usual polling stations in Ukraine, foreign polling stations are opened for voters from 8 to 20 o'clock, but according to local time, not the time in Ukraine.[law 6] The polling station to be opened the earliest is the one at the Embassy of Ukraine in Australia in Canberra. It opens at 23 o'clock of previous day in Ukrainian time. The latest to open is the polling station at the Consulate-general of Ukraine in San Francisco, which opens at 18 o'clock Ukrainian time.[12]
  • Unlike the territory of Ukraine, where electoral precincts are never bigger than a hundred square kilometers and in big cities they can be even smaller than a block, in the Foreign electoral district precincts can contain whole countries or sometimes even considerable parts of continents. That creates a lot of trouble for voters abroad.
  • In the Foreign electoral district voting at the place of residence (for people who due to health problems are unable to visit a polling station personally) is not carried out because of giant sizes of electoral precincts.[law 7]
  • In polling stations abroad voters should present a travel passport, diplomatic passport or service passport to get a ballot, while in polling station in Ukraine voters should present an identity card.[13]
  • While citizens of Ukraine who live in Ukraine are added to lists of voters according to their resident registration, citizens abroad are added to the lists according to the data of consular registration.[14]
  • In countries where there is a significant number of Ukrainian citizens, e.g. Poland, Germany, Moldova, USA or Canada, lists of voters can be as large as tens of thousands people (with the biggest list belonging to a polling station at the embassy in Chisinau — over 50 thousand voters). Meanwhile, on the territory of Ukraine a list of voters in every polling station never exceeds 2,500 people.[15]

Abolishment of foreign polling station of Ukraine in Russia

Foreign electoral precincts of Ukraine to which parts of Russia belong

In 2018 the Central Election Commission, on the submission of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, decided to close all Ukrainian polling stations on the territory of Russia, namely in the embassy in Moscow and in consulates in Saint-Petersburg, Rostov-na-Donu, Yekaterinburg and Novosibirsk.[16] Voters residing in Russia were moved to the polling stations in neighboring countries. North Caucasian and Southern federal districts of Russia were included into the electoral precinct of the Embassy of Ukraine in Georgia, the rest of European Russia into precinct of Embassy of Ukraine in Finland, Asian Russia into precinct of Embassy of Ukraine in Kazakhstan. That was done due to security reasons.[17] Pavlo Klimkin, then the Minister of foreign affairs, said that there are significant security risks, such as law enforcement, administrative and propaganda pressure on voters and election commissions members, possibility of dangerous provocation, infiltration of special services agents into election commissions, intervention of Russian authorities into elections etc. Minister summarized the position of MFA with such a statement:[18]

We believe that holding free and fair elections on the territory of aggressor state is impossible, devoid of political and legal sense, and for those deciding to participate – just dangerous.

This gave rise to Russian media claiming that 2019 Ukrainian presidential election is illegitimate, with arguments that polling stations on the territory of Russia were abolished, and also that Russian observers were denied permission to observe Ukrainian elections.[19]

This decision was challenged in the Supreme Court of Ukraine in January 2019, but the court recognized it legal.[20]

Difficulties with voting abroad

On 2019 Ukrainian presidential election in Foreign electoral district only 59,830 out of 552,357 registered voters used their right to vote, even when there are approximately 6 million Ukrainian citizens listed in state registers as being abroad. Thus, only about 1% of Ukrainian citizens abroad participate in elections.[9] Many Ukrainians living outside Ukraine hide their being there from the Ukrainian officials, with the biggest reasons being frequent statements by politicians about the possibility of introducing taxation for people working abroad and introducing punishment for dual citizenship,[21] as well as distrust of the Ukrainian authorities in general. Those citizens who do decide to vote must either apply to be included into the list of voters at a polling station abroad or apply to be included into consular list at a diplomatic establishment of Ukraine, which will also result in inclusion into the list of voters.[22] In both cases, they have to either send the application by mail, together with the Ukrainian passport and the original residence permit, which is deemed risky,[9] or come to the diplomatic establishment in person. The passport of another state as a proof of residence permit in that state is not eligible, since Ukraine does not recognize other citizenships of its citizens. Therefore, citizens of Ukraine who also have a passport of another state can not achieve being added to the voters list, as well as being added the consular list. Attending an embassy or a consulate in person to register for voting or to vote is a problem for many citizens as they often have to travel long distances.[23] For example, a Ukrainian living in Perth has to travel more than 3,000 km to the embassy in Canberra, and a plane ticket across the continent can cost $800 or more.[24] In addition to the financial component, this trip takes one or even several days. This problem is especially acute in countries with few polling stations and large territories or polling stations covering several major countries, such as Brazil, South Africa, Australia, China. During the election day, huge queues appear in front of polling stations in countries where there are significant presence of Ukrainians, such as Germany, the Czech Republic, the United States, Moldova or Estonia. Due to the low capacity of foreign polling stations, voters have to wait in queue for several hours.[7] Sometimes, it happens that the queue is still there when it is time for the polling station to close, so it has to continue its work for a while.[25] Also, it is often problematic to find people to work in foreign precinct election commissions.[21][10]

Due to the above-mentioned problems, Ukrainians abroad are actively advocating for electronic voting, at least for foreign voters.[26] Opponents of voting over the Internet say that there will be doubts about the honesty of the votes counting, also there will be no way to make sure that the vote was given freely and personally, that is, what if a person voted under supervision of another person, or even under supervision of the special services of the host country. In addition to that, critics of online voting fear numerous votes from Russia, whose honesty will be questioned.[10] Also, voters living abroad ask to introduce an online consular registration system[24] and allow voting by mail.[27][21] Along with that, foreign voters are concerned about the lack of polling stations and offer to open them not only at embassies and consulates, but also at honorary consulates of Ukraine or elsewhere.[28][29] Officials, namely the former Foreign Minister Pavlo Klimkin, point out that the current Ukrainian legislation allows opening polling stations abroad only at embassies and consulates and at military bases, moreover, not all countries would allow opening polling stations outside diplomatic missions.[30] At the same time, Klimkin expressed his full support for the ideas of electronic voting.[31]

Foreign voting in other countries

There are two main approaches in the World to attribute the votes of citizens abroad to a particular constituency: their votes are collected into one (all over the World) or several (each covers a certain part of foreign territory) foreign constituencies, or their votes are somehow attributed to constituencies located in the territory of their nativeland. A single foreign constituency exists in many countries, for example in Bulgaria or in Croatia. Ukrainian voters abroad can not elect majoritarian MPs, unlike many other countries, such as France, Portugal or Croatia.[f 1] In some countries, there are not one but several foreign constituencies, each covering only a specific part of foreign territories. For example, in Portugal there are two foreign constituencies: one includes countries in Europe, the other all countries outside Europe.[f 2] In France, there are 11 foreign constituencies, each comprising several European countries or large parts of other continents.[f 3] Similar "fragmented" foreign constituencies are also found in Italy and Northern Macedonia.

Another approach is to assign votes of citizens abroad to one or more constituencies (usually in the capital) in the territory of their nativeland. This approach was cancelled in Ukraine by the Constitutional Court in 2012 . This approach is used in the Netherlands, where citizens abroad are assigned to The Hague constituency (the Hague mayor is responsible for registering voters abroad);[f 4][f 5] in Poland, where citizens abroad are counted into 19th constituency in Warsaw; in Belarus, where foreign votes are attributed to the 95th Kupalov district in Minsk, in which the MFA of Belarus is located;[f 6] and other countries.

As for the voting itself, depending on the country, citizens either have to personally come to the polling station abroad, or they can vote remotely (by mail or online). Some countries, including Norway[f 7] and Australia,[f 8] allow voters who will be abroad on election day, but who will be at home shortly beforehand, to vote in advance. Citizens of those countries that allow voting only in the polling station should visit their country's diplomatic establishment to vote. An exception is Moldova, whose voters can arrange polling stations anywhere, even in the shop, under certain conditions. Ukrainian legislation allows voting abroad to be held only in the diplomatic missions of Ukraine.[10]

Many countries of the World, unlike Ukraine, provide voters with the opportunity to register in voters lists and to vote by mail (paper or electronic) or online. For example, in Estonia you can vote online,[f 9] and in the United States, depending on the state, voters either receive a paper ballot, fill it out, and send it back, or receive a ballot by email or fax, print it, and send it back, or vote via the Internet.[f 10] Some countries do not even allow citizens abroad to vote. As an example, Israeli citizens can vote only in Israel. Those citizens who are abroad (except diplomats and employees of some government organizations abroad) are not allowed to vote.[f 11] The same, except for elections to the European Parliament, also applies to Ireland.[f 12]

In the United Kingdom, citizens living or temporarily residing abroad are allowed to delegate someone else to vote on their behalf.[f 13] During elections to the European Parliament, a national of one EU member state residing in another EU member state may vote in the country of stay on the same terms as local citizens. For example, an Irish citizen residing in Spain may participate in the elections as a Spanish voter and vote for a party nominated for the EP by Spain.[f 14]

Voting results

Presidential elections

2019

second round
[r 1]
[r 2]

first round
[r 3]
[r 4]
2014
[r 5]
[r 6]
2010

second round
[r 7]

first round
[r 8]

Parliamentary elections

In the Foreign electoral district "pro-European" parties have traditionally had more electoral support than "pro-Russian" ones. For example, in the parliamentary elections of 2012, Svoboda won the most votes, overtaking the Party of Regions by one third of a percent, while the Party of Regions was confidently victorious in the territory of Ukraine, gaining three times as many votes as Svoboda.[r 9] Another example is the fact that the Communist Party of Ukraine has always received fewer votes in the foreign district than in Ukraine. In 2014, the Opposition Bloc won the overwhelming majority in electoral districts in eastern Ukraine, but won only in one electoral precinct in the Foreign electoral district.[r 10]

2019
[r 11]
[r 12]
2014
[r 13]
[r 14]
2012
[r 15]
[r 16]
2007
[r 17]
2006
[r 18]

List of polling stations and precincts

Polling stations abroad are located in all embassies and consulates of Ukraine abroad, except embassies and consulates in Russia , embassies in the Vatican, Indonesia, Iraq, Pakistan, Tajikistan, Angola, Ethiopia, Kenya, Nigeria, Senegal, consulate São Paulo, as well as the embassies in Libya and Syria, which because of ongoing military conflicts, are temporarily situated in Tunisia and Lebanon, respectively.

There are also countries that are not part of any foreign electoral precinct: Iceland, Albania, Bhutan, Laos, North Korea, Papua New Guinea, Haiti, many African countries, including Sierra Leone, Guinea-Bissau, The Gambia, Liberia, Ivory Coast, Burkina Faso, Ghana, Togo, Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, Congo, DR Congo, Chad, Central African Republic, South Sudan, Uganda, Djibouti, Eritrea and Somalia, as well as the numerous Pacific and Caribbean island states.

Polling stations are also located on military bases where there are Ukrainian peacekeeping contingents. Currently, they are the base of Ukrainian peacekeeping forces in Kosovo and the base of the 18th Separate Helicopter Detachment in the DR Congo. Previously, there was also a polling station at the 56th Separate Helicopter Unit of the United Nations Mission in Liberia (polling station #900113). In addition, in the past, there was another polling station at the 18th Helicopter Detachment (polling station #900112) in Bunia in DRC, simultaneously with the station in Goma, which still exists today.

Electoral precincts by number of voters:

The number
of electoral
precinct
Polling station City Territory Number
of voters

[doc 6]
Map
900001Embassy of Ukraine to AustraliaCanberra Australia
 New Zealand
1749 🌍
900002Embassy of Ukraine to AustriaVienna Austria2612 🌍
900003Embassy of Ukraine to AzerbaijanBaku Azerbaijan282 🌍
900004Embassy of Ukraine to AlgeriaAlgiers
 Algeria
 Mali
 Niger
 Nigeria
 Benin
 Gabon
285 🌍
900005Embassy of Ukraine to ArgentinaBuenos Aires Argentina
 Paraguay
 Uruguay
1070 🌍
900006Embassy of Ukraine to BelgiumBrussels Belgium
 Luxembourg
2298 🌍
900007Embassy of Ukraine to the Republic of BelarusMinsk Belarus (central and eastern parts)7284 🌍
900008Consulate of Ukraine in Brest, BelarusBrest Belarus (western part)4850 🌍
900009Embassy of Ukraine to BulgariaSofia Bulgaria2812 🌍
900011Embassy of Ukraine to BrazilBrasília Brazil
 Bolivia
 Guyana
 Suriname
133 🌍
900012Embassy of Ukraine to VietnamHanoi Vietnam216 🌍
900013Embassy of Ukraine to the United KingdomLondon United Kingdom (England and Wales)2950 🌍
900014Consulate of Ukraine in Edinburgh, United KingdomEdinburgh United Kingdom (Scotland and Northern Ireland)174 🌍
900015Embassy of Ukraine to ArmeniaYerevan Armenia403 🌍
900016Embassy of Ukraine to GreeceAthens Greece (southwest part)2804 🌍
900017Consulate of Ukraine in Thessaloniki, GreeceThessaloniki Greece (northeast)1060 🌍
900018Embassy of Ukraine to GeorgiaTbilisi Georgia
 Russia (Caucasian part)
8442 🌍
900020Embassy of Ukraine to DenmarkCopenhagen Denmark2960 🌍
900021Embassy of Ukraine to EstoniaTallinn Estonia4736 🌍
900022Embassy of Ukraine to EgyptCairo Egypt
 Sudan
 Comoros
 Ethiopia
171 🌍
900023Embassy of Ukraine to IsraelTel Aviv Israel
 Palestine
13867 🌍
900025Embassy of Ukraine to IndiaNew Delhi India
 Bangladesh
 Sri Lanka
Nepal
 Maldives
160 🌍
900026Embassy of Ukraine to IranTehran Iran228 🌍
900027Embassy of Ukraine to IrelandDublin Ireland771 🌍
900028Embassy of Ukraine to SpainMadrid Spain (central and northern parts)5029
900029Consulate General of Ukraine in Barcelona, SpainBarcelona Spain (eastern part)5598 🌍
900030Consulate of Ukraine in Málaga, SpainMálaga Spain (southern part)2878 🌍
900031Embassy of Ukraine to ItalyRome Italy (central part)
 Malta
 San Marino
8074 🌍
900032Consulate General of Ukraine in Milan, ItalyMilan Italy (northwest part)6059 🌍
900033Consulate General of Ukraine in Naples, ItalyNaples Italy (southern part)5815 🌍
900034Embassy of Ukraine to JordanAmman Jordan
 Iraq
714 🌍
900035Embassy of Ukraine to KazakhstanNur Sultan Kazakhstan
 Russia (Asian part)
3818 🌍
900037Embassy of Ukraine to CanadaOttawa Canada (eastern part)1358 🌍
900038Consulate General of Ukraine in Toronto, CanadaToronto Canada (central part)5365 🌍
900040Embassy of Ukraine to KyrgyzstanBishkek Kyrgyzstan148 🌍
900041Embassy of Ukraine to the People's Republic of ChinaBeijing China (except Shanghai, Guangdong and their neighboring provinces)
 Mongolia
376
900042Consulate General of Ukraine in Shanghai, PRCShanghai China (Shanghai and its neighboring provinces)484 🌍
900043Embassy of Ukraine to CyprusNicosia Cyprus612 🌍
900044Embassy of Ukraine to the Republic of KoreaSeoul South Korea242 🌍
900045Embassy of Ukraine to CubaHavana Cuba
 Venezuela
 Dominican Republic
 Nicaragua
 El Salvador
 Honduras
361 🌍
900046Embassy of Ukraine to KuwaitKuwait City Kuwait173 🌍
900047Embassy of Ukraine to LatviaRiga Latvia2503 🌍
900048Embassy of Ukraine to LithuaniaVilnius Lithuania3163 🌍
900049Embassy of Ukraine to LebanonBeirut Lebanon
 Syria
1437 🌍
900051Embassy of Ukraine to Northern MacedoniaSkopje North Macedonia81 🌍
900052Embassy of Ukraine to MalaysiaKuala Lumpur Malaysia
 Timor-Leste
 Philippines
103 🌍
900053Embassy of Ukraine to MoroccoRabat Morocco
 Mauritania
 Senegal
 Guinea
608 🌍
900054Embassy of Ukraine to MexicoMexico City Mexico
 Panama
 Guatemala
 Costa Rica
257 🌍
900055Embassy of Ukraine to MoldovaChișinău Moldova (southern part)51293 🌍
900056Consulate of Ukraine in Bălți, MoldovaBălți Moldova (northern part)12994 🌍
900058Embassy of Ukraine to the NetherlandsThe Hague Netherlands1892 🌍
900059Embassy of Ukraine to GermanyBerlin Germany (northeast part)16953 🌍
900061Consulate General of Ukraine in Hamburg, GermanyHamburg Germany (northwest part)14147 🌍
900062Consulate General of Ukraine in Munich, GermanyMunich Germany (Bavaria and Baden-Württemberg)25768 🌍
900063Consulate General of Ukraine in Frankfurt, GermanyFrankfurt Germany (Rhineland-Palatinate, Saarland and Hesse)13275 🌍
900064Embassy of Ukraine to NorwayOslo Norway583 🌍
900065Embassy of Ukraine to the UAEAbu Dhabi United Arab Emirates (emirate of Abu Dhabi)
 Bahrain
335 🌍
900067Embassy of Ukraine to PeruLima Peru
 Ecuador
 Colombia
212 🌍
900068Embassy of Ukraine to South AfricaPretoria
 South Africa
 Botswana
 Zambia
 Zimbabwe
 Mauritius
 Madagascar
 Mozambique
 Namibia
 Lesotho
 Eswatini
 Kenya
 Burundi
 Malawi
 Rwanda
 Tanzania
 Angola
345 🌍
900069Embassy of Ukraine to PolandWarsaw Poland (central and western parts)19523 🌍
900070Consulate of Ukraine in Gdańsk, PolandGdańsk Poland (northwest and northern parts)5306 🌍
900071Consulate General of Ukraine in Krakow, PolandKrakow Poland (southwest and southern parts)12033 🌍
900072Consulate General of Ukraine in Lublin, PolandLublin Poland (eastern part)4505 🌍
900073Embassy of Ukraine to PortugalLisbon Portugal (southern part)2855 🌍
900074Consulate of Ukraine in Porto, PortugalPorto Portugal (northern part)883 🌍
900080Embassy of Ukraine to RomaniaBucharest Romania338 🌍
900082Embassy of Ukraine to Saudi ArabiaRiyadh Saudi Arabia
 Yemen
102 🌍
900083Embassy of Ukraine to SerbiaBelgrade Serbia360 🌍
900085Embassy of Ukraine to SingaporeSingapore Singapore
 Brunei
 Indonesia
262 🌍
900086Embassy of Ukraine to SlovakiaBratislava Slovakia4185 🌍
900088Embassy of Ukraine to SloveniaLjubljana Slovenia720 🌍
900089Embassy of Ukraine to the USAWashington, D.C. United States (southeast and southern parts)
 Antigua and Barbuda
7313 🌍
900090Consulate General of Ukraine in New York City, USANew York City United States (northeast part)12080 🌍
900091Consulate General of Ukraine in San Francisco, USASan Francisco United States (western part)23730 🌍
900092Consulate General of Ukraine in Chicago, USAChicago United States (northern part)5908 🌍
900093Embassy of Ukraine to ThailandBangkok Thailand
 Myanmar
 Laos
192 🌍
900094Embassy of Ukraine to TunisiaTunis Tunisia
 Libya
360 🌍
900095Embassy of Ukraine to TurkeyAnkara Turkey (except Istanbul, Antalya and their neighboring provinces)219 🌍
900096Consulate General of Ukraine in Istanbul, TurkeyIstanbul Turkey (Istanbul and its neighboring provinces)366 🌍
900097Embassy of Ukraine to TurkmenistanAshgabat Turkmenistan
 Afghanistan
206 🌍
900098Embassy of Ukraine to HungaryBudapest Hungary (central and western parts)2521 🌍
900099Consulate of Ukraine in Nyíregyháza, HungaryNyíregyháza Hungary (eastern part)4152 🌍
900100Embassy of Ukraine to UzbekistanTashkent Uzbekistan
 Tajikistan
1233 🌍
900101Embassy of Ukraine to FinlandHelsinki Finland
 Russia (European part except Caucasus)
20484 🌍
900102Cultural and Information Center of the Embassy of Ukraine to FranceParis France
 Monaco
3705 🌍
900104Embassy of Ukraine to CroatiaZagreb Croatia
 Bosnia and Herzegovina
326 🌍
900105Embassy of Ukraine to the Czech RepublicPrague Czech Republic (western part)24113 🌍
900106Consulate of Ukraine in Brno, Czech RepublicBrno Czech Republic (eastern part)5451 🌍
900107Embassy of Ukraine to MontenegroPodgorica Montenegro338 🌍
900108Embassy of Ukraine to SwitzerlandBern  Switzerland
 Liechtenstein
1388 🌍
900109Embassy of Ukraine to SwedenStockholm Sweden920 🌍
900110Embassy of Ukraine to JapanTokyo Japan533 🌍
900111Military base in Goma, DR CongoGomamilitary base268 🌍
900114Military base in Novo Selo, SerbiaNovo Selomilitary base40
900116Consulate of Ukraine in Dubai, UAEDubai United Arab Emirates (except emirate of Abu Dhabi)
 Pakistan
 Oman
1225 🌍
900120Embassy of Ukraine to QatarDoha Qatar175 🌍
900121Consulate General of Ukraine in Milan, ItalyMilan Italy (northeast part)4539 🌍
900122Consulate General of Ukraine in Düsseldorf, GermanyDüsseldorf Germany (North Rhine-Westphalia)21288 🌍
900123Division of the Embassy of Ukraine to Argentina in ChileSantiago Chile106 🌍
900124Consulate of Ukraine in Antalya, TurkeyAntalya Turkey (Antalya and its neighboring provinces)324 🌍
900125Consulate General of Ukraine in Edmonton, CanadaEdmonton Canada (western part)1044 🌍
900126Consulate General of Ukraine in Guangzhou, PRCGuangzhou China (Guangdong and its neighboring provinces)62 🌍

Map

Polling stations at:

  Embassies
  Consulates
  Divisions of embassies
  Military bases

See also

References

  1. "У Генштабі розповіли, де зможуть проголосувати українські миротворці" [The General staff told where could Ukrainian peacekeepers vote] (in Ukrainian). Ukrinform. 21 March 2019. Archived from the original on 22 March 2019. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  2. "ЦВК дозволила виборчій дільниці в Антарктиді виготовити бюлетені" [CEC allowed voting ballots to be printed right at the polling station in Antarctica]. Ukrinform (in Ukrainian). 17 April 2019. Archived from the original on 18 April 2019. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  3. "Українці за кордоном голосують на дострокових виборах до парламенту" [Ukrainians abroad vote in early parliamentary elections] (in Ukrainian). Yevropeyska Pravda. 21 July 2019. Archived from the original on 22 July 2019. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  4. "ЦВК сформувала всі дільничні комісії у закордонному виборчому окрузі" [CEC has already formed all precinct commissions in the Foreign electoral district] (in Ukrainian). RBK-Ukrayina. 12 March 2019. Archived from the original on 14 July 2019. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  5. "Клімкін: явка на українських виборах за кордоном впала з 2014 року на 27%" [Klimkin: turnout in Ukrainian elections abroad has dropped by 27% since 2014] (in Ukrainian). Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. 1 April 2019. Archived from the original on 2 April 2019. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  6. Slavinska, Iryna (1 February 2019). "Айвазовська про вибори за кордоном: найбільше українці голосують в країнах, де є об'єднана громада" [Aivazovskaya about elections abroad: most Ukrainians vote in countries where there is a united community] (in Ukrainian). UA: Ukrainian Radio. Archived from the original on 9 July 2019. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  7. "Українці в Празі, Берліні, Таллінні, Мюнхені та Дюссельдорфі вишикувалися у великі черги, щоб проголосувати. Фоторепортаж" [Ukrainians in Prague, Berlin, Tallinn, Munich and Düsseldorf lined up to vote. Photo report] (in Ukrainian). Tsenzor.net. 31 March 2019. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  8. Matola, Victoriya (21 March 2019). "Ольга Айвазовська: "Повертається адміністративний ресурс. Зокрема, бюджетний адмінресурс"" [Olga Aivazovskaya: "The administrative resource is coming back. In particular, the budget sector administrative resource"] (in Ukrainian). LB.ua. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  9. Reshetniak, Ihor (3 April 2019). "Непотрібні голоси: чому не голосували 99% виборців закордонного округ" [Unnecessary votes: why 99% of voters abroad did not vote] (in Ukrainian). Yevropeyska Pravda. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  10. Sydorenko, Serhiy (28 March 2019). "Голоси мільйонної діаспори: чи може голосування за кордоном визначити результат виборів" [Millions of diaspora votes: can voting abroad determine the outcome of an election] (in Ukrainian). Yevropeyska Pravda. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  11. "Як голосували українці за кордоном" [How did Ukrainians vote abroad] (in Ukrainian). LB.ua. 1 April 2019. Archived from the original on 1 April 2019. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  12. "Українці за кордоном вистоюють великі черги, щоб проголосувати (фото)" [Ukrainians abroad are standing in long queues to vote (photo)] (in Ukrainian). Ukrainian Independent Information Agency. 31 March 2019. Archived from the original on 1 April 2019. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  13. Tutorial for members of precinct election commission, article 95 — Vyborkom
  14. "Вибори 2019: де найбільше голосуватимуть українці з Криму та Донбасу" [2019 Election: where will Ukrainians from Crimea and Donbass vote the most] (in Ukrainian). BBC. 27 March 2019. Archived from the original on 14 July 2019. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  15. "Українці діаспори розповіли, як готуються до президентських виборів 31 березня" [Diaspora Ukrainians told how they are preparing for the March 31 presidential election] (in Ukrainian). Ukrinform. 22 March 2019. Archived from the original on 23 March 2019. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  16. "ЦВК закрила дільниці в Росії. Де зможуть проголосувати українці" [CEC closed polling stations in Russia. Where can Ukrainians vote.] (in Ukrainian). Ukrayinska Pravda. 31 December 2018. Archived from the original on 6 July 2019. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  17. "Виборчі дільниці в Росії закрили з міркувань безпеки, – Клімкін" [Polling stations in Russia were closed for security reasons - Klimkin] (in Ukrainian). ZIK. 3 January 2019. Archived from the original on 21 April 2019. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  18. Klimkin, Pavlo (3 January 2019). "Проводити вибори в Росії - небезпечно" [Holding elections in Russia is dangerous] (in Ukrainian). Ukrayinska Pravda. Archived from the original on 7 July 2019. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  19. "Як реагують українці на території Росії на те, що не можуть проголосувати" [How Ukrainians in Russia react to becoming unable to vote] (in Ukrainian). Channel 24. 31 March 2019. Archived from the original on 14 July 2019. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  20. Stets, Andriy (13 January 2019). "Верховний Суд України підтвердив рішення ЦВК про закриття виборчих дільниць у РФ" [The Supreme Court of Ukraine upheld the decision of the Central Election Commission to close polling stations in the Russian Federation] (in Ukrainian). Zaxid.net. Archived from the original on 7 July 2019. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  21. Khotyn, Rostyslav (9 April 2019). "Світ і Україна. Для голосування за кордоном треба більше дільниць і електронне голосування – активістка" [The World and Ukraine. More polling stations and electronic voting are needed for voting abroad - activist] (in Ukrainian). Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. Archived from the original on 8 July 2019. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  22. "Голосування громадян України за кордоном" [Voting of citizens of Ukraine abroad]. www.ukrainians.lu (in Ukrainian). Ukrainians in Luxembourg. Archived from the original on 15 July 2019. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  23. "Як готуються до дня виборів українці на виборчих дільницях у США. Відео" [How Ukrainians in the USA prepare for voting day - Video] (in Ukrainian). Voice of America. 30 March 2019. Archived from the original on 8 July 2019. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  24. Fedyanina, Maryna (3 April 2019). "Вибори за кордоном: де мільйони голосів і що з цим робити?" [Elections abroad: where did millions of votes go and how to deal with it?] (in Ukrainian). Ukrinform. Archived from the original on 8 July 2019. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  25. "Голосування у Варшаві продовжилося після закриття дільниці" [Voting in Warsaw continues after precincts closing time] (in Ukrainian). Ukrainian Independent Information Agency. 31 March 2019. Archived from the original on 1 April 2019. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  26. "Марафон парламентські вибори 2019" [TV-marathon - 2019 parliamentary election]. YouTube (in Ukrainian). Channel 24. 21 July 2019. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  27. Bedratenko, Oksana (20 March 2019). "США, Канада, Чилі, Австралія - українці світу хочуть, щоб на виборах в Україні почули їх голос" [USA, Canada, Chile, Australia - Ukrainian from all the World want their voice to be heard] (in Ukrainian). Voice of America. Archived from the original on 8 July 2019. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  28. "З понад мільйона громадян України в Польщі українську владу обирає лише кілька тисяч" [From over a million citizens of Ukraine in Poland, only several thousand elect the government] (in Ukrainian). Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. 16 March 2019. Archived from the original on 8 July 2019. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  29. "Українці за кордоном назвали умови голосування на іноземних дільницях дискримінаційними" [Ukrainians abroad consider the voting procedures at foreign polling stations to be discriminatory] (in Ukrainian). Ukrainian Independent Information Agency. 3 April 2019. Archived from the original on 5 April 2019. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  30. Klimkin, Pavlo (1 April 2019). "Pavlo Klimkin commenting voting results". Facebook (in Ukrainian). Archived from the original on 10 April 2019. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  31. "Клімкін обстоює якнайшвидше запровадження в Україні цифрового голосування" [Klimkin stands for ASAP introduction of electronic vote in Ukraine] (in Ukrainian). Novoye Vremya. 5 April 2019. Archived from the original on 14 July 2019. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
State documents
Voting results
  1. 2019 Ukrainian presidential election: Results of voting in the Foreign electoral district (re-vote on 21.04.2019) — website of the Central Election Commission (archive)
  2. 2019 Ukrainian presidential election: Results of voting in polling stations abroad (re-vote on 21.04.2019) — website of the Central Election Commission (archive)
  3. 2019 Ukrainian presidential election: Results of voting in the Foreign electoral district (vote on 31.03.2019) — website of the Central Election Commission (archive)
  4. 2019 Ukrainian presidential election: Results of voting in polling stations abroad (vote on 31.03.2019) — website of the Central Election Commission (archive)
  5. 2014 Ukrainian extraordinary presidential election: Results of voting within the Foreign electoral district — website of the Central Election Commission (archive)
  6. 2014 Ukrainian extraordinary presidential election: CEC protocol on the results of voting within the Foreign electoral district — website of the Central Election Commission
  7. 2010 Ukrainian presidential election: Results of voting in the Foreign electoral district (second round) — website of the Central Election Commission
  8. 2010 Ukrainian presidential election: Results of voting in the Foreign electoral district (first round) — website of the Central Election Commission (archive)
  9. 2012 Ukrainian parliamentary election: Results of votes counting in the nationwide multi-member constituency — website of the Central Election Commission
  10. 2012 Ukrainian extraordinary parliamentary election: Results of votes counting in the nationwide multi-member constituency in each electoral district — website of the Central Election Commission
  11. 2019 Ukrainian extraordinary parliamentary election: Information about the results of counting of votes in foreign polling stations — website of the Central Election Commission (archive)
  12. 2019 Ukrainian extraordinary parliamentary election: Results of voting in foreign polling station in nationwide constituency — website of the Central Election Commission (archive)
  13. 2014 Ukrainian extraordinary parliamentary election: Information about the results of counting of votes in foreign polling stations — website of the Central Election Commission (archive)
  14. 2014 Ukrainian extraordinary parliamentary election: CEC protocol on the results of voting in the nationwide multi-member constituency within the Foreign electoral district of the elections of People's Deputies of Ukraine — website of the Central Election Commission
  15. 2012 Ukrainian parliamentary election: Information about the results of counting of votes in foreign polling stations — website of the Central Election Commission
  16. 2012 Ukrainian parliamentary election: CEC protocol on the results of voting in the nationwide multi-member constituency in foreign polling stations — website of the Central Election Commission
  17. 2007 Ukrainian extraordinary parliamentary election: Information about the results of counting of votes in foreign polling stations — website of the Central Election Commission
  18. 2006 Ukrainian parliamentary election: Information about the results of counting of votes in foreign polling stations — website of the Central Election Commission
Laws
  1. Law of Ukraine «On elections of the President of Ukraine» — Article 24. Formation of precincts election commissions, paragraph 10
  2. Law of Ukraine «On amendments to some legislative acts of Ukraine to improve laws concerning organization of elections» — website of Verkhovna Rada
  3. Law of Ukraine «On elections of the President of Ukraine» — Article 21. System of election commissions, paragraph 3
  4. Law of Ukraine «On elections of the President of Ukraine» — Article 24. Formation of precincts election commissions, paragraph 4
  5. Law of Ukraine «On elections of the President of Ukraine» — Article 73. The procedure for sending election ballots to election commissions, paragraph 6
  6. Law of Ukraine «On elections of the President of Ukraine» — Article 75. Preparation for voting on the Election Day (Re-vote Day), paragraph 1
  7. Law of Ukraine «On elections of the President of Ukraine» — Article 77. The procedure for organizing voting at the place of residence, paragraph 18
Sources from other countries
  1. "9. saziv Hrvatskoga sabora (14.10.2016.): XI. izborna jedinica" [9th convocation of Croatian Parliament]. www.sabor.hr (in Croatian). Croatian Parliament. Archived from the original on 7 July 2019. Retrieved 30 November 2019.
  2. "Comissão Nacional de Eleições: Mapa Oficial" [Official list of Portuguese constituencies] (PDF). www.cne.pt (in Portuguese). National election commission of Portugal. Archived (PDF) from the original on 7 July 2019. Retrieved 30 November 2019.
  3. "La représentation des Français établis hors de France" [Representation of French living outside France]. www.senat.fr (in French). French Senate. Archived from the original on 7 July 2019. Retrieved 30 November 2019.
  4. "Stemmen vanuit het buitenland bij verkiezingen" [Voting from abroad during an election (the Netherlands)]. www.rijksoverheid.nl (in Dutch). Government of the Netherlands. Archived from the original on 30 November 2019. Retrieved 30 November 2019.
  5. "Kieswet" [Dutch election law]. wetten.overheid.nl (in Dutch). Archived from the original on 2 July 2019. Retrieved 30 November 2019.
  6. "Самый большой избирательный округ — Купаловский 95-й" [The biggest electoral district — 95th Kupalov] (in Russian). National State Television and Radio Company of Belarus. 11 September 2016. Archived from the original on 7 July 2019. Retrieved 30 November 2019.
  7. "How To Vote From Abroad (Norway)". nww.no. Norwegians Worldwide. Archived from the original on 7 July 2019. Retrieved 30 November 2019.
  8. Medhora, Shalailah (15 April 2019). "How to vote if you're living overseas or travelling on Election Day (Australia)". ABC Online. Archived from the original on 16 May 2019. Retrieved 30 November 2019.
  9. "E-hääletamine" [Electronic vote (Estonia)]. www.valimised.ee (in Estonian). Archived from the original on 8 July 2019. Retrieved 30 November 2019.
  10. "Absentee Voting Information for U.S. Citizens Abroad". travel.state.gov. United States Department of State. Archived from the original on 13 July 2019. Retrieved 30 November 2019.
  11. "נציגויות ישראל שבהן תתקיים הצבעה בחו"ל" [Representations of Israel abroad, where the voting will take place]. www.bechirot20.gov.il. Central Elections Committee of Israel. Archived from the original on 7 July 2019. Retrieved 30 November 2019.
  12. "Right to vote in Ireland". www.citizensinformation.ie. Archived from the original on 7 July 2019. Retrieved 30 November 2019.
  13. "Apply to vote by proxy (United Kingdom)". www.gov.uk. Government of the United Kingdom. Archived from the original on 7 July 2019. Retrieved 30 November 2019.
  14. "EU citizens' electoral rights". ec.europa.eu. European Commission. Archived from the original on 20 June 2019. Retrieved 30 November 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.