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People power? Or George power?
New Statesman ^ | Monday 29th November 2004 | Mark Almond

Posted on 11/29/2004 11:54:48 AM PST by jb6

Observations on Ukraine. By Mark Almond

George Soros, the billionaire philanthropist, promised to "spend whatever it takes" to defeat George W Bush. So when the president was returned to office, he said he felt like retiring to a monastery. Yet outside America, the missionaries of Soros's lavishly funded Open Society foundations march in parallel columns with the Bush administration. Domestic enmities don't stop the two Georges presenting a united front abroad when it comes to promoting friends and punishing foes.

A year ago, they jointly helped topple Georgia's president Eduard Shevardnadze by putting financial muscle and organisational metal behind his opponents. Now Ukraine has felt the full force of their displeasure.

Bush's representatives have alleged fraud in the presidential elections held on 21 November, which ended in victory for the current prime minister, Viktor Yanukovich, who is regarded as pro-Russian. Meanwhile, Soros's activists have marched in support of the west's favoured candidate for president, Viktor Yushchenko, and have provided the visiting media and election observers with allegations of fraud and intimidation.

The principal charge is that the official results are at odds with exit polls run by what western embassies call "independent" polling agencies (ie, agencies partly paid by western funds channelled through the embassies). Sound familiar? The exit polls in America's presidential elections were also wildly out. As Michael Meacher reports (page 22), the official result in Florida, for instance, was 7 per cent worse for John Kerry than the exit poll. The Republican senator Richard Lugar was in Ukraine, but he didn't caution locals against taking exit polls at face value.

I talked with two exit pollsters in western Ukraine. They stopped every 20th voter and asked how he or she voted. There was no weighting by age or class. Forty per cent refused to answer. Of the rest, 80 per cent said they voted for Yushchenko. But things are not so simple. The two pollsters were also local figures, known as pro-Yushchenko journalists. Mightn't a Yanukovich voter be shy of stating a preference to them?

Despite allegations about media bias towards the prime minister, you would hardly have known, from what I saw of local TV channels in western Ukraine, that he even existed. Even on polling day, Yushchenko and other public figures were shown voting, but not the prime minister. And on election eve, the Eurovision Song Contest winner Ruslana and other pop stars big in Ukraine appeared sporting orange (pro-Yushchenko) symbols.

One observer, the Tory MEP Charles Tannock, compared Ukraine to despotic Turkmenistan because Yanukovich was almost unanimously endorsed by his home region in eastern Ukraine. But then Yushchenko got votes of 90 per cent or more in western regions. Maybe both candidates have enforcers in their own regions who can stuff ballots. What is certain is that western observers never cry foul when a Soros-backed candidate gets a Saddam-style result. They, like the western media, prefer the modern fairy tale of "people power": plucky, freedom-loving, youthful opposition versus slab-faced, ex-communist apparatchiks and oligarchs.

Western election observers in Ukraine were led by the Labour MP Bruce George, who was their chief in Georgia last year. His criticisms helped get the steam up for "people power" there. Yet a few weeks after Shevardnadze was ousted, he saw nothing odd when the west's favoured candidate won 96 per cent of the vote to replace him. Generous George Soros stepped in to pay the salaries of the new president's ministers and policemen in Georgia. Soros's business partner Kakha Bendukidze became economy minister.

Does Soros have similar partners-in-waiting for Ukraine? We shall see. But though they are enemies at home, Bush and Soros always seem to be on the same, winning side abroad. This article first appeared in the New Statesman. For the latest in current and cultural affairs subscribe to the New Statesman print edition.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Foreign Affairs; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: elections; soros; ukraine

1 posted on 11/29/2004 11:54:49 AM PST by jb6
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To: jb6

bump


2 posted on 11/29/2004 11:58:34 AM PST by RippleFire ("It was just a scratch")
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To: jb6

"George Soros, the billionaire philanthropist, promised to "spend whatever it takes" to defeat George W Bush.........Western election observers in Ukraine were led by the Labour MP Bruce George, who was their chief in Georgia last year.

George = ge (earth) + ergos (work). They're all plowing up the place, although maybe each one has a different crop in mind.


3 posted on 11/29/2004 12:01:38 PM PST by proxy_user
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To: jb6

Different ends of the same stick.


4 posted on 11/29/2004 12:02:44 PM PST by Spirited
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To: Spirited

this article was just about as confusing an article I've ever read. What went on, where? Could someone please dumb it down or at least elminate the confusing structure for me and make it a little more clear? I'm usually pretty smart. Maybe its just the cold medicine talking.

thanks in advance.


5 posted on 11/29/2004 12:07:54 PM PST by timtoews5292004
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To: jb6
Viktor Yanukovich, who is regarded as pro-Russian. Meanwhile, Soros's activists have marched in support of Viktor Yushchenko

Obviously, Ukranians, voting by means of a butterfly ballot, voted for Viktor Yanukovich when then meant to vote for Viktor Yushcheko. It would be an easy mistake to make.

6 posted on 11/29/2004 12:08:59 PM PST by My2Cents ("Well...there you go again.")
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To: jb6
The fraud allegations are based on evidence stronger than simple exit polls.

Like the fact that 2.8M votes started pouring in for the KGB toadie at the last minute. Or the fact that the pro-Russian districts of the Ukraine were reporting 97% turnout while the Ukrainian patriot areas were reporting turnout of 60%.

7 posted on 11/29/2004 12:10:51 PM PST by wideawake (God bless our brave soldiers and their Commander in Chief)
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To: wideawake; FairOpinion; wildandcrazyrussian
To: FairOpinion
I did some math on the almost-final election results found on the Internet a week ago: I typed in the actual reported percentages of the winner of each of the 27 regions, then found the 1991 census figures (I know there was a census in 2001 but I can't find the numbers anywhere on the Internet yet), divided for a ratio of votes last week to population (all I can work with so far, but still looking) , then sorted by decreasing such percentage. This was solely to see what patterns emerge at a first glance. The numbers follow. One thing that jumps out is that Yushchenko got 11 of the top 13 regions ranked by ration defined above. I think that this undercuts any claim by the Yushchenko side that there was allegedly vote fraud, since if there were, you would think that it would be the Yanukovich-supporting regions which would have had inflated turnouts, but instead they generally lagged the Yushchenko ones.
Region              Yanuk%  Yushch%   Turnout  1991 pop    TO%
 ------------------- ------  -------   -------   -------   ----

CHERNIHIV                     65.65    768458    938600   81.9
DONETSK              96.20            3711606   5346700   69.4
TERNOPIL                      93.53    745749   1175100   63.5
IVANO-FRANKIVSK               93.44    887365   1442900   61.5
VOLYN                         85.79    654870   1069000   61.3
LVIV                          91.79   1694801   2764400   61.3
KIEV                          74.69   1645563   4589800   61.1
+KIEV REGION                  76.27   1158359               
LUHANSK              92.72            1751982   2871100   61.0
RIVNE                         76.63    710601   1176800   60.4
KHMELNYTS                     71.45    898100   1520600   59.1
POLTAVA                       60.86   1025918   1756900   58.4
VINNYTSIA                     75.87   1108270   1914400   57.9
SUMY                          69.16    813331   1430200   56.9
KHARKIV              70.25            1794873   3194800   56.2
DNIPROPETROVSK       63.61            2188359   3908700   56.0
ZAPORIZHIA           70.33            1176025   2099600   56.0
CHERKASY                      71.93    853128   1530900   55.7
ZHYTOMYR                      60.41    833271   1510700   55.2
MYKOLAIV             69.75             739596   1342400   55.1
KHERSON              52.20             649900   1258700   51.6
ZAKARPATSKA                   55.00    620448   1265900   49.0
ODESSA               67.51            1282554   2635300   48.7
CRIMEA               81.99            1201605   2549800   48.1
+SEVASTOPOL          88.97             247864                 
KIROVOHRAD                    51.93    537784   1245300   43.2
CHERNIVTSI                    74.50    506747   1405800   36.0

TOTAL                                30297195  51452000   58.9

Note that of the 5 regions with 90+% reported for either of the two candidates, 3 are for Yushchenko the supposed reformer, and 2 for Yanukovich who is accused of election fraud. 3 > 2. I remain unconvinced.

7 posted on 11/29/2004 5:07:33 AM PST by wildandcrazyrussian

8 posted on 11/29/2004 12:21:18 PM PST by jb6 (Truth = Christ)
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To: wideawake
Absentee ballots. The easiest way yet to commit fraud. This was the difference. When 90% of the absentee ballots all come in for the Commie, you know there is something smelly.

The parliament there just passed a law banning absentee voting to stop this election fixing by Moscow. Now, they need to get the Supreme Court there to order a new election.

9 posted on 11/29/2004 12:23:02 PM PST by bpjam (I don't know what a neo-con is and neither does anybody else.)
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To: jb6

Yes, we must fight this evil Bush-Soros nexus! I don't know why I've never seen it before!


10 posted on 11/29/2004 12:25:16 PM PST by Tailgunner Joe
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To: jb6
I remain unconvinced. I am now FIRMLY undecided.
11 posted on 11/29/2004 12:29:59 PM PST by derheimwill (sorry, no tagline yet)
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To: bpjam

The communists were calling to have parliment decide the balloting, under mining Yunokovich's support, the Socialists flat out came out in favor of the opposition, in exchange for a full Iraqi pull out.


12 posted on 11/29/2004 12:32:45 PM PST by jb6 (Truth = Christ)
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To: derheimwill

Or in Diplo babble: YES! No! maybe?


13 posted on 11/29/2004 12:33:25 PM PST by jb6 (Truth = Christ)
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To: bpjam

By the way, most of the Absentee balloting came in for the opposition.


14 posted on 11/29/2004 12:34:02 PM PST by jb6 (Truth = Christ)
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To: jb6

The Russian Communists support Yanukovych. Big surprise. Both sides in Russia support the Pro-Russia candidiate.


15 posted on 11/29/2004 12:35:04 PM PST by Tailgunner Joe
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To: wideawake
The writer of this article, Mark Almond, is the chairman of the "British Helsinki Human Rights Group." Another member of the group is John Laughland. I've compiled their aticles with those of Justin Raimondo and various other commie propaganda:

More by Almond here and here: "The current ideology of New World Order ideologues, many of whom are renegade communists, is Market-Leninism - that combination of a dogmatic economic model with Machiavellian methods to grasp the levers of power."

More Laughland in the Guardian, and ZMag.

More Guardian here and here, and here.

Justin Raimondo's Ukraine articles:
'Democracy' and Mendacity
The Yushchenko Mythos
Commissar Aaronovitch
The New Cold War
The Ukrainian Template

The Nation
World Socialist Web Site
CounterPunch.Org
People's Weekly World
Worker's World, and more here.
ProgressiveTrail.Org
Socialist Worker
Sozialismus.info
Lyndon LaRouche

16 posted on 12/21/2004 2:27:32 PM PST by Tailgunner Joe
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