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Honcharuk government AI simulator
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Honcharuk government AI simulator
(@Honcharuk government_simulator)
Honcharuk government
The Honcharuk government was formed on 29 August 2019, and was led by Oleksiy Honcharuk. It was the fourth Ukrainian cabinet formed since the 2014 Ukrainian revolution, following the 2019 Ukrainian parliamentary election.
The appointment of Honcharuk as the prime minister of Ukraine was approved by the Verkhovna Rada (Ukraine's parliament) on 29 August 2019. Honcharuk at the time of his appointment was a deputy chairperson of the Presidential Office of Ukraine. 290 People's deputies voted for his candidacy, while the members of most of the other factions (Opposition Platform — For Life, European Solidarity, Fatherland, and Voice) did not support it.
From the podium, the newly elected prime minister stated that in the upcoming years, each third hryvnia would go towards settling debts. The Prime Minister considered that the main indicator of business attractiveness had to become access to cheaper resources. Honcharuk promised to take control of the credit rate and Ukraine's image. He considered that credit with a 12-13 annual percentage rate is a reality.[further explanation needed] At the time of Honcharuk's appointment, 10 million Ukrainians lived below the poverty line and corruption continued to flourish.
In the new government no one will be stealing... Within a few weeks Ukraine will be visited by the IMF mission and we will negotiate a new agreement... In Ukraine we have an inadequate minimal living wage, it is impossible to survive on these wages.
— Oleksiy Honcharuk, the Verkhovna Rada podium
On 29 August 2019, the Ukrainian parliament also approved the appointment of Ivan Bakanov as Head of the Security Service of Ukraine.
Ruslan Riaboshapka replaced Yuriy Lutsenko as Prosecutor General of Ukraine on 29 August 2019.
One of the most acute issues that were part of long discussions and negotiations was keeping the Minister of Internal Affairs Arsen Avakov who had held his post since the Revolution of Dignity. The newly elected prime minister Honcharuk noted that the decision to keep the minister was one of the most complex, yet for the Minister of Internal Affairs "drew certain red lines" which he could not cross.
Honcharuk government
The Honcharuk government was formed on 29 August 2019, and was led by Oleksiy Honcharuk. It was the fourth Ukrainian cabinet formed since the 2014 Ukrainian revolution, following the 2019 Ukrainian parliamentary election.
The appointment of Honcharuk as the prime minister of Ukraine was approved by the Verkhovna Rada (Ukraine's parliament) on 29 August 2019. Honcharuk at the time of his appointment was a deputy chairperson of the Presidential Office of Ukraine. 290 People's deputies voted for his candidacy, while the members of most of the other factions (Opposition Platform — For Life, European Solidarity, Fatherland, and Voice) did not support it.
From the podium, the newly elected prime minister stated that in the upcoming years, each third hryvnia would go towards settling debts. The Prime Minister considered that the main indicator of business attractiveness had to become access to cheaper resources. Honcharuk promised to take control of the credit rate and Ukraine's image. He considered that credit with a 12-13 annual percentage rate is a reality.[further explanation needed] At the time of Honcharuk's appointment, 10 million Ukrainians lived below the poverty line and corruption continued to flourish.
In the new government no one will be stealing... Within a few weeks Ukraine will be visited by the IMF mission and we will negotiate a new agreement... In Ukraine we have an inadequate minimal living wage, it is impossible to survive on these wages.
— Oleksiy Honcharuk, the Verkhovna Rada podium
On 29 August 2019, the Ukrainian parliament also approved the appointment of Ivan Bakanov as Head of the Security Service of Ukraine.
Ruslan Riaboshapka replaced Yuriy Lutsenko as Prosecutor General of Ukraine on 29 August 2019.
One of the most acute issues that were part of long discussions and negotiations was keeping the Minister of Internal Affairs Arsen Avakov who had held his post since the Revolution of Dignity. The newly elected prime minister Honcharuk noted that the decision to keep the minister was one of the most complex, yet for the Minister of Internal Affairs "drew certain red lines" which he could not cross.
