
Ukraine’s Anti-Corruption Controversy Is a Gift to Kyiv’s Enemies. There Is Still Time to Change Course.
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Ukraine’s Anti-Corruption Controversy Is a Gift to Kyiv’s Enemies. There Is Still Time to Change Course.
Protesters filled central Kyiv following the passage of a bill that weakens Ukraine’s key anti-corruption institutions. It is a sign of the Ukrainian peoples’ desire to continue the trajectory toward a future anchored in the rule of law. The outcry in Kyiv is not a rejection of the Ukraine state, nor a descent into chaos. In fact, it is a reflection of the strength and maturity of Ukraine’s civic identity, despite a full-scale war with Russia. The protests themselves are proof that Ukrainians will not quietly accept a slide backward to those standing in negiable solidarity with them, writes Andrey Kuznetsov, a Russian-Ukrainian political analyst and former EU commissioner. He says Ukraine has made bold steps in uncovering corruption, even while its energy is focussed on defending itself. It remains a worthy cause to support the Ukrainian people, he says, and the West should not miss the opportunity to show its support for the country.
The outcry in Kyiv is not a rejection of the Ukrainian state, nor a descent into chaos. In fact, it is a reflection of the strength and maturity of Ukraine’s civic identity, despite a full-scale war with Russia. Participants were peaceful, patriotic and from all areas of Ukrainian society. They demanded accountability, not regime change. They sang the national anthem and waved Ukrainian flags. Their message was to the point: this is not what they have been fighting for. Some in the West have already seized upon this moment to reignite old, simplistic narratives about corruption in Ukraine. For example, anti-Ukrainian U.S. Congresswoman and conspiracy theorist Marjorie Taylor Greene tweeted that the protests were happening because Zelensky is a “dictator” who refues to end the war. “Good for the Ukrainian people! Throw him out of office! And America must STOP funding and sending weapons!!!” This is a dangerous and dishonest misrepresentation that overlooks the remarkable progress Ukraine has made. Since 2013, the country has gained 10 points on Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index, reaching 35 on a scale where 100 is the lowest level of corruption. That may not seem like much, but it is remarkable in a world where most countries have either stagnated or declined. Critics overlook that the protests themselves are proof that Ukrainians will not quietly accept a slide backward. Most importantly, it fails to grasp that Ukraine’s European path is not negotiable — not to Ukrainians and not to those standing in solidarity with them. Indeed, what anti-Ukrainian voices in the West miss is that this moment is not a validation of their skepticism — it is a demonstration of why Ukraine remains a worthy cause to support. The fact that Ukrainian citizens are willing to protest in wartime, under martial law, without any protection from opposition parties or radical groups, is a testament to the strength of democratic consciousness in this country.
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