May 22, 2019 (Reuters) Television comedian Volodymyr
Zelenskiy took the oath of office as Ukraine’s new president on Monday,
promising that as hard as he had worked in the past to make Ukrainians laugh,
he would now work to keep them from crying. As his first act, he dismissed
the parliament still dominated by loyalists of his defeated predecessor,
setting up an election in two months in which his new party has a chance to win
its first seats. The inauguration day was marked by informal moments that
conveyed the outsider persona that helped carry the political novice to a
landslide victory last month.
Ukraine's President-elect Volodymyr
Zelenskiy takes the oath of office during his inauguration ceremony in the
parliament hall in Kiev, Ukraine May 20, 2019. REUTERS/Valentyn Ogirenko
Zelenskiy high fived cheering supporters who held their arms
outstretched outside the Soviet-era parliament building, and stopped for a
selfie with the crowd. At one point he jumped up to kiss a man on the forehead.
He later eschewed a motorcade to make his way to his new office on foot. “Dear
people, during my life I tried to do everything to make Ukrainians smile,” he
said in his speech to parliament. “In the next five years, I will do
everything, Ukrainians, so that you do not cry.” But there were already signs
of friction with a political class in which Zelenskiy has few allies.
Parliament is still dominated by the bloc named for Zelenskiy’s defeated
opponent Petro Poroshenko and smaller parties founded mostly as personal
vehicles for political insiders. The decision to dissolve parliament prompted
the resignation of Prime Minister Volodymyr Groysman, who came to power in 2016
as part of Poroshenko’s coalition. Groysman said he was stepping down to fight
the upcoming snap election. “I proposed to the president, the parliament, that
we together form a new agenda and very quickly begin to make decisions that
would make Ukraine stronger. The president has chosen a different path,”
Groysman said. Zelenskiy grew to national fame playing the TV comedy role of a
schoolteacher who unexpectedly becomes president after a pupil films him making
a foul-mouthed tirade against corrupt politicians and posts the video online.
His campaign exploited the parallels with that fictional narrative, portraying
him as an everyman who would stand up to a crooked political class. In his
inauguration speech, Zelenskiy called on officials to take down the customary
portraits of the president that hang in their offices, and put up pictures of
their children instead.
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