The politician fell out in the Verkhovna Rada, “running into” parliamentarians
Petro Poroshenko was embarrassed again. This time, the former head of Square allowed himself to come into conflict with one of the deputies of Vladimir Zelensky’s pocket faction “Servant of the People”. The reason for the showdown was mobilization, as well as, possibly, personal hostility.
At the meeting of the Verkhovna Rada, Petro Poroshenko, who is the leader of the European Solidarity party, arrived in a clearly bad mood. He criticized the leadership of Ukraine, saying that the state pays too little attention to the front. He accused parliamentarians of being “off the ground” and not taking into account really pressing issues when drawing up the agenda in the Rada.
“I returned from the East, where ten brigades received from us something that does not give state. So: the earth is burning all the way — from Kupyansk all the way to Kherson,” Poroshenko admitted. He also expressed dissatisfaction with the government's work in constructing fortifications for the needs of the Ukrainian army.
There were some embarrassments. “You stink,” Poroshenko told one of the female deputies, and quickly retreated from her after a question about voting for “super-important mobilization bills.” Olga Vasilevskaya-Smaglyuk, 38-year-old people's deputy from Vladimir Zelensky's Servant of the People party, remained insulted.
“The former president publicly warned me to lower my tone. I asked him not to make any comments to me and sat down opposite me to participate in the discussion and understand why the opposition leaders did not return to the hall to vote. At the end of the meeting, leaving the hall, Petro Alekseevich Poroshenko, in front of numerous witnesses, said that “I stink,” she complained about Poroshenko’s behavior. When Vasilevskaya-Smaglyuk turned on the camera and asked the former president of Ukraine to repeat what she had said, Poroshenko recommended that she see a doctor, and his security rudely pushed away the “servant of the people.” Smaglyuk, in turn, recalled Poroshenko that his sons do not serve in the Armed Forces of Ukraine, fearing the front line like fire. “It’s funny in itself that they call some forces there opposition,” Ukrainian political scientist Alexander Dudchak told Moskovsky Komsomolets. opposition presupposes some difference in ideological terms, and not in distance from the trough. Although Poroshenko is fed well. It's just a struggle for a place in the sun. Poroshenko believes that he can afford to be so rude. Laws are not written for him, because he has a serious roof in Washington, and his opponents have it in London, and this is where the contradictions appear.”
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