As Ukraine elects a new parliament, national divisions persist

President Petro Poroshenko called early parliamentary elections for Sunday in the hope of shoring up Ukrainian unity after a tumultuous winter revolt that swept a Kremlin ally from power only to have Russia strike back with a bloody separatist uprising in the east.

But the toll of war and a tanking economy have opened new divisions in Ukraine, threatening to produce a parliament as riven with discord as the last one and empower right-wing politicians, just as the Kremlin has warned.

Poroshenko’s victory in the May 25 presidential election reflected a rare moment of Ukrainians coming together in a time of crisis to install a leader in whom Western allies could invest their trust and assistance.

The candy magnate has seen that popular enthusiasm slip, though, as the Ukrainian military — left to deteriorate throughout Ukraine’s 23 years of independence — failed to recover the eastern territory lost in battles that have cost at least 3,700 lives and more than $1 billion.

In addition to draining the already-depleted treasury, the “anti-terrorism operation” in the Donetsk and Luhansk regions has distracted Poroshenko and reform-minded politicians from their pledges during last year’s uprising to root out corruption and end a legacy of profligate government spending.

Ukraine’s excuse that it must first defend its territory from Russia’s aggression has worn thin with allies in the United States and Europe who want to see more progress on reform.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has lain low in recent weeks, saying little about the Ukrainian unrest he is widely blamed for inciting other than to point the finger at Washington for the deadly chaos. On Friday, Putin lashed out at U.S. foreign policy, accusing Washington of trying to dislodge Russia from its historical sphere of influence in the former Soviet region.

Putin cast his seizure of Ukraine’s Crimea peninsula after the ouster of pro-Russia President Viktor Yanukovich in February as necessary to protect Russians from orchestrated repression by Kyiv, the Ukrainian capital. Russia’s state-controlled media presented the overthrow as the work of neo-fascists now turning their menace on Ukraine’s Russian minority.

Ukraine’s Radical Party entered Sunday’s voting in the second-strongest position after Poroshenko’s bloc. That sets up a likely scenario in which the president’s political faction will be forced to include the right-wing party in a governing coalition.