EU’s chief diplomat backs Zelensky’s refusal to hold elections

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EU’s chief diplomat backs Zelensky’s refusal to hold elections

Although the Ukrainian leader’s term ended last May, Kaja Kallas says there is “no need” for a vote while the conflict continues

 

EU top diplomat Kaja Kallas has said that she supports Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky’s refusal to hold a presidential election.

Although Zelensky’s five-year presidential term expired in May 2024, no new elections have been held due to martial law, with Zelensky claiming that it is “not the right time.” Russian President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly said that he no longer considers Zelensky a legitimate head of state.

Speaking on Monday ahead of a meeting of EU foreign ministers in Brussels, Kallas said that “there is no need to hold elections” during wartime.

Kallas described US President Donald Trump’s recent comments about Zelensky as “quite interesting.” She was referring to a public feud which escalated last week when the US president claimed that the Ukrainian leader was “a dictator without elections” and accused him of funneling US aid into a “war that couldn’t be won.”

Zelensky responded by claiming that Trump is “living in a disinformation space” created by Moscow. 

In tune with Zelensky, Kallas declared that “it’s clear that the Russian narrative is very strongly represented” in Trump’s statement.

Trump also claimed last week that Zelensky’s approval rating was at 4% and suggested that an election should be called.

“He refuses to have elections. He’s low in the real Ukrainian polls. How can you be high with every city being demolished?” Trump said, adding that in the meantime, the US was “successfully negotiating an end to the war with Russia.”

Kallas, however, stressed that for any peace deal to be effective, it would need to involve the Europeans and the Ukrainians. She was referring to recent high-level US-Russian talks in Saudi Arabia, which frustrated the EU. Member states criticized Washington for sidelining Brussels and Kiev during the negotiations.

“You can discuss whatever you want with Putin, but if it comes to Ukraine and Europe, then Ukraine and Europe also have to agree to this deal,” Kallas told journalists.

Last week, reports suggested that the EU is preparing a military aid package worth at least $6.2 billion for Ukraine. The package is expected to include 1.5 million artillery shells and air defense systems – one of the bloc’s largest military aid commitments since the escalation of the conflict in 2022. Russia considers Zelensky “illegitimate” and recognizes only the Ukrainian parliament and its speaker. Russian officials have warned that any treaties he signs could be challenged and questioned his ability to conclude lasting agreements.

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