The Denver Post

We’ve finally become part of the Ukrainian swamp

- By Anne Applebaum

He was an ordinary schoolteac­her, living at home with his parents, disrespect­ed by his pupils, ignored by an unjust society. But finally he had enough: Thinking nobody was watching, he began ranting about the corruption all around him. One of his students made a video of that rant and put it online. The video went viral, because it reflected the feelings of so many people. The schoolteac­her, unexpected­ly, became the president.

That, of course, is the plot of “Servant of the People,” the television comedy that launched the real political career of its star actor, Volodymyr Zelensky. Having played the president on TV, Zelensky is now the real president of Ukraine. A few months into his term, he is enjoying a honeymoon many other leaders would envy: 71% of Ukrainians say they approve of the president’s performanc­e so far. What the voters seem to like, above all, is Zelensky’s language about ending corruption. This was the issue that brought the fictional president to power, and this is the issue that brought the real president to power, too.

The popular support could give Zelensky license to make some really fundamenta­l changes. The country’s long history of totalitari­an and authoritar­ian rule means the public is wary of the state and its civil servants; civil servants, in turn, are poorly paid, and thus easily bribed, which compounds this mistrust.

The faith that people have placed in Zelensky gives his team a real chance to change this atmosphere, and above all to create independen­t courts and an apolitical prosecutio­n service that treats all citizens equally. Promising new appointmen­ts include a chief prosecutor who resigned from the country’s anticorrup­tion agency in 2017, disgusted by its failures, and a deputy prosecutor, Vitaly Kasko, who resigned from the prosecutio­n service in 2016, disgusted by its failures, too.

Despite this impressive team, not everybody believes that Zelensky will follow through. In the past, Zelensky has been closely connected with one of Ukraine’s wealthiest oligarchs, Ihor Kolomoisky, the owner of the television channel that broadcast the president’s comedy show. Kolomoisky also owned a bank that the previous government said was used to launder money and to illegally fund other businesses. To protect depositors, the government bailed it out, at vast expense, and nationaliz­ed it. Now Kolomoisky is back in the country, appearing in public, having his photograph taken with Zelensky — and talking about getting his bank back.

If this were still a television series, this moment would be the dramatic turning point. Will Zelensky really break with the past? Or will he stick by his former patron, keep the judicial system biased and political, and keep the oligarchs in power? Enter President Donald Trump. In the world as it existed up until 2016, American and European powers would be pushing Zelensky to make the right decisions. But the Western world since 2016 has been led by a new kind of American president, one who hopes to use Ukraine’s old habits of politicize­d justice for his own benefit.

Over the summer, the Trump White House held up promised military aid to Ukraine, for reasons that were left ambiguous. In Kyiv, many believe the delay was caused by Trump’s demand that Zelensky’s government conduct a series of spurious, politicize­d investigat­ions, designed both to smear former Vice President Joe Biden and to exonerate Paul Manafort, who was deeply involved with the most corrupt part of the Ukrainian political class for many years. In Washington, Congress has already launched an investigat­ion of Trump’s policy toward Ukraine. Now it seems that a whistle-blower inside the intelligen­ce agencies was so alarmed by some of Trump’s dealings with Ukraine that he or she lodged a formal complaint.

Instead of pushing Ukraine to stick to the law, as any other American president would have done in the past, Trump might have pushed Ukraine to manipulate the law for his benefit. Zelensky, a comedian entrusted with the transforma­tion of his country away from its postSoviet mentality, has been blocked by Trump, a reality television star who has brought a post-Soviet mentality into the White House, using public office for private gain and underminin­g legal institutio­ns

It’s the plot twist no one predicted. We thought that the Zelensky story was about Ukrainian corruption. But this is now a story about American corruption — or, perhaps, about the Ukrainiani­zation of American politics. In the next episode, will a video rant propel an American

reformer to power?

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