New Ukrainian leader took page from sitcom script
MOSCOW — The president-elect of Ukraine does not have a political record that foreign governments and companies can search for clues. For now, a 51-episode TV sitcom might offer the clearest view of what kind of leader Volodymyr Zelenskiy will be.
Zelenskiy, a career comedian, foretold his future when he took the starring role in “Servant of the People.” The series, created by Zelenskiy’s production company, follows a high school teacher who finds himself elected to Ukraine’s highest office.
The show, which premièred in 2015, is the first Ukrainian series bought by Netflix. In an interview earlier this year, Zelenskiy told journalists he wanted to put “a dream country” on the small screen. The latest season aired after Zelenskiy declared his candidacy for the real presidency on New Year’s Eve.
Further blurring the line between fiction and reality, he named his political party Servant of the People.
SEPARATISM AND THE WAR IN THE EAST
The dispute over Russia’s annexation of Crimea and a deadly separatist war in eastern
Ukraine are likely to dominate Zelenskiy’s agenda.
Zelenskiy said earlier this year he doesn’t see military force as an option for bringing either area back under Kyiv’s wing. He said the government should reach out to welcome the eastern territories to a new Ukraine.
“We need to send a message that we are all Ukrainians ... that you’re one of us,” he said.
In the latest season of “Servant of the People,” Zelenskiy’s character, Vasyl Holoborodko, assumes the presidency of a country split into 28 independent states, some of which resemble actual separatist fiefdoms in eastern Ukraine.
“Enough with the old slogans: north, west, south. We’re one country, we’re all Ukrainians,” the fictional President Holoborodko tells two separatist leaders in one episode of the TV show.
At the end of the latest season, Ukraine’s east and west come back together following a joint effort to help coal miners trapped underground.
OVERHAUL OF GOVERNMENT
After an exit poll predicted he won nearly three out of every four votes, Zelenskiy on Sunday reiterated a campaign promise to fire Ukraine’s prosecutor general for an appointee of his own. He called the chief prosecutor part of “the old team.”
In the first season of “Servant of the People,” the president character pushes out existing officials with reputations for corruption and abusing power.
But Holoborodko is despondent because he can’t find a single honest professional to appoint. He ends up putting his school friends in top posts, attracting accusations of cronyism.
During an actual presidential debate on Friday, Zelenskiy was surrounded by literally the same people — the actors who played his cabinet ministers on TV. The president-elect has not announced who he wants to appoint, but no peers from acting or comedy have shown interest in following Zelenskiy into politics.
PERKS AND PRIVILEGES
As early election returns came in, Zelenskiy said he would cut the presidential administration budget, get rid of the perks that come with office and move the seat of government out of central Kyiv so “there is no traffic.”
“I would like to find a place in Kyiv or outside Kyiv so that there would be no motorcades, and I would like to get rid of the motorcades altogether,” he said.
The scripted president of “Servant of the People” gives up his motorcade in Season 1 and takes the bus or taxis to work. He pushes through a bill to relocate executive branch offices to a Sovietera pavilion on Kyiv’s outskirts.
The character ends up hiring back the bodyguard he fired and being driven in a car after he narrowly escapes a group of taxi drivers angry about his crackdown on illegal cabs.
RELATIONS WITH OUTGOING LEADER
Zelenskiy spent a huge portion of his campaign lambasting traditional politicians for alleged corruption.
At Friday’s debate in front of nearly 60,000 people, Zelenskiy called incumbent Petro Poroshenko “a wolf in sheep’s clothing” and accused him of abusing power for personal enrichment.
Poroshenko tweeted that the Kremlin would be “celebrating” the election of a “new, inexperienced Ukrainian president,” but also called Zelenskiy to concede defeat and offer his assistance.
Zelenskiy on Sunday said of the president’s offer to help, “If I really need to call him, I will.”
In “Servant of the People,” his character must deal with a crestfallen predecessor who locks himself in his office, gets drunk and refuses to come out.
“They’ve stolen the country from me, an entire country,” the fictional outgoing president says.
In the end, the new president convinces the outgoing leader to go peacefully.