Konstantin Skorkin

Skorkin is an independent journalist based in Moscow.

Latest Analysis

    • Carnegie.ru Commentary

    Revenge Voting: Ukraine Prepares to Go to the Polls

    • September 29, 2020

    For Zelensky’s team, used to winning landslide victories, the outcome of the upcoming local elections will be dispiriting and will fan the flames of internal strife.

    • Carnegie.ru Commentary

    Ukraine’s Unpopular Populist: What Next for Zelensky?

    • July 17, 2020

    A further fall in President Zelensky’s ratings could become a serious demotivating factor for the former TV star. His transformation from the “people’s president” into yet another Ukrainian politician with broken promises, a state dacha, and a dodgy entourage will primarily weigh on the president himself.

    • Chapters

    Russia and Ukraine in the Age of Coronavirus

    • July 08, 2020

    COVID-19 is exacting a cruel toll on Ukraine. Its economy, its presidency, its prospects for peace with Russia, and its ties with key Western partners have all suffered as a result of the pandemic.

    • Carnegie.ru Commentary

    Ukraine’s Latest Schism: Zelensky Against the Regions

    • June 03, 2020

    The coronavirus pandemic has turned the mounting tension between the center and the regions into an open conflict. Now threats loom of revenge by the old elites and a new wave of populism exploiting the idea of regional independence.

    • Carnegie.ru Commentary

    IMF Bailout Costs Ukraine’s President Dear

    • April 09, 2020

    Struggling to hold on to his party’s majority, President Zelensky is increasingly forced to take heed of the influential national-patriotic minority in parliament. Zelensky finds himself held hostage by the old elite, from whom he is buying the last chances for reform at the cost of his own political future.

    • Carnegie.ru Commentary

    Pandemic Unsettles Ukraine’s Zelensky

    • March 26, 2020

    In Ukraine, the chaos caused by the coronavirus pandemic combined with the country’s existing political problems could sharpen the appetite for authoritarianism in Ukrainian society.

    • Carnegie.ru Commentary

    Ukraine’s Unromantic Reshuffle

    • March 06, 2020

    Having dismissed his young government, President Zelensky risks joining the ranks of Ukraine’s failed reformers. The reshuffle is being seen as a victory for business as usual and oligarchic interests.

    • Carnegie.ru Commentary

    Last Man Standing: How Avakov Survived in Ukraine

    • February 12, 2020

    Arsen Avakov has survived Ukraine’s change of regime. President Zelensky needs him because of his links to the dark side of the Ukrainian deep state, against which the president’s young reformers are often powerless. The omnipotent minister is prepared to put aside his personal ambition to become the regime’s informal mainstay.

    • Carnegie.ru Commentary

    Cracks Emerge in Ukraine’s Ruling Party

    • January 22, 2020

    Faced with a fluctuating approval rating, President Zelensky is attempting to instill order in his party’s ranks. The voting machine that he built from his parliamentary majority is beginning to malfunction as deputies refuse to be mere cogs in that machine.

    • Carnegie.ru Commentary

    Ukraine’s New Economic Policy Juggles Populism With Libertarianism

    • November 12, 2019

    Zelensky’s economic path has turned out to be as contradictory as his political path. Various promises ranging from libertarian reforms to classic social populism are hindering the implementation of any meaningful policy.

Please note

You are leaving the Carnegie–Tsinghua Center for Global Policy's website and entering another Carnegie global site.

请注意...

你将离开清华—卡内基中心网站,进入卡内基其他全球中心的网站。