TIME Magazineさんのインスタグラム写真 - (TIME MagazineInstagram)「The battle for the presidency once looked like an easy win for #Ukraine’s most powerful woman. @yulia_tymoshenko was leading in the polls last year because no other candidate could claim her credentials: two terms as Prime Minister, two campaigns for the presidency, two years behind bars as a prisoner of conscience and two popular uprisings that saw protesters carry her portrait like a talisman against corruption. Still, she doesn’t fault Ukrainians for supporting Volodymyr Zelensky, one of the country's most famous comedians who plays the President on television. “We can’t blame people for this,” #Tymoshenko says one afternoon in March. “Their outrage is a sign of powerlessness,” she adds. “They are so disappointed, so unhappy with the system that they start looking for new ways out. And when they don’t find that, the rise of ­Zelenskies is like a protest, a response to the feeling of hopelessness.” In most surveys, roughly twice as many people say they would vote for him as for his closest rivals during the first round of voting on March 31. Polls suggest he would also beat any challenger in the runoff set for April 21, when Zelensky is expected to face the incumbent, President Petro Poroshenko, a candy magnate who has led Ukraine through five years of conflict with #Russia. Read more at the link in bio. Photograph by @anastasiatl for TIME」3月31日 22時22分 - time

TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 3月31日 22時22分


The battle for the presidency once looked like an easy win for #Ukraine’s most powerful woman. @yulia_tymoshenko was leading in the polls last year because no other candidate could claim her credentials: two terms as Prime Minister, two campaigns for the presidency, two years behind bars as a prisoner of conscience and two popular uprisings that saw protesters carry her portrait like a talisman against corruption. Still, she doesn’t fault Ukrainians for supporting Volodymyr Zelensky, one of the country's most famous comedians who plays the President on television. “We can’t blame people for this,” #Tymoshenko says one afternoon in March. “Their outrage is a sign of powerlessness,” she adds. “They are so disappointed, so unhappy with the system that they start looking for new ways out. And when they don’t find that, the rise of ­Zelenskies is like a protest, a response to the feeling of hopelessness.” In most surveys, roughly twice as many people say they would vote for him as for his closest rivals during the first round of voting on March 31. Polls suggest he would also beat any challenger in the runoff set for April 21, when Zelensky is expected to face the incumbent, President Petro Poroshenko, a candy magnate who has led Ukraine through five years of conflict with #Russia. Read more at the link in bio. Photograph by @anastasiatl for TIME


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