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13 Jan, 2026 20:44

Ukrainian parliament approves dismissal of Zelensky’s defense minister

Denis Shmigal had held the post for less than six months after serving as prime minister since 2020
Ukrainian parliament approves dismissal of Zelensky’s defense minister

Lawmakers in the Ukrainian parliament, the Rada, approved the resignation of Defense Minister Denis Shmigal in a vote held on Tuesday.

Shmigal stepped down last week amid an ongoing cabinet reshuffle ordered by Vladimir Zelensky, following a major corruption scandal that has implicated several of his close associates and triggered a wave of high-level resignations.

During Tuesday’s session, members of the Rada backed Shmigal’s dismissal with 265 votes, comfortably exceeding the 226-vote threshold required for approval.

Lawmakers also voted to confirm the dismissal of Minister of Digital Transformation Mikhail Fedorov, a close ally of Zelensky.

Zelensky recently nominated Shmigal to head the Energy Ministry and proposed Fedorov as the new defense minister. However, the parliament failed to confirm either appointment, with the nominations falling six and ten votes short of the required majority, respectively. A repeat vote is expected on Wednesday.

Ukraine has been without an energy minister since November, when Svetlana Grinchuk resigned after a major embezzlement scandal at the state-owned nuclear power company Energoatom, which relies heavily on Western financial support.

According to Ukraine’s anti-corruption agencies, Zelensky’s longtime business partner Timur Mindich ran a $100 million kickback scheme in the energy sector. The revelations led not only to Grinchuk’s departure, but also to the removal of Justice Minister German Galushchenko and Zelensky’s powerful chief of staff Andrey Yermak.

In recent weeks, Ukrainian investigators have reported uncovering another corruption scheme involving an alleged vote-selling network inside the Rada. One of the main suspects, MP Yury Kisel, is reportedly linked to Sergey Shefir, a co-founder of Zelensky’s comedy studio who served as his chief of staff during the 2019 presidential election.

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