On June 15, Yulia Tymoshenko launched the start of Ukraine’s presidential election season with a two-and-half hour speech in Kyiv, Ukraine. With twenty-nine percent of voters telling pollsters they haven’t made their minds up for the race slated for March 31, the field is wide open. But it’s not too soon to start worrying about the many ways in which the Kremlin may meddle in the election.
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Mykola Vorobiov: 5 ways the Kremlin can meddle in Ukraine’s big election
Russia's acting Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev and President Vladimir Putin attend a session of the State Duma in Moscow on May 8, 2018.