Servant of the People – 43 percent, 126 seats
- Dmytro Razumkov, 35, a political technologist, the head of the Servant of the People party.
- Ruslan Stefanchuk, 40, a legal scholar and professor, Zelensky’s representative in parliament, his adviser and the ideologist of the Servant of the People party.
- Iryna Venedyktova, 40, a professor of law.
- Davyd Arakhamia, 40, also known as David Braun, an IT businessman and volunteer who is helping the Ukrainian army.
- Halyna Yanchenko, 31, an anti-corruption activist and former lawmaker of the Kyiv City Council from Democratic Alliance.
- Mykhailo Fyodorov, 28, Zelensky’s digital advisor, the founder of digital service company SMMSTUDIO.
- Oleksandr Korniyenko, 35, an election consultant and head of Servant of the People’s election campaign.
- Anastasiya Krasnosilska, 35, an anti-corruption activist and former board member of the Anti-Corruption Action Center
- Oleksandr Tkachenko, 53, the CEO of 1+1 TV channel, which is owned by oligarch Ihor Kolomoisky.
- Zhan Beleniuk, 28, a Greco-Roman wrestler and Olympic champion.
- Serhiy Babak, 40, an expert on education issues on Zelensky’s team and head of educational programs at the Ukrainian Institute for the Future think tank.
- Vladyslav Kryklii, 32, the former head of the Main Service Center of the Ministry of Interior Affairs and a former adviser to Interior Minister Arsen Avakov.
- Olena Shuliak, 43, the CEO and co-owner of Midland Development Ukraine, a development consulting firm.
- Dmytro Natalukha, 31, a lawyer, human rights activist and the founder and head of Lead Augury, a law firm.
- Yelyzaveta Yasko, 28, an expert in politics and culture and co-founder of Yellow Blue Strategy, a public initiative for cultural diplomacy through arts and education.
- Oleksiy Orzhel, 35, a fuel and energy expert and head of the energy sector at the Better Regulation Delivery Office, created by the economy ministry.
- Andriy Gerus, 37, Zelensky’s representative at the Cabinet of Ministers, an energy expert, a former member of the national commission regulating energy and utility services and a former executive director of investment bank Concord Capital.
- Mykhailo Radutsky, 50, the president and founder of the Boris private medical clinic in Kyiv.
- Denys Monastyrsky, 39, an expert on law enforcement and judicial reform at the Ukrainian Institute for the Future think tank.
- Danylo Hetmantsev, 41, a law professor, expert on banking and tax law and member of the European Association of Tax Law Professors.
- Denys Malyuska, 37, a lawyer focusing on business activity, dispute resolution and bankruptcy; a consultant for the World Bank; and chairman of the board at Better Regulation Delivery Office, created by the economy ministry.
- Andriy Kholodov, 46, the deputy head of Tekam Plius, a wholesale company.
- Geo Leros, 30, an artist, movie director and former adviser to Information Policy Minister Yuriy Stets and Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko.
- Serhiy Kalchenko, 54, a lawyer and associate partner at Hillmont Partner law firm.
- Maksym Tkachenko, 36, a television producer and the head of Zelensky’s company, Kvartal-Concert.
- Yehor Chernev, 34, an expert at HiTech Office Ukraine, a union of digital companies, and former CEO of Starlight Digital Sales, a sales house owned by oligarch Viktor Pinchuk.
- Sviatoslav Yurash, 23, a digital and foreign policy expert on the Zelensky team, former coordinator of the EuroMaidan PR blog and head of communications at Babylon13, a cinematography community union.
- Pavlo Sushko, 39, a film producer, screenwriter and the founder and director of film production company Prime Story Pictures.
- Iryna Vereshchuk, 39, a foreign policy expert, head of the International Center for Baltic-Black Sea Studies and the Consensus Practices Center for Political Dialogue civic organization.
- Oleksandr Kurbakov, 36, head of the IT and telecom sector at the Better Regulation Delivery Office, created by the economy ministry.
- Yulia Didenko, 41, the Odesa-based commercial director of Vmeste advertising agency.
- Dmytro Solomchuk, 38, the Rivne-based head of Agro-Center, a company that produces and sells parts of agricultural machinery.
- Mykhailo Ananchenko, 24, a Sumy-based student activist, head of the All-Ukrainian Youth Council, and an aide to Sumy Mayor Oleksandr Lysenko.
- Anna Kovalenko, 28, a journalist and former activist of the EuroMaidan Revolution.
- Vladlen Nekliudov, 45, a prosecutor from the Dnipropetrovsk Oblast prosecutor’s office.
- Ihor Kryvosheyev, 34, an Uzhhorod-based comic, who works at ComedyOrg event, a wedding agency.
- Serhiy Ionushas, 39, a lawyer and head of the Geleon law firm, which specializes in intellectual property and registration of trademarks.
- Oleksandr Zavitnevych, 46, director of the Smila Foundry Plant in Cherkasy Oblast.
- Vadym Strunevych, 36, a Kyiv developer and the founder and director of the Kyivproekt company, which provides construction design services for buildings in Kyiv. Strunevych is also the head of Ukrinvestbud Development, a Kyiv-based development firm.
- Volodymyr Voronov, 40, a brand maker and founder of the Vladimir Voronov International Branding Agency.
- Yuriy Aristov, 44, a Kyiv businessman who has several companies for selling fish and seafood.
- Yuriy Kisiel, 56, the owner and head of several companies that produce concrete in Kryvy Rih.
- Vadym Halaichuk, 48, a lawyer and expert on constitutional, administrative and election law, and the head of the Hillmont Partners law firm.
- Artem Kovaliov, 35, the CEO of UNIAN news agency, which is owned by oligarch Ihor Kolomoisky.
- Valeriy Sterniychuk, 38, the head of League of Laughter, a comedy competition founded by Zelensky’s company, in the city of Lutsk.
- Halyna Mykhailiuk, 32, a legal scholar working with the National University of Kyiv Mohyla Academy and the European Union Advisory Mission.
- Roman Babiy, 41, the head of the Held-Energiya financial company.
- Oleksandr Kachura, 29, a lawyer and the founder and head of the Kachura Lawyers law firm, who worked for Zelensky’s Kvartal 95 company.
- Hanna Novosad, 27, the head of the Directorate for Strategic Planning and European Integration at the Ministry of Education and Science of Ukraine.
- Artem Kultenko, 35, founder of the Union of Investors in the Transport Infrastructure of Kyiv, known for his previous attempts to participate in city-level politics in Kyiv.
- Oleh Marusyak, 51, an entrepreneur from Kalush in Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast who deals in repairing automobiles and renting equipment for construction.
- Mykola Kyrychenko, 36, a member of the Kharkiv Oblast Council involved in several farming ventures.
- Halyna Tretyakova, 56, the CEO of the Ukrainian Insurance Federation and a founder of the Civil Liberties Institute earlier involved in the work of the Reanimation Package of Reforms, a coalition of reform-oriented think tanks.
- Pavlo Khalimon, 36, former director of Agro House LLC (farming) and financial director of Prometey Gaz 1 LLC (logistics) based in Pryluky, Chernihiv Oblast.
- Olena Moshenets, 36, a business journalist, media manager, editor-in-chief of the Ekonomika+ publishing house and founder and CEO of MAP Communication Group consultancy.
- Olha Saladuha, 36, a professional track-and-field athlete who has won the gold in triple-jump at the World and European championships.
- Olha Koval, 28, an associate professor at the National University of Food Technologies.
- Alina Zagoruyko, 35, a lawyer working at the Ukrainian Consulting Group who used to work at Ukraine’s Central Electoral Commission.
- Oleh Bondarenko, 44, an ecological activist, lawyer and entrepreneur from Kharkiv and the chairman of the Green Fund NGO, where he works on defending the rights of victims of environmental catastrophes.
- Mykhailo Kryachko, 39, an internet marketing specialist who works as the COO of SMM Studio, a digital company owned by Zelensky’s digital advisor Mykhailo Fedorov, No.6 on the list.
- Maryna Bardina, 27, an aide to former reformist lawmaker Sergii Leshchenko who specializes in gender and equality issues.
- Lyudmyla Marchenko, 36, an HR manager at the Epiсentr and Nova Liniya retail networks specializing in household goods.
- Ivan Yunakov, 35, an architect and founder of the 33BY architectural bureau, who developed the design for Zelensky’s new office.
- Darya Volodina, 28, an expert in political communications and the founder of the Iconic Creations communications agency.
- Olha Savchenko, 30, a lawyer specializing in the litigation of criminal, human rights and migration matters and an authorized representative of Zelensky.
- Oksana Hrynchuk, 40, a mathematics graduate of Chernivtsi University with business experience in marketing and management. She used to work for one of the largest telecom operators in Ukraine, Kyivstar PrJSC.
- Volodymyr Kozak, 35, a lawyer and an entrepreneur coming from the Svarog West Group, which specializes in growing and exporting agricultural produce and belongs to former members of ousted President Viktor Yanukovych’s Party of Regions, brothers Serhiy and Oleksandr Buryak.
- Andriy Lysyuk, 42, a practicing lawyer and founder of the Hillmont Partners law firm specializing in criminal law and the recovery of distressed assets.
- Oleksandr Sova, 47, the CEO and founder of popular Ukrainian jewelry brand Sova.
- Volodymyr Vatras, 39, a legal scholar and the founder and head of the Vatras and Partners law firm based in Khmelnytsky.
- Roman Mulyk, 46, an Ivano-Frankivsk businessman working in construction, real estate leasing and servicing and a former lawmaker of the Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast Council from the Party of Regions.
- Oleh Tarasov, 35, the Kropyvnytsky-based deputy head of the Agroekstra agrarian company and co-founder of the Ukrainian Grain Union, a grain trading company.
- Anatoliy Kostiukh, 31, a former TV journalist based in the village of Storozhnytsia in Zakarpattia Oblast, the former head of the local youth wing of the Udar political party, founded and lead by Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko.
- Yevheniy Brahar, 25, a historian at Taras Shevchenko Kyiv National University.
- Vitaliy Bezgin, 29, an expert on communications and design, who works at the Better Regulation Delivery Office, created by the economy ministry.
- Oleksandr Saliychuk, 32, the Rivne-based owner and head of the Persha Myasna Khata meat production company.
- Ella Riepina, 45, an economics professor at Donetsk State University of Economics and Law, which is now based in Kryviy Rih, Zelensky’s home city.
- Arseniy Pushkarenko, 26, an aide to Andriy Pavlovsky, a lawmaker from the Batkivshchyna party of former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko. Pushkarenko is also the former head of the Kyiv branch of the Samopomich party of Lviv Mayor Andriy Sadovy.
- Maryan Zablotsky, 33, an economist; the head of Ukrainian Agrarian Association, a union of agrarian producers; and an aide to Oleksiy Mushak, a lawmaker from former President Petro Poroshenko’s party and the cousin of agrarian multimillionaire Andriy Verevsky.
- Andriy Klochko, 38, a crisis manager who ran for Kyiv City Council with the Vidrodzhennia party, largely formed out of the former allies of ousted President Viktor Yanukovych.
- Yulia Ovchynnikova, 34, a professor at Vasyl Stus Donetsk National University, which moved to Vinnytsia after Donetsk was occupied by Russian-led troops.
- Oleksandr Merezhko, 48, a professor of law at Kyiv National Linguistic University.
- Oleksiy Ustenko, 25, the head of the investment department of AgroGeneration, a French farming company, in Ukraine.
- Oleksandr Kabanov, 45, a scriptwriter at Zelensky’s company Kvartal 95 and a doctor-psychotherapist by education.
- Fedir Venislavsky, 50, Zelensky’s representative in the Constitutional Court and a lecturer in constitutional law at the Yaroslav Mudry Kharkiv National Law University.
- Lada Bulakh, 43, executive head of 100 Percent of Life: Kyiv Region, a charity helping people with HIV.
- Yevhen Petruniak, 42, a lawyer and head of Leks-K law firm based in Lviv.
- Oleksandr Marikovsky, 36, a media-expert, head of media monitoring company Mediateka, member of civic anti-corruption group AutoMaidan and an adviser to Artem Bidenko, the state secretary of the Ministry of Information Policy.
- Oleksandr Fediyenko, 47, the head of Internet-provider firm IMK and head of the Ukrainian Internet Association.
- Andriy Motovilovets, 37, deputy head of Prozorro.Sales, an electronic state procurement system, and an adviser to the Ministry of Infrastructure.
- Anna Kolisnyk, 34, a former forensics expert at the Kharkiv Forensics Center of the Interior Ministry.
- Yelizaveta Bohutska, 55, an activist and blogger, who was born in Crimea and worked as psychiatrist in Simferopol before leaving the peninsula after Russia annexed it in 2014.
- Artem Nahayevsky, 36, a businessman and head of PAT ATP 13058, a Kyiv-based logistics company.
- Mykyta Poturayev, 48, a political analyst, head of Focus-Media, a company that publishes Focus weekly magazine, which reportedly belongs to Vitali Khomutynnik, a businessman and lawmaker from Vidrodzhennia group in parliament, which is largely formed out of the former allies of the ousted President Viktor Yanukovych
- Pavlo Yakymenko, 29, the director of Interplex, a company that owns a chain of diners in Kharkiv, former deputy of the Kharkiv district council elected there as a member of the Party of Regions.
- Artem Kunayev, 27, economist, the deputy head of the department of helicopter marketing and sales at Motor Sich, a Ukrainian aircraft engine company and airline of the same name.
- Dmytro Pryputen, 33, lawyer and economist, a part-time associate professor for law and finance director at Mahrok LLC, in which he holds a 14 percent stake.
- Maksym Pavlyuk, 27, lawyer, a deputy military prosecutor of Darnytsya military command.
- Vasyl Mokan, 34, a political consultant specializing in election campaigns, a business partner of Dmytro Razumkov, the No.1 on the list.
- Roksolana Pidlasa, 25, an economist, adviser and spokesperson for Stepan Kubiv, the minister of economic development and trade of Ukraine, who previously worked for the American Chamber of Commerce in Ukraine and the Ukrainian Crisis Media Center.
- Bohdan Torokhtiy, 35, a legal counsel for the State Grain Corporation of Ukraine, who previously held legal and management positions in Kirovohrad region.
- Oksana Dmytrieva, 39, a medical doctor, entrepreneur and public health expert, the CEO of Status Dental Studio.
- Marharyta Shol, 30, an economist and accountant, who represented Volodymyr Zelensky during the last presidential elections in Mariupol.
- Andriy Kostin, 46, a prominent attorney at law in Odesa, who manages a universal court practice in Odesa and takes on a leadership position in the Odesa regional bar association.
- Ruslan Horbenko, 40, a local politician from Luhansk oblast in eastern Ukraine, the co-owner and manager of Interguma-2010 LLC and Intershina UA, tire selling companies.
- Andriy Zhupanin, 30, a lawyer holding diplomas from Uzhhorod, Kyiv, and Leiden universities, who currently works in Kyiv for a law firm operating under the worldwide legal consultancy brand DLA Piper.
- Rostyslav Tistyk, 25, Zelensky’s representative in Lviv Oblast during the presidential campaign. His father was a deputy of Lviv City Council from Svoboda nationalist party and his uncle was a deputy of Lviv Oblast Council from the same party.
- Yevheniya Kravchuk, 33, the head of the press office of the Servant of the People party, a freelance aide of Iryna Konstankevych, a lawmaker from UKROP party linked to oligarch Ihor Kolomoisky, former head of communications of Sylna Ukrayina party of Serhiy Tihipko, a former ally of the ousted president Viktor Yanukovych.
- Nelli Yakovleva, 34, a managing partner of Ukrainian Politconsulting Group along with Dmytro Razumkov, No. 1 on the party list, a professor at Kyiv National Polytechnic University.
- Serhiy Hryvko, 33, a Chernihiv-based activist, head of several local civic organizations, who used to work as a sales manager at local heating company ChernihivGasSpetsService. He campaigned for Chernihiv City Council from Nash Kray, a party formed by mayors and former allies of the ousted President Viktor Yanukovych.
- Petro Pavlovsky, 37, a Kharkiv-based lawyer and a human rights activist.
- Iryna Allakhverdiyeva, 40, the head of the Mykolayiv Oblast branch of Uniqa, an Austrian insurance company.
- Olena Vintoniak, 40, a legal adviser based in Ivano-Frankivsk.
- Yuriy Zaslavsky, 37, the head of Macrus, a local pharmaceutical distributor, who campaigned to join Khmelnytsky City Council several times.
- Andriy Zadorozhniy, 51, the head of Proxen, a Kyiv-based law firm. His late brother Oleksandr Zadorozhniy was a lawmaker for two terms in 1998-2006, being a loyalist of then-President Leonid Kuchma.
- Ostap Shypailo, 30, a Lviv-based businessman, who owns several energy and construction companies suspected of tender fraud, according to the Nashi Groshi anti-corruption watchdog.
- Ivan Shynkarenko, 32, an Odesa-based engineer with the Institute of Renewable Energy at the National Academy of Science of Ukraine.
- Olga Sovgyrya, 38, a professor of constitutional law at the Taras Shevchenko University in Kyiv.
- Volodymyr Kreydenko, 32, ran for the city council of his hometown Melitopol in Zaporizhya Oblast on Batkivshchyna party ballot, served as the head of two obscure and inactive political parties, the Party of Republicans and the Development and Prosperity party, served as an aide to two lawmakers, including one from the current parliament – Valery Karpuntsov of Petro Poroshenko Bloc.
- Taras Tarasenko, 38, a lawyer and the founding partner of the law firm STS.
- Mykola Solskyi, 40, a lawyer from the Protsyk and Partners law firm.
- Pavlo Frolov, 42, an economist, chief consultant at the Apparatus of Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine, who earlier worked at the State Committee for Natural Resources of Ukraine.
- Mykhailo Novikov, 53, a lawyer and the founder of the Novikov and Partners law firm, former judge of the Kyiv Appeal Commercial Court and a judge of the Arbitration (Commercial) Court of Kyiv.
- Viktoriia Podhorna, 50, a political scientist and philosopher, former chief consultant of the National Institute for Strategic Studies, founder and CEO of the non-profit Smart City Public Council, digital economy expert at the NGO High-Tech Office Ukraine.
- Olena Khomenko, 44, an economist and the director of digital product management and development at Zelensky’s company Kvartal 95.
- Anatolii Ostapenko, 51, a lawyer and engineer, the director of the Alfaiurkonsaltynh law firm.
Opposition Platform – 12.5 percent, 33 seats.
- Yuriy Boyko, 60, deputy prime minister in 2012-2014, minister of energy and the coal industry 2010-2012, and minister of fuel and energy 2006-2007, 2010.
- Vadym Rabinovych, 65, member of Opposition Bloc in previous parliament, serial entrepreneur with a focus on media and the chairman of the Ukrainian Jewish Congress
- Viktor Medvedchuk, 64, a businessman and the former head of the presidential administration in 2002-2005, and deputy speaker of the Verkhovna Rada in 1998-2001. Russian President Vladimir Putin is a friend and the godfather of Medvedchuk’s children.
- Nataliya Korolevska, 44, a member of Opposition Bloc in previous parliament, former minister of social policy in 2012-2014.
- Serhiy Lovochkin, 47, member of Opposition Bloc in previous parliament, former chief of the presidential administration in 2010-2013 and chief-of-staff of Ukraine’s prime minister in 2006-2007.
- Vasyl Nimchenko, 68, a former judge of the Supreme Court and Constitutional Court.
- Nestor Shufrych, 52, a member of parliament since 2002 with the Opposition Bloc, former minister of emergency situations.
- Serhiy Larin, 56, a member of parliament since 1998, former governor of Kirovograd Oblast.
- Serhiy Dunayev, 45, lawmaker with the Party of Regions, and the former mayor of Lysychansk, a city in Luhansk Oblast, some 750 kilometers to the southeast of Kyiv.
- Taras Kozak, 47, the owner of NewsOne television channel, former deputy chief of the State Customs Service.
- Vadym Stolar, 36, lawmaker with the Party of Regions, co-owner of 101 Tower business center, director of the Kyevoblzhylstroi construction company.
- Yuliy Ioffe, 78, member of parliament since 1990, lawmaker with the Party of Regions.
- Mykhailo Papiiev, 59, formerly member of Opposition Bloc, former Minister of Labor and Social Policy.
- Ihor Abramovych, 34, temporarily unemployed, was an assistant of Kharkiv’s deputy Alexander Feldman, according to the Chesno civic watchdog.
- Dmytro Isaienko, 51, deputy minister of Regional Development, Construction and Housing and Communal Services of Ukraine in 2007-2015, vice-president of the Confederation of Builders of Ukraine.
- Mykola Skoryk, 46, lawmaker with the Party of Regions, former chairman of Odesa regional state administration.
- Hryhoriy Surkis, 69, president of the Dynamo Kyiv football club, co-owns electricity distribution companies in western Ukraine with his brother Ihor Surkis.
- Ihor Kisiliov, 34, deputy head of the Kyiv City council committee for urban development, architecture and land use.
- Yuriy Zahorodniy, 60, first deputy head of the Presidential Administration in 2002-2005.
- Anatoliy Burch, 56, former deputy head of Security Service of Ukraine in Kirovograd region.
- Yulya Lovochkina, 42, lawmaker with the Party of Regions in 2012-2014 and the Opposition Bloc in 2014-2019, sister of Serhiy Lovochkin.
- Oleksandr Koltunovych, 31, researcher at the Institute of Agrarian Economics, assistant to an Opposition Bloc lawmaker until 2019.
- Hryhoriy Mamka, 44, partner at Mamka & Partners law firm, former Deputy Chief of the Main Investigation Department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Ukraine.
- Volodymyr Kaltsev, 53, Secretary of Zaporizhzhia City Council in 2010-2012, notorious hunter of wild animals.
- Yuriy Pavlenko, 44, Commissioner for Children’s Rights under President Viktor Yanukovych in 2011-2014, Minister for Family Youth and Sport under President Viktor Yushchenko in 2007-2010.
- Nataliya Prykhodko, 37, Kyiv City Council deputy, worked at Kyiv City Administration.
- Viktor Chornyi, 51, director of Storm security company.
- Vitaliy Bort, 46, deputy director for economics at DS Prom Group road-building company, lawmaker with the Party of Regions in 2006-2007, 2007-2012 and 2012-2014.
- Mykhailo Makarenko, 69, head of the Obstetrics and Gynecology Department of the Bogomolets National Medical University, deputy of Kyiv Oblast Council with the Party of Regions in 2014.
- Oleh Voloshyn, 38, head of international cooperation service at 112 TV channel, spokesperson and director of the information department of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 2010-2013.
- Tetiana Plachkova, 36, lawyer, founder and former director of Key and Case law Firm in Odesa.
- Oleksandr Puzanov, 42, Deputy Head of Kyiv City Administration in 2010-2014.
- Suto Mamoyan, 37, deputy director of “Myasprom” meat-producing company, brother of Serhiy Mamoyan, deputy of Poltava Oblast Council.
European Solidarity – 8.8 percent, 26 seats
- Petro Poroshenko, 54, President of Ukraine in 2014-2019.
- Andriy Parubiy, 48, Chairman of the Ukrainian Parliament in 2016-2019.
- Iryna Gerashchenko, 48, First Deputy Chair of the Ukrainian Parliament in 2016-2019.
- Mykhailo Zabrodskyi, 46, Lieutenant General of the Airborne Forces, commander of military operations in the east of Ukraine since 2017.
- Sofiya Fedyna, 35, singer and TV presenter.
- Mustafa Dzhemilev, 76, former Head of the Mejlis of the Crimean Tatar People and Commissioner for the Affairs of Crimean Tatars under former President Poroshenko.
- Yana Zinkevych, 24, medical volunteer, founder of the Hospitaliery medical volunteer battalion.
- Akhtem Chiygoz, 54, Deputy Head of the Mejlis of the Crimean Tatar People since 2008, who was politically imprisoned by Russia in 2015-2017.
- Oleh Synyutka, 49, Governor of Lviv Oblast since 2014, First Deputy Mayor of Lviv, 2007-2014.
- Ivanna Klympush-Tsintsadze, 47, Deputy Prime Minister of Ukraine for European and Euro-Atlantic Integration in 2016-2019.
- Artur Gerasimov, 46, head of Petro Poroshenko’s faction in the Ukrainian Parliament in 2017-2019, head of Ukraine’s delegation to the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly.
- Stepan Kubiv, 57, First Deputy Prime Minister of Ukraine in 2016-2019, Minister of Economic Development and Trade in 2016-2019.
- Iryna Friz, 44, Minister for Veteran Affairs in 2018-2019.
- Nina Yuzhanina, 54, Head of the Tax and Customs Policy Parliamentary Committee in 2015-2019.
- Iryna Lutsenko, 53, Representative of the President of Ukraine under Poroshenko in 2017-2019, the wife of Prosecutor General Yuriy Lutsenko.
- Viktoria Siumar, 42, Head of the Freedom of Speech and Information Policy Parliamentary Committee in 2015-2019.
- Volodymyr Ariev, 44, head of the Ukrainian delegation to the Council of Europe in 2015-2019.
- Rostyslav Pavlenko, 42, Deputy Head of the Poroshenko’s Presidential Administration in 2018, Director of National Institute for Strategic Studies in 2018-2019.
- Mykola Velychkovych, 47, Deputy Minister of Internal Affairs of Ukraine in 2014.
- Serhiy Alexeyev, 42, Deputy Head of the Legal Policy and Justice Parliamentary Committee in 2014-2019.
- Ruslan Knyazevych, Head of the Legal Policy and Justice Parliamentary Committee in 2014-2019.
- Maxim Savrasov, 38, lawmaker with the Petro Poroshenko Bloc in 2014-2019.
- Mariya Ionova, 41, Deputy Chairwoman of the European Integration Parliamentary committee on in 2014-2019.
- Nataliya Boyko, 30, Deputy Minister of Energy and Coal Industry of Ukraine in 2017-2019.
- Volodymyr Viatrovych, 42, Head of the Ukrainian Institute of National Remembrance in 2014-2019.
- Iryna Nykorak, 31, Kyiv City Council deputy in 2016-2019.
Batkivshchyna – 7.7 percent, 22 seats.
- Yulia Tymoshenko, 58, party leader and former Prime Minister.
- Serhii Taruta, 63, founder of the Industrial Union of Donbas and former governor of Donetsk Oblast.
- Valentyn Nalyvaichenko, 53, former head of the Security Service of Ukraine.
- Serhii Soboliev, 57, acting Batkivshchyna faction leader.
- Olena Kondratiuk, 48, secretary of the Committee on Freedom of Expression and Information Policy.
- Ivan Kyrylenko, 62, member of parliament, former Minister of Agrarian Policy in 2000-2002.
- Andriy Kozhemiakin, 53, chair of the committee on legislative support of law enforcement, a former security service officer.
- Hryhoriy Nemyria, 59, Vice Prime Minister of Ukraine for European and Euro-Atlantic Integration in 2007-2010.
- Serhiy Vlasenko, 52, a member of parliament, lawyer.
- Valerii Dubil, 45, a member of the Committee on issues of budget in Ukraine.
- Oleksandr Abdullin, 57, a former journalist, member of the Committee on freedom of speech and information policy in Ukraine.
- Ivan Krulko, 38, a member of the Committee on issues of budget in Ukraine.
- Anzhelika Labunska, 51, a lawyer, former Head of Zhytomyr oblast Council in 2015-2016.
- Kostiantyn Bondarev, 46, a former member of the Committee on taxation and customs policy in Ukraine.
- Mykhailo Tsymbaliuk, 54, Lieutenant General, lawyer.
- Vitalii Danilov, 52, former president of Ukrainian football Premier League in 2008-2016.
- Olga Belkova, 44, Deputy Chairman of the Committee on fuel and energy complex, nuclear policy and nuclear safety.
- Oleksii Kucherenko, 58, a former minister of regional development, building and housing and communal services in Ukraine in 2007-2010.
- Andriy Nikolayenko, 40, a former Head of State Agency for Donbas Restoration in September-October 2014, Chairman of the Board of Directors of LLC “Velta”.
- Mykhailo Volynets, 62, a former Deputy Chairman of the Committee on fuel and energy complex, nuclear policy and nuclear safety in 2007-2012.
- Andriy Puziychuk, 41, Deputy General Director of LLC house-building company Fundament.
- Aliona Shkrum, 31, a lawyer and chair of the subcommittee for questions of civil service and service in the bodies of local self-government.
Voice – 6 percent, 18 seats.
- Svyatoslav Vakarchuk, 44, leader of the party, frontman of the popular rock band Okean Elzy.
- Yulia Klymenko, 43, head of the party, former Deputy Economy Minister in 2014-2016, head of the Kyiv School of Economics.
- Kira Rudik, 33, chief operating officer of Ring Ukraine.
- Yaroslav Zhelezniak, 29, advisor to the Prime Minister for parliamentary relations since 2017.
- Oleksandra Ustinova, 33, board member of the Anti-Corruption Action Center
- Oleg Makarov, 53, former deputy of the Kyiv city council.
- Yaroslav Yurchyshyn, 38, deputy head of the party, former chief executive officer at Transparency International Ukraine.
- Serhiy Rakhmanin, 50, first deputy chief editor of the influential Dzerkalo Tyzhnya (Mirror of the Week) newspaper.
- Solomiia Bobrovska, 29, former deputy governor of Odesa Oblast in 2016-2017.
- Olha Stefanyshyna, 36, deputy minister of health since 2018
- Oleksandr Kurdydyk, 45, deputy general director at DLA Piper law firm.
- Volodymyr Tsabal, 34, partner of McKinsey & Company consulting firm.
- Andrii Osadchuk, 47, former deputy of the Kyiv city council.
- Roman Kostenko, 35, war veteran, Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) colonel.
- Roman Lozynskyi, 25, former head of Ukrainian Galician Party, member of NGO “Plast.”
- Inna Sovsun, 34, lecturer at the Kyiv School of Economics
- Lesia Vasylenko, 32, founder and chair of the Legal Hundred NGO
- Rustem Umierov, 37, Crimean Tatar businessperson, Executive Director at the Astem infrastructure technology company.