NEUHARDENBERG, GERMANY - SEPTEMBER 15: Ukrainian Vice Prime Minister and Minister of Economy Yulia Svyrydenko speaks to the media prior to a meeting of G7 nations trade ministers and representatives at Schloss Neuhardenberg on September 15, 2022 in Neuhardenberg, Germany. Trade ministers and representatives from the G7 group of nations, Ukraine and the European Union are meeting for two days to discuss issues including possible reviving the influence of the World Trade Organization (WTO) and international trade repercussions stemming from Russia's ongoing war in Ukraine. (Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images)

From the capitals

Ukraine PM resigns in Zelensky-ordered reshuffle

2 minutes read
Avatar for AFP

Ukraine’s Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko resigned today as part of a government reshuffle ordered by President Volodymyr Zelensky.

The Ukrainian leader has yet to name a replacement and has said only that Kyiv is “changing its political strategy” amid “new challenges and new tasks”.

Ukraine’s parliament formally approved Svyrydenko’s resignation in a vote on Tuesday.

She was only appointed in July 2025 and was seen as having good relations with US officials, having negotiated a minerals investment deal with Washington in the aftermath of Zelensky’s Oval Office clash with President Donald Trump.

The reshuffle comes at a pivotal moment in the more than four-year war with Russia, with Moscow escalating its deadly ballistic missile strikes on Ukraine, and Kyiv planning to domestically produce US Patriot air defence systems.

Announcing the reshuffle over the weekend, Zelensky said he planned to assign different people to manage different areas of foreign policy, and that he had offered Svyrydenko a new role leading “relations with a key partner”, without elaborating.

The role of prime minister does not typically include a say on military strategy or frontline operations, where Zelensky and his military chiefs call the shots.

Svyrydenko said she had delivered “concrete results” in office and posted a photo of herself making a heart symbol with her hands during an address to parliament.

Ukrainian media has named Sergiy Koretsky, the CEO of Ukraine’s state energy firm Naftogaz, as the frontrunner to replace her.

Zelensky met Koretsky at the weekend — after he had announced plans to remove Svyrydenko — and hailed his “effective leadership” in an “extremely complex sector”.

Energy is a key priority in Ukraine, with the grid having been battered by Russian attacks and power outages widespread throughout winter.

Key Topics

More like this

Zelensky moves to replace Ukraine's prime minister in government reshuffle
Democracy

Zelensky moves to replace Ukraine’s prime minister in government reshuffle

By Brussels Signal

Defence

Needs money, weapons and loyalty: Zelensky reshuffles government

By Chris Nelson

Ukraine will send a team to Washington this week to move forward with negotiations on a more expansive draft for a minerals deal offered by the United States, the deputy prime minister said on April 7. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
News

Ukraine aims to ‘align’ with US on minerals deal in talks this week

By Reuters

Premium
From the capitals

Zelensky snubs Poland over Ukraine recovery conference in Gdańsk

By Krzysztof Mularczyk