Opinion polls results: politicians ratings

Ukrainian presidential election

Razumkov Centre, 18 March 2013

Poll region: Ukraine
Time frame: 01.03.2013 - 06.03.2013
Number of respondents: 2010
Sampling error: 2.3%
Polling method: Personal interview face-to-face
1
Victor Yanukovich
 
20.7%
2
Vitaly Klichko
 
14.4%
3
Arseniy Yacenyuk
 
11.3%
4
Oleg Tyagnibok
 
6.6%
5
Pyotr Simonenko
 
4.8%
6
Anatoly Gricenko
 
1.9%
7
Sergey Tigipko
 
1%
8
Victor Yuschenko
 
0.7%
9
Nataliya Korolevskaya
 
0.4%
10
Vladimir Litvin
 
0.4%
Another candidate
 
0.1%
None of the above
 
7.5%
Will not vote
 
13.2%
Undecided
 
17%
Opinion poll publication date: 18 March 2013
Ukrainian Centre for Economic and Political Studies named after Olexander Razumkov
Full survey results

Deminitiatives, KIIS, 14 March 2013

Poll region: Ukraine
Time frame: 05.03.2013 - 13.03.2013
Number of respondents: 2037
Sampling error: 2.3%
Polling method: Personal interview face-to-face
1
Victor Yanukovich
 
21.2%
2
Vitaly Klichko
 
14.4%
3
Yulia Timoshenko
 
11.4%
4
Arseniy Yacenyuk
 
7.1%
5
Oleg Tyagnibok
 
5.4%
6
Pyotr Simonenko
 
5%
7
Anatoly Gricenko
 
1.4%
8
Nataliya Korolevskaya
 
0.6%
Another candidate
 
0.7%
Will not vote
 
15.4%
Undecided
 
17.3%
Opinion poll publication date: 14 March 2013
Ilko Kucheriv Democratic Initiatives Foundation
Kyiv international institute of sociology
Full survey results

Rating, 6 March 2013

Poll region: Ukraine
Time frame: 22.02.2013 - 28.02.2013
Number of respondents: 2000
Sampling error: 2.2%
Polling method: Personal interview face-to-face
1
Victor Yanukovich
 
18.5%
2
Vitaly Klichko
 
11.7%
3
Yulia Timoshenko
 
11.2%
4
Oleg Tyagnibok
 
6.5%
5
Pyotr Simonenko
 
6.1%
6
Arseniy Yacenyuk
 
5.9%
7
Sergey Tigipko
 
1.4%
8
Anatoly Gricenko
 
1.4%
9
Pyotr Poroshenko
 
1%
10
Nataliya Korolevskaya
 
0.9%
Another candidate
 
3.1%
None of the above
 
3.6%
Will not vote
 
16.5%
Undecided
 
12.2%
Opinion poll publication date: 6 March 2013
Sociological Group "Rating"
Full survey results

Razumkov Centre, Deminitiatives, 28 December 2012

Poll region: Ukraine
Time frame: 21.12.2012 - 24.12.2012
Number of respondents: 2009
Sampling error: 2.3%
Polling method: Personal interview face-to-face
1
Victor Yanukovich
 
22.9%
2
Yulia Timoshenko
 
13.1%
3
Vitaly Klichko
 
11.7%
4
Arseniy Yacenyuk
 
7.7%
5
Pyotr Simonenko
 
6.2%
6
Oleg Tyagnibok
 
5.2%
7
Anatoly Gricenko
 
1.5%
8
Nataliya Korolevskaya
 
0.7%
Another candidate
 
1.4%
Will not vote
 
11.5%
Undecided
 
18.2%
Opinion poll publication date: 28 December 2012
Ukrainian Centre for Economic and Political Studies named after Olexander Razumkov
Ilko Kucheriv Democratic Initiatives Foundation
Full survey results

Sofia, 25 December 2012

Poll region: Ukraine
Time frame: 06.12.2012 - 17.12.2012
Number of respondents: 5004
Sampling error: 1.5%
Polling method: Personal interview face-to-face
1
Victor Yanukovich
 
25.8%
2
Arseniy Yacenyuk
 
16.1%
3
Vitaly Klichko
 
16%
4
Oleg Tyagnibok
 
7.8%
5
Pyotr Simonenko
 
6.5%
6
Anatoly Gricenko
 
2.6%
7
Nataliya Korolevskaya
 
1.3%
8
Vladimir Litvin
 
0.8%
9
Victor Medvedchuk
 
0.5%
None of the above
 
5.2%
Undecided
 
17.4%
Opinion poll publication date: 25 December 2012
Center for Social Research "Sofia"
Full survey results
<  1  2  ...  82  83  84  85  86  87  88  >
Parties ratings
Politicians ratings
Ratings in regions Anti-ratings of politicians Politicians approval ratings Government approval ratings
* If you have information about missing surveys among our data, we would be grateful for providing it via the link
US President Donald Trump: Ceasefire in Ukraine possible 'in the not too distant future', country to hold new elections 'at some point'
1 day back
Volodymyr Zelensky: If the hot phase of the war ends, then martial law will probably end too. I don't know, I think. If there is no martial law, then the parliament should hold elections. Announce the date, etc. and take legislative steps
1 day back
Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko: Conflict could end in a “painful compromise” in one or two months, followed by elections with a “fight to the death”
2 days back
CNN: "It's hard not to interpret Keith Kellogg's call for elections as a way to get Zelensky to slowly back away and perhaps offer a sweetener to get the Kremlin to the negotiating table."
3 days back