Oleksandr Aliksiichuk

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Green: voted for beneficial and against harmful bills, red: voted against beneficial and for harmful bills. Yellow: abstained. Dark grey: present but did not vote, or absent.

Green: voted for beneficial and against harmful bills, red: voted against beneficial and for harmful bills. Yellow: abstained. Dark grey: present but did not vote, or absent.

Biography

Oleksandr Aliksiichuk was elected as a Member of Parliament of the 9th convocation representing the “Servant of the People” party from the Rivne region (district #154, which includes the city of Dubno and the Demydivka, Dubno, Zdolbuniv, Mlyniv, and Radyvyliv districts). He joined the Verkhovna Rada Committee on the Organization of State Power, Local Self-Government, Regional Development and Urban Planning, and became head of the subcommittee on cooperation between territorial communities and regions.

Aliksiichuk played a key role in the ban on the activities of the Russian Orthodox Church, which the aggressor state used as an intelligence network. Along with “Holos” MP Yuliia Sirko (formerly Klymenko), he gathered the required “wet signatures” to bring the ban on the “Moscow priests” to the parliamentary floor. Eventually, Parliament supported the corresponding government bill. The MP was also one of the “Servant of the People” representatives who opposed Maksym Buzhanskyi’s legislative initiative aimed at reversing the transition of Russian-language schools to Ukrainian in 2020.

Timeline of Key Events

2025

Did not vote for the so-called “Ihor Mazepa Law” (Draft Law No. 12089), a legislative initiative that essentially reflected the demands of unscrupulous business interests. The law provides for the “resetting” of claims regarding illegally acquired forests and coastal lands if ten years have passed since they entered private ownership, potentially legalizing land grabs from the previous decade. Despite a petition demanding a veto gathering over 25,000 signatures, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy signed the law. The first victim was the case concerning Protasiiv Yar.

However, he voted for the liquidation of the independence of anti-corruption bodies, namely the NABU and the Specialized Anti-Corruption Prosecutor’s Office (Draft Law No. 12414). This vote triggered a protest near Bankova Street the same day.

2024

The MP’s wife, Kateryna Aliksiichuk, became the owner of the firm “Yevroekspertyza,” which provides expert services in the construction sector. Journalists from “Nashi Hroshi” raised questions regarding the firm’s activities. “Yevroekspertyza” was subsequently excluded from the list of companies authorized to conduct expert assessments of construction projects. The MP noted that the alleged violations occurred before his wife became the owner (prior to July 2024) and added that the exclusion from the list of expert organizations was, in his opinion, unjustified and would be challenged.

2023

Along with MP Yuliia Sirko (“Holos”), he initiated the collection of over 226 signatures to bring the issue of national security—the ban on the activities of the Moscow Patriarchate—to the parliamentary agenda. The Cabinet’s initiative became law in 2024.

2022

Aliksiichuk co-initiated an appeal expressing no confidence in the Chairman of the Committee on the Organization of State Power and Local Self-Government, Andriy Klochko, who was later served a notice of suspicion and eventually removed from his position.

He voted for the urban planning “reform” bill #5655, authored by “Servant of the People” party leader Olena Shuliak. The civil sector and media criticized the initiative, and Chatham House (UK) warned that such rules could create favorable conditions for construction cartels. The European Parliament and the European Commission also expressed serious concerns.

2021

His car was set on fire, according to preliminary data, for political reasons. The MP considers it a politically motivated attack.

In the same year, together with MP Oleh Dunda, he registered a bill on the denunciation of the agreement between Ukraine and the Russian Federation regarding the status and conditions of the Black Sea Fleet’s presence on the territory of Ukraine (#0095), the so-called “Kharkiv Pacts.”

2020

Became one of the authors of a draft resolution on the dismissal of Arsen Avakov from the post of Minister of Internal Affairs.

In the same year, he was among 44 deputies who did not vote for the bill on the removal of parliamentary immunity, arguing that he had not had time to review all proposed amendments; a month later, during the repeat vote, he supported the initiative.

He supported resolution #4104, by which Parliament approved its representatives to the competition commission for selecting the leadership of the Specialized Anti-Corruption Prosecutor’s Office (SAPO). The composition of this commission drew large-scale criticism from civil society, the EU delegation, and G7 countries, as it included individuals whose independence and integrity were in doubt.

2019

Won the parliamentary elections in the Rivne region (district #154) as a member of the “Servant of the People” party. At that time, he was an entrepreneur. A few months earlier, during the presidential campaign, he was a trusted agent for presidential candidate Andriy Sadovyi, the mayor of Lviv representing the “Samopomich” party. Aliksiichuk financed Sadovyi’s election campaign.

2003-2019

Worked in the construction business as a director/co-owner of LLC “Torhbud-Servis,” LLC “Budtekh-Plus,” LLC “Inter-Bud,” and other companies in the Rivne region construction industry.

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Voting record

For

"For" votes apply to both beneficial bills (green) and harmful bills (red).

Against

"Against" votes apply to both beneficial bills (green) and harmful bills (red).