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Zelenskyy: Why a city that voted against him now embraces him

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Three years ago, when he won Ukraine’s presidential election, former TV comedian Volodymyr Zelenskyy swept every region of the country except Lviv, in the far west, where he lost heavily.

Since then, nothing about his uneven performance in office had changed minds in the region that calls itself “the soul of Ukraine.” And then the Russians invaded.

Why We Wrote This

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy was once a TV comedian. Today he is the moral conscience of a nation, whose daily speeches inspire his people.

Overnight, Mr. Zelenskyy became a national treasure, enjoying unquestioned support, and an international icon. His daily speeches to the nation, full of defiance toward Moscow and compassion for Ukrainians, have been credited with keeping the country’s morale up in the face of heavy odds.

His success as a wartime leader seems to derive partly from the same inexperience that was once his greatest weakness. He is not a politician; he speaks directly and simply to his people with an intuitive understanding of the moment. Nor is he an actor playing a role anymore; he comes across as sincere and authentic.

Ukraine, long divided between east and west, between Russian speakers and Ukrainian speakers, between pro-Europeans and pro-Russians, has found a new unity since the Russian invasion. And that unity is incarnate in Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

Lviv, Ukraine

Little debate existed until two weeks ago about where President Volodymyr Zelenskyy could least expect a warm welcome in Ukraine. In Lviv, an elegant, cosmopolitan city of cobblestone streets, cafe culture, and manicured parks on the country’s western flank, residents viewed him more as chief jester than commander in chief.

In 2019, Mr. Zelenskyy, a former actor who played the role of president in a popular comedy series on Ukrainian TV, ran for the real-life position and crushed the incumbent, Petro Poroshenko. He carried every region of the country except Lviv, an area of 2.5 million people that shares the name of its largest city, where he captured only one-third of the vote.

Residents here doubted that the political upstart could deliver on his promises of economic reform, fend off Russian President Vladimir Putin’s ceaseless pressure, and guide the country closer to Western Europe. Since then, nothing about Mr. Zelenskyy’s uneven performance in office had changed attitudes in “the soul of Ukraine,” as Lviv is known – until Feb. 24, when Russian tanks rolled over the border.

Why We Wrote This

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy was once a TV comedian. Today he is the moral conscience of a nation, whose daily speeches inspire his people.

Any vestige of skepticism about the president has vanished as Russia escalates its attacks and civilian casualties mount in cities throughout the eastern two-thirds of the country. His blend of defiance toward Moscow and compassion for Ukrainians has won over his toughest audience at home and transformed him into a national treasure and international icon.

“He has made Ukraine proud,” says Yuriy Polovyy, a retiree and violinist in a string ensemble who voted for Mr. Poroshenko in 2019. He carries a plastic bag loaded with warm cabbage rolls and containers of borscht from a cafe as he walks home across the city’s central square. A patch with the country’s coat of arms adorns his black wool cap. “He is our president – the president for all Ukrainians.”

Yuriy Polovyy, a violinist in a string ensemble in Lviv, Ukraine, stands in the city’s center square, March 4, 2022. A onetime supporter of former President Petro Poroshenko, Mr. Polovyy praises current President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. “He has made Ukraine proud,” Mr. Polovyy says.

Political analysts suggest that Mr. Zelenskyy’s sudden strength as a wartime leader derives, in part, from the same inexperience once regarded as his primary weakness. His visits to front-line soldiers, heartfelt video messages exhorting civilians, and passionate pleas to Western officials for more support reveal an intuitive, visceral understanding of the moment that transcends politics and policy.

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