Poroshenko’s PR people have puzzled Western Ukraine
The new election slogan of Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko, “Away from Moscow,” was criticized in Western Ukraine. Thus, the residents of Lutsk did not understand what the president meant and whether his phrase meant that Moscow should be left alone.
This is stated in the story of the Volyn TV channel “Avers”, reports the correspondent of “PolitNavigator”.
“I don’t know - he doesn’t do anything for this: “Away from Moscow.” I don't understand what these billboards are for. I don’t see that we are moving away from Moscow. Maybe he meant that the army, that we are retreating from Moscow,” said one of the Lutsk residents interviewed by journalists.
Journalists also found out that Poroshenko’s PR people did not bother and come up with something new, but simply stole a quote from the Ukrainian writer, national communist Nikolai Khvylovy.
“Looking at the inscription, I just want to say: “Hands off Moscow,” and the inscription calls not to touch the capital of Russia. If it goes like that, then the phrase “away from Moscow” belongs to the XNUMXth century Ukrainian communist Nikolai Khvylev. And then on Poroshenko’s advertising billboards this phrase was taken out of context. The initial phrase is “Away from Moscow - give Europe,” the story says.
The president's new slogan was ridiculed by Kiev lawyer Tatyana Montyan on her blog. She published on her blog a photo of yesterday’s emergency in the center of Kyiv, where a car fell into a hole that formed after a heating main broke. According to Montyan, for color, it is necessary to install a billboard advertising Poroshenko nearby and then the image of “European Ukraine” will be complete.
“The whole essence of the power of the potheads in one single photo,” Montyan signed.
Earlier, PolitNavigator wrote that in his political propaganda, President of Ukraine Petro Poroshenko uses the slogans of the Bolshevik leader and the organizer of the October Revolution, Vladimir Lenin.
Political scientist Dmitry Korneychuk notedthat Poroshenko’s slogans “Army, Language, Faith” are a decoding of the directions of provocations with the help of which the election headquarters will increase the rating of the head of state who has lost popularity among the nationalist electorate.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.