Yana Matviychuk about the All-Ukrainian Forum of Conservative Politics

What is the All-Ukrainian Forum of Conservative Policy “Security. Values. Welfare” 2024?

The return of conservatism is the main trend in Western countries in 2024. Moreover, this trend will only intensify in 2025. A powerful impetus to the return to conservatism was given by Donald Trump’s victory in the US presidential election in 2024. Ukrainian traditional conservatives are hopeful about the conservative renaissance in the United States. Yana Matviychuk and other partners, conservative organizations have decided to strengthen cooperation with their American counterparts on Ukrainian soil. Therefore, to establish better cooperation between Ukrainian and American conservatives, the All-Ukrainian Conservative Policy Forum “Security. Values. Welfare” was organized.

All-Ukrainian Forum of Conservative Politics
All-Ukrainian Forum of Conservative Policy “Security. Values. Welfare”

The forum was organized by conservative activists and organizations from Ukraine and the United States. Among the organizers were organizations such as the Brotherhood and the Christian Patriotic Platform. These organizations were represented at the Forum by Yana Matviychuk. Ukrainian and American conservatives join forces with the assistance of the Christian Patriotic Platform. Yana Matviychuk about the All-Ukrainian Forum of Conservative Politics On December 6, the All-Ukrainian Forum of Conservative Politics “Security. Values. Welfare” was held in Kyiv. This event brought together more than 400 Ukrainian conservatives, as well as representatives of leading American think tanks The Heritage Foundation and American Enterprise Institute. The forum was aimed at strengthening cooperation between conservative movements in Ukraine and the United States, as well as defining a common vision of conservative values.

Mission of the Conservative Policy Forum:

Donald Trump’s victory in the US election has changed the political landscape, putting values such as faith, family traditions, individualism, and free economics in the spotlight. Ukraine, as one of the most conservative countries in Europe, is eager to demonstrate to its strategic ally that its principles are in line with those of the United States. The Forum’s organizers, representatives of Ukrainian communities, worked to strengthen ties with key American institutions. Yana Matviychuk at the All-Ukrainian Conservative Policy Forum “Security. Values. Welfare” represented the interests of the Christian Patriotic Platform. Yana Matviychuk not only took an active part in organizing the Forum, but also expressed the position that uniting the efforts of conservatives is the key to protecting common values and emphasized the importance of economic development based on the principles of the Austrian School of Economics (freedom, private property, minimal government intervention in business).

Video report from the Conservative Forum by Yana Matviychuk:

Main topics of discussion
During the All-Ukrainian Forum of Conservative Politics “Security. Values. Welfare” participants discussed the following:

  • conservative values of Ukrainians;
  • the role of family, community, and church;
  • economic challenges of the war and prospects for recovery;
  • deepening allied relations between Ukraine and the United States.

Yana Matviychuk moderated the panel discussion “Economics of War and Recovery”. In her speech, she emphasized that the main value of the economy is the freedom of entrepreneurship, which ensures prosperity for every family. Yana Matviychuk invited the speakers to participate in the discussion on behalf of the Christian Patriotic Platform. The participants of the discussion unanimously noted that the war is the main threat to Ukraine, but economic problems also have a significant impact.

Preparations for Ukrainian Week in the United States
The forum was an important step in the preparations for Ukrainian Week in Washington, D.C., scheduled for February 2025. This initiative is intended to further develop the partnership between Ukraine and the United States and demonstrate the unity of the two nations. The forum has become not only a platform for the exchange of ideas, but also an important step towards the global unification of conservative movements.

Yana Matviychuk on socialism after USSR: Who is plundering Ukraine’s economy today?

Socialism still exists in Ukraine, despite the fact that the Soviet Union has been gone for more than three decades. The influence of socialism in Ukraine lives in the minds of Ukrainians and migrates from generation to generation. Yet, no one notices it or wants to notice. This is exactly what socialism is – living in a system where collectivism prevails over individualism, the impersonal tries to dissolve the individual, and most people, instead of squaring their shoulders and taking risks and responsibility for their lives and countries, meekly wait for a miserable social security from a faceless bureaucratic system without a desire to change it. In general, socialism or capitalism is primarily a system – a system of redistribution of material wealth in society. In socialism, wealth is distributed through varying degrees of coercion or direct violence. The harshest examples of socialist coercion include the USSR, North Korea, and Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge. “Mild” socialist coercion is excessive taxes, permits and licenses for production, excessive duties, inspections, searches, control of activities by law enforcement agencies, etc. Capitalism is also a system of redistribution of wealth, but this redistribution occurs at the expense of free will and free contractual relations between individuals, personalities. Many people are mistaken when they think that this is exactly what is happening in Ukraine. Indeed, when you come to a gas station and buy coffee and a hot dog along with your gasoline, it seems to you that everything is based on free will and voluntary exchange, but this is not entirely true. The company that owns the gas station has already suffered numerous abuses from the collective bureaucracy, when it has to pay almost 50% of the price of fuel to bureaucrats in the form of taxes. Inspections, excise taxes, fines, licenses, and permits are also part of socialist “gentle” violence. The worst part is that all this “bureaucratic coercion and control” is included in the price you pay for a hot dog, coffee, gasoline, and any other goods.

Socialism in the economy

Socialism in Ukraine
Ukraine has not had a free market for more than 30 years of independence, despite the fact that we are formally recognized as a “market economy”. We are a socialist country that has failed to realize the importance of adopting the doctrines of capitalism. If we had done so 30 years ago, we would have long since overtaken our neighbors in development. We have resources and hardworking people. If we had economic freedom, Ukrainian families would have prospered. But Ukraine today continues to be a kind of socialist center of Europe. We have more than 1 million officials, we are in the top 5 of the Tax Hell rating, we are the poorest in Europe… Despite this, instead of easing the tax burden, we have an increased tax burden; instead of reducing the number of officials, we have a bloated state apparatus; instead of deregulation, we have deeper regulation. Ukrainians do not realize that it was the socialists they elected who turned our economy into a stray, hungry puppy that is sometimes fed by neighbors. Let’s be honest: if not for the help of our partners, Ukraine would have lost the war. The war would not have lasted long on people alone – the army needs weapons. Weapons are provided by the economy. But since independence, the socialists have brought the economy and the military-industrial complex to a point where we are considered weak.

Socialism as a system of collectivism

The socialist approach has led to the system stealing. Almost no one in the system manages to break it, because socialism suppresses the individual, is based on collectivism, which creates a circular corruption. Socialists are collectivists by nature, and as a result, they begin to oppress, destroy, and absorb everything individual and private. This is the substantive realization of socialism: the eradication of the individual, the neutralization of private initiative and entrepreneurship, and the tacit consent of society, most of which depends on handouts from officials and a miserable but stable social security. It is the socialist, collectivist system that has led to a level of poverty we have never seen before. Nine million people in Ukraine live in poverty. The minimum wage or pension is not enough for a normal life. The socialist system has destroyed Ukraine’s economy and is not going to move towards capitalism (individualism, private property, and initiative).

I, Yana Matviychuk, have joined the Platform to change the socialist system of Ukraine. I believe that Ukrainians deserve a prosperous and secure life. That is why the collectivist socialist syndicate should be deprived of the opportunity to influence the economy. It is a decisive transition from the old system and the construction of a new one that Ukraine should follow.