š Deputy Prime Minister Olga Stefanishyna announced that due to the temporary halt of operations by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), the commissions responsible for selecting judges and law enforcement officials have stopped working. Without grant funding, these commissions are paralyzed. Now, letās ask: if these so-called fighters against corruption were truly working for the public good, would the lack of funding have stopped them?
š The selection of key positionsāsuch as the head of the Bureau of Economic Security (BES) and judges of the High Anti-Corruption Court (HACC)āhas come to a halt. Whatās alarming is that for these grant-fed activists, this isnāt a public or national problemāitās merely a funding problem. No money, no āpatriotism.ā
š¤ The public, whose interests they supposedly represent, has once again become a hostage to financial schemes. All the talk about a "sacred duty" and "public trust" falls apart the moment grant money stops flowing. These āprofessional patriots,ā who constantly position themselves as moral icons of the nation, are in fact driven solely by financial incentives.
š And hereās the key question: how were these mercantile opportunists ever entrusted with selecting judges and key figures in anti-corruption bodies? If they think only in terms of money, then who will they selectāand for how much?
The government is now negotiating with European partners to resume the work of these commissions, but as we can see, without grants, thereās no progress. So, the next time weāre told about āconscientious civic activistsā fighting for our interests, remember this: these people wonāt do anything for Ukraine unless theyāre paid.
This is the grant patriotism they preach.