First Vynnychenko government

The first government lasted from June 28 until August 13 when the Mala Rada accepted the resignation of V.Vynnychenko.[1] Most ministers later were imprisoned by the Soviet regime, the rest managed to survive abroad.

Composition

Party key Jewish Bund
USDRP
UPSR
UPSF
Fareynikte
PDCP
RPSR
Office Party Incumbent
Secretary of Internal Affairs Volodymyr Vynnychenko
Secretary of Nationalities Serhiy Yefremov
Deputy - Jewish Affairs Moishe Zilberfarb
Deputy - Polish Affairs Mieczysław Mickiewicz
Secretary of Finance Khrystofor Baranovsky
Secretary of Court Affairs Valentyn Sadovsky
Secretary of Military Affairs Symon Petlyura
Secretary of Agrarian Affairs Borys Martos
Secretary of Education Ivan Steshenko
Secretary of Food Supply Mykola Stasyuk
Chancellor Pavlo Khrystiuk
Controller Moisei Rafes
Secretary of Communications Aleksandr Zarubin
Secretary of Transportation Vsevolod Holubovych

The last three portfolios of the First Secretariat were added on July 13, three more (Trade/Industry, Labor, and Russian Affairs) assigned to Bolsheviks were never filled due to boycott.

Events
Deputy-Secretaries of Nationalities

Secretary of Nationalities was expanded by the request of the Provisional Government as the minority representatives to Undersecretaries of ethnic affairs (deputies) and soon on July 17 Yefremov was replaced by Oleksander Shulhyn.

At first the deputy secretaries of Nationalities were part of the secretariat of Nationalities headed initially by Yefremov. With the proclamation of the III Universal on December 22, 1917 on the initiative of Oleksandr Shulhyn the Secretariat of Nationalities was transformed into the Secretariat of Foreign Affairs. The position for the Russian Affairs representative for quite sometime was left unoccupied although was specifically reserved for the Russian Provisional Government. After the Secretariat was reorganized as the Council of Ministers the deputy-secretaries received their own ministerial assignments.

Prosecutions

References

  1. Photo with the article about the first Secretariat (English)
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