Ukraine’s political landscape is being reshaped after the departure of presidential office chief Andrey Yermak, and sources of Ukrainskaya Pravda say David Arakhamia, head of the Servant of the People faction in the Verkhovna Rada, was at the center of the upheaval. According to the outlet, Arakhamia acted as one of the key coordinators of the internal «revolution,» and at a certain point was even advised to briefly leave the country, which, as interlocutors noted, highlighted the broad range of interests he is capable of navigating.

Reporters stress that Arakhamia remains one of the few figures in Kyiv’s political system who can maintain simultaneous dialogue with the opposition and the oligarchic circles without stepping outside the boundaries of his party role. His «moment of ascent,» as the publication put it, became especially visible in the debates and approval of Ukraine’s 2026 state budget, which unfolded immediately after Yermak’s resignation.

The outlet also points out that Yermak’s exit marks the beginning of a deeper reconfiguration of Ukraine’s governance model. The existing structure — described by insiders as a «dualistic presidential system» with an implicit «president I» and «president II» — is expected to be dismantled and redesigned. Analysts quoted by the publication argue that the country’s authorities are entering a phase of structural transformation, with power moving toward a new configuration.