Lesya Orobets

[2] Then beginning in March 2004, she worked as an assistant-consultant to People's Deputy of Ukraine (Member of Parliament), Yuriy Orobets until September 2004.

[2] Immediately following this experience, Orobets worked as an employee representative of the law firm Baker & McKenzie located in Kyiv and remained there until February 2007.

Between 2011 and 2013 alone, Orobets sent over 800 appeals[18] to government officials, which focused primarily on protecting the rights of citizens and combating corruption during various important procedures.

Working on the issue of corruption in collaboration with «Nashi Groshi» and «Anticorruption Action Center», Orobets helped save about 1 billion UAH (or about $100 million)[19] from procurement in the form of budget costs in 2012.

Orobets publicly turned to Volodymyr Lytvyn in 2011 with a request to renew the text of the law on banning tobacco advertisement, which was falsified before being given to the head of the Verkhovna Rada to sign.

[25] Her legislative priorities include the reform of primary, secondary and higher education, transparent and effective system of elections for units of representative government, and encouragement of charitable activities and leading a healthy lifestyle.

These regulations include, "On public associations", "On the introduction of a moratorium on the closure of secondary schools in rural areas", "On amendments to certain legislative acts of Ukraine to ban advertisements, sponsorships and promotion of sale of tobacco products", "On amendments to certain legislative acts of Ukraine to pass laws to restrict tobacco product smoking spaces" and more.

As a result of these regulatory innovations, the level of smoking in Ukraine over the last five years has decreased 17% among men and double that figure among women.

In fact, due to the introduction of the excise tax, in only nine months (January 2012 – September 2012) the Ukrainian budget received 12.8 billion UAH.

He died in a car accident under suspicious circumstances before a special inquiry commission released a report about unlawful elections in Cherkasy.

[31] This was seen by Orobets herself as a way of pressuring her into a pro-Presidential (Viktor Yanukovych) majority in the Verkhovna Rada and an attempt to monopolize the entire investment sector to "the people close to power".

On May 3, 2014, she caused controversy when she posted pictures of herself posing with a rifle on Facebook[39] and Twitter,[40] just the day after the deadly Odesa clashes, which she characterized as "a great victory" and "an adequate response" to the pro-Russian demonstrations.

Meeting with voters
With family