[8] The UGP holds an annual congress, during which it elects members to the political council and decides policy priorities for the upcoming year.
Under the agreement, only one of the three parties could run a candidate in any single-member parliamentary constituency in order to avoid acting as a spoiler.
Under the terms of the coalition, UGP candidates would be added to Voice's national electoral list, and the party would not contest single-member districts.
[12][13][14] As a result of the coalition, three UGP members were elected to the Verkhovna Rada as representatives of the Voice party in Lviv Oblast electoral districts, including former political council chairman Roman Lozynskyi.
[19] Soon after the election, the UGP announced that it would not consider a coalition on the Lviv Oblast Council with representatives from parties it deemed "oligarchic, compromised, or corrupt."
It expressed interest in the possibility of forming a partnership with Self Reliance or Voice, with which it had previously partnered during the 2019 Ukrainian parliamentary election, although neither coalition would provide it with a plurality on the 84-seat council.