November 28, 2019

Ukrainian president appoints U.S. lawyer as adviser amid outreach to diaspora

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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has appointed an American lawyer as a new adviser with a mandate to build relations with ethnic Ukrainians living in the United States and elsewhere.

Andrew Mac, who heads the Washington office of the Kyiv-based law firm Asters, was officially named to the position on November 5, according to a presidential decree.

In filings with the U.S. Justice Department’s Foreign Agent Registration Act unit, Mr. Mac said the appointment was for an indefinite period and he would not be paid for his services.

“The registrant participates in conferences and other engagements in his personal capacity that promote ties between Ukraine and the Ukrainian-American community and American investment in Ukraine which may indirectly benefit the President of Ukraine,” according to the filing, dated November 14.

Mr. Mac’s appointment comes as Ukraine’s reputation in the United States has taken a hit during the Democratic-led impeachment hearing into whether President Donald Trump withheld military aid to the country in order to pressure President Zelenskyy to conduct investigations into a potential rival in the 2020 presidential election.

Republicans have sought to defend Mr. Trump in part by casting Ukraine as one of the world’s most corrupt countries.

Mr. Mac’s role will “likely involve” speaking with Ukrainian American media or media outlets read by the Ukrainian American community, according to the filing with the Justice Department.

There are more than 1 million Americans who identify as Ukrainian, according to Andrij Dobriansky, director of communications for the Ukrainian Congress Committee of America.

In an interview with RFE/RL, Mr. Mac said that after Mr. Zelenskyy was elected president in April, he was contacted by one of Mr. Zelenskyy’s advisers, Andriy Yermak, whom he called a good friend. He said his efforts were not focused on improving Ukraine’s image among Americans, but rather on building closer ties with Ukrainians in the United States and Canada.

“The diaspora is great, but it’s an under-utilized asset,” Mr. Mac said. “My role is to fortify existing bridges, but more importantly to build new ones.”

“My goal is not to inform Americans where Ukraine is on the map,” he said. “I’m not hired to be a public-relations consultant for Ukraine’s global image.”

A spokeswoman for Mr. Zelenskyy did not return RFE/RL messages seeking comment. Mr. Yermak could not be immediately reached for comment.

Mr. Mac’s main role will likely focus on promoting Ukraine as a place to do business, Mr. Dobriansky told RFE/RL. Fighting the perception that Ukraine is corrupt will probably also be part of his portfolio, he said. “President Zelenskyy’s goal is to grow the economy as he has very concrete budgetary concerns,” he added.

Mr. Zelenskyy met with the leaders of the Ukrainian World Congress and the Ukrainian Canadian Congress in July during a visit to Toronto; he met with members of the U.S. diaspora during his trip to New York in September.

Mr. Mac specializes in cross-border transactions involving the United States, Ukraine and other former Soviet states, according to a biography on Asters’ website.

Asters, which is headquartered in Kyiv, includes on its client list Ukraine’s largest lender, PrivatBank, which is in the midst of a major legal and political fight involving its former co-owner, billionaire Ihor Kolomoisky.

The bank was nationalized in 2016 when international auditors found a $5.5 billion hole in its balance sheet; Mr. Kolomoisky, who has close ties to Mr. Zelenskyy, has insisted that the bank was improperly nationalized by Ukrainian regulators.

According to a 2010 interview with the Kyiv Post, Mr. Mac said he was recruited in 2002 by the accounting firm Pricewater­houseCoopers and decided to stay in Kyiv longer after being “inspired” by the 2004 Orange Revolution that brought a pro-Western government to power.

In 2009, Mr. Mac was made managing partner at Magisters, a major law firm founded in Kyiv. After the Russian law firm Egorov, Puginsky, Afanasiev & Partners acquired Magisters in July 2011, Mr. Mac established a firm in Washington associated with the practice.

Mr. Mac, born in New York City and raised in the Philadelphia area, has Ukrainian roots.

 

With reporting by Mike Eckel in Prague and the Kyiv Post.

Copyright 2019, RFE/RL Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave. NW, Washington DC 20036; www.rferl.org (to read the full text of this story, see https://www.rferl.org/a/zelenskiy-appoints-u-s-lawyer-as-adviser-amid-outreach-to-ukrainian-diaspora/30278949.html).

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