Sun, 07 Jun 2026 Berlin 00:15 DE / UKR / EN

Churchill’s 1945 Defeat: What Ukraine Can Learn from It

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky enjoys high approval for his wartime leadership, but polls show former Commander-in-Chief Valerii Zaluzhnyi ahead. A comparison with Winston Churchill's surprising election loss in 1945 reveals parallels – and differences.

Churchill’s 1945 Defeat: What Ukraine Can Learn from It
Photo: static.kyivpost.com

As the Kyiv Post reports in an analysis, President Volodymyr Zelensky remains highly respected among Ukrainians. His compatriots value his patriotism, courage, and diplomatic skill. Yet the same opinion polls suggest that former Commander-in-Chief Valerii Zaluzhnyi would win a direct runoff against Zelensky today.

Historical Parallel to Churchill

Observers often draw a comparison with Britain’s Winston Churchill, who suffered a surprising election defeat in July 1945 – immediately after the war ended. At first glance, the parallels seem plausible: war heroes make many important decisions, some of which are unpopular. A patriotic nation stays silent as long as the war continues, because it sees its leader working hard and doing everything in his power.

After the war, however, people want change. They raise issues they said little about during the war and expect the government to address many neglected questions. In Britain, the Labour Party won the 1945 general election with a large majority and implemented radical left-wing reforms – including extensive nationalizations, social reforms, and decolonization.

Different Times, Agenda

For Ukraine, such a course is unlikely, according to the Kyiv Post. The world has changed too much, and Ukraine’s concerns are entirely different. During World War II, the state dominated the economy: comprehensive price and currency controls, rationing, protectionism, and loose fiscal policy. Government contracts shaped the wartime economy. After the war, communists were strong in many countries and demanded far-reaching nationalizations for ideological reasons.

Today, however, hardly anyone believes in the benefits of state ownership of large enterprises, and no one advocates for a state-directed economy. The extensive postwar nationalizations, despite their damage to efficiency and innovation, were difficult to reverse – strong bureaucracies and unions protected the status quo. It was not until Margaret Thatcher in the 1980s that the tide turned.

Ukraine needs a completely different political agenda than Britain in 1945, the analysis concludes. The lesson from Churchill’s defeat is not the specific policies, but the pattern: a war leader can lose the nation’s gratitude once peace returns – and people demand new priorities.

Source: www.kyivpost.com