Ukraine’s Zelenskyy says his chief of staff has resigned

Ukraine’s Zelenskyy says his chief of staff has resigned


Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Head of the Office of the President of Ukraine Andriy Yermak pose for the press, as they meet with Spain’s King Felipe (not pictured), at the Zarzuela Palace, in Madrid, Spain, Nov. 18, 2025.

Violeta Santos Moura | Reuters

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s powerful chief of staff, a close ally of the president who has headed Ukraine’s negotiation team at fraught U.S.-backed peace talks, quit on Friday, hours after anti-corruption agents searched his home.

Zelenskyy said Andriy Yermak had resigned and that he would consider his replacement on Saturday.

Yermak’s departure comes as a major probe into high-level graft ensnared senior officials, fueling widespread public anger.

“Russia very much wants Ukraine to make mistakes,” Zelenskyy said in a video address. “There will be no mistakes on our part. Our work continues.”

Yermak, 54, has been a close friend of Zelenskyy since the president’s days as a TV comedian, and helped guide Zelenskyy’s successful 2019 presidential campaign as a political outsider.

He has not been named a suspect, but opposition lawmakers and some members of Zelenskyy’s own party had called for his dismissal as part of Ukraine’s worst wartime political crisis.

Earlier on Friday, Yermak had confirmed his apartment was being searched and said he was fully cooperating.

The National Anti-Corruption Bureau of Ukraine and the Specialised Anti-Corruption Prosecutor’s Office said the searches were “authorized” and linked to an unspecified investigation.

Earlier this month, the two anti-graft agencies unveiled a sweeping investigation into an alleged $100 million kickback scheme at the state atomic energy company that ensnared former senior officials and an ex-business partner of Zelenskyy.

In a statement on Friday, the opposition European Solidarity party had called for Yermak’s dismissal and his removal from the negotiating team, as well as for a new coalition government and talks with Zelenskyy.

“The issue of peace and the fate of Ukrainians cannot depend on the personal vulnerabilities and tarnished reputation of politicians involved in a corruption scandal,” it said.

The U.S.-backed peace push comes as Russian forces grind forward along several parts of the sprawling front line. Moscow says its troops are close to capturing the eastern city of Pokrovsk, which would be their biggest prize in nearly two years.

On Thursday, President Vladimir Putin said a 28-point U.S. peace plan leaked last week could be “a basis for future agreements”. He demanded Kyiv withdraw troops from eastern land it holds before Moscow stops fighting.

Speaking to The Atlantic magazine this week, Yermak had said “no one should count on us giving up territory.”

Showing progress in fighting corruption is a central element of Kyiv’s bid for European Union membership, which Ukrainian officials see as critical to breaking out of Russia’s orbit.

In a statement before Yermak’s resignation was announced, a European Commission spokesperson said Brussels would “continue to follow the situation closely.”

The two anti-graft agencies have stepped up their campaign during Russia’s invasion, but have said they face pressure from vested interests. Zelenskyy briefly rolled back their independence last July but reversed course after a public outcry and criticism from foreign partners.



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