On February 23, 2014, immediately after the removal of Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych, the Verkhovna Rada voted to repeal the Law “On the Principles of State Language Policy.”
The language policy law had been adopted in 2012 at the initiative of the ruling Party of Regions. It allowed any region to grant official status to a language spoken natively by at least 10% of the local population. In such cases, local authorities were permitted to use that regional language in their official work alongside Ukrainian. In several regions of Ukraine, including Donetsk and Luhansk, Russian was granted regional status. In some areas, other languages such as Romanian and Hungarian also received this status.
The repeal of the language law on February 23, 2014, sparked intense protests in regions with predominantly Russian-speaking populations, including Donbas, Crimea, and Kharkiv. Residents of these regions demanded a resolution on the status of the Russian language and called for constitutional reform, including the possibility of federalizing Ukraine.