Kharkiv Oblast Council

The Kharkiv Oblast Council (Харківська обласна рада) is the regional oblast council (parliament) of the Kharkiv Oblast (province) located in eastern Ukraine. The council is composed of 120 members and is situated in the oblast's administrative center Kharkiv. Council members are elected for five year terms. In order to gain representation on the council, a party must gain more than 5 percent of the total vote.

On 1 March 2022, during the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the building was bombed in a missile strike. According to the Council, 29 people were killed.

2020
Distribution of seats after the 2020 Ukrainian local elections 46 Bloc Kernes — Successful Kharkiv!

29 Opposition Platform — For Life

17 Servant of the People

17 Bloc Svitlychna Together!

11 European Solidarity

Election date was 25 October 2020

2015
Distribution of seats after the 2015 Ukrainian local elections {{legend|#008080|Revival: 50 seats}} {{legend|#960000|Petro Poroshenko Bloc: 20 seats}} {{legend|#274696|Opposition Bloc: 19 seats}} {{legend|#2E8B57|Self Reliance: 12 seats}} {{legend|#0000FF|Our Land: 11 seats}} {{legend|#E80000|Fatherland: 8 seats}} Election date was 25 October 2015

Regional executive committee

 * Vasily Kuzmenko (1932–1933)
 * Ilya Shelekhes (1933–1934)
 * Ivan Fedyaev (1934–1935)
 * Grigory Pryadchenko (1935–1937)
 * Nikolay Prokopenko (1937–1938)
 * Grigory Butenko (1938–1940)
 * Pyotr Svinarenko (1940–1942)
 * Artem Vakhnyuk (acting, 1943)
 * Dmitry Zhila (acting, 1943)
 * Ivan Voloshin (1943–1954)
 * Dmitry Pisnyachevsky (1954–1963)
 * Dmitry Pisnyachevsky (agrarian, 1963–1964)
 * Konstantin Trusov (industrial, 1963–1964)
 * Dmitry Pisnyachevsky (1964–1968)
 * Andrey Bezditko (1968–1983)
 * Oleksandr Maselsky (1983–1990)
 * Yuri Titov (1990–1991)

Regional council

 * Oleksandr Maselsky (1991–1992)
 * Volodymyr Tyahlo (1992–1994)
 * Oleksandr Maselsky (1994–1996)
 * Volodymyr Tyahlo (1996–2002)
 * Oleksiy Kolesnik (2002–2004)
 * Yevhen Kushnaryov (2004–2005)
 * Oleh Shapovalov (2005–2006)
 * Vasiliy Salygin (2006–2008)
 * Serhii Chernov (2008–2020)
 * Artur Tovmasyan (2020–2021)
 * Tetiana Yehorova-Lutsenko (since 2021)