The dispute has brought crowds as big as 300,000 to the streets of Kiev, the largest outpouring of public anger since the 2004 Orange Revolution.
The no-confidence measure got the support of 186 members of the Verkhovna Rada, 40 shy of the majority needed. Even if it had passed, Yanukovych would have remained president, but the prime minister and cabinet would have been ejected.
Prime Minister Mykola Azarov, attending the parliament session with his cabinet, apologized for the violence by riot police against protesters, but otherwise defended the government’s course and denounced protesters who have blocked access to government offices.
Such actions “are not the path to European integration but to dictatorship,” he said, hitting the desk with his fist as opponents jeered.
Azarov, like Yanukovych, has said Ukraine wants further integration with the EU but cannot now bear the burden of the trade losses with Russia it would presumably suffer. Ukraine is also deeply dependent on natural gas from Russia, which previously has sharply raised prices for its neighbor.
Russia opposes closer Ukraine-EU relations, hoping to draw Ukraine into a trading bloc of several former Soviet republics.
Yanukovych on Tuesday left the country for a trip to China, where he is expected to sign an array of economic cooperation agreements.
After the no-confidence motion failed, several thousand demonstrators remained outside the parliament building, but there was no immediate unrest.
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