Is the primate of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church a patriarch or a major archbishop? I mean no offence to those Ukrainian Greek Catholics who want a patriarch.

I would like to know the actual status of this Church’s primate.
If the UGCC is a major archiepiscopate (have I spelt that correctly?), can the holy synod of the UGCC elevate its status to a patriarchate; I assume that would require the assent of the Bishop of Rome. OR Does the Bishop of Rome have to elevate the status of the primacy of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church?
UGCC can do what it wants. Internally, they can address and regard their primate as a Patriarch. This has happened several times in the history of the Church.
However, the question is whether others outside the UGCC will accept that designation. For the status of the UGCC to be a Patriarchate in the UNIVERSAL Church, the Supreme authority of the Church (either the Ecumenical Council or the Pope personally - practically, it should be the Pope in Synod) must at least recognize that status.
In the early Church, the Supreme authority of the Ecumenical Council (the universal body of bishops in union with its head bishop) was the only one who could grant Patriarchal status. In the latter part of the first millenium, secular rulers tried to force the EP to grant patriarchal status to their national Church. Even if that occurred, the action would be invalid according to a Canon of the Council of Trullo (which Easterns recognize as authoritative) that states that ecclesiastical actions forced by secular authorities are invalid. In the second millenium, a new standard developed in which Patriarchates could be established by a particular mother Church. These new patriarchates did not really have the same status as one of the original 5 Apostolic Patriarchates. I think the only new Patriarchate to have ever pretended to be equal to one of the original Pentarchy is the MP.
Currently, the UGCC has requested the bishop of Rome to recognize its patriarchal status. I confess, I used to argue that only an Ecumenical Council could do this, since there is no precedent for the Pope to personally do it. Roman Popes have granted patriarchal status to other local Churches in the Middle Ages, but it was not as universal head, but rather on the principle mentioned earlier of mother Churches granting patriarchal status to one of their daughter churches. The problem here is that, sans any evidence that the Pope could as universal head, personally (rather than collegially) grant patriarchal status to a local Church, the UGCC is not a daughter Church of the Church of Rome.
But while investigating a matter regarding the Nestorians a few weeks ago, I discovered that Pope St. Cyril of Alexandria had specifically appealed to Pope St. Celestine to
personally correct the pretenses of the primate of Jerusalem from claiming patriarchal status. That is a clear indication that the bishop of Rome was regarded to have the personal prerogative to make a determination on the matter.
So it appears that the UGCC has a patristic basis to ask the Pope to
personally make a determination of its patriarchal status. After making my discovery on this matter, I am now more sympathetic to the pleas of my UGCC brethren.
Blessings,
Marduk