Английская Википедия:1995 Russian legislative election

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Infobox legislative election

Legislative election were held in Russia on 17 December 1995.[1] At stake were the 450 seats in the State Duma (Gosudarstvennaya Duma), the lower house of the Federal Assembly.

Electoral system

The election law adopted for the 1995 election was similar to that adopted for the 1993 election, with some minor modifications. First, to secure a place on the proportional representation ballot, parties had to have registered with the Ministry of Justice no later than six months before the election, and the number of signatures they had to gather rose from 100,000 to 200,000. Second, invalid votes were now included in the calculation of the 5.0 percent threshold. Third, on the single-member district ballot, party endorsements of candidates were indicated.

Political blocs

Bloc Шаблон:Abbr First troika Political position Ideologies Notes
1 style="background: Шаблон:Party color;"| Women of Russia ZhR Alevtina FedulovaEkaterina LakhovaGalina Klimantova Centre Women's rights / Pacifism [2]
2 Social Patriotic Movement «Derzhava» Derzhava Alexander RutskoyViktor KobelevKonstantin Dushenov Right-wing Russian nationalism / Social conservatism
3 Social Political Movement «Duma-96» Duma-96 Vladimir BureninMikhail SimonovGeorgy Kondratyev Centre Centrism / Conservatism
4 Transformation of the Fatherland PO Eduard RosselYury NozhikovViktor Yakimov Centre Regionalism / Autonomism
5 Tikhonov–Tupolev–Tikhonov TTT Alexander TikhonovAleksey TupolevViktor Tikhonov Centre Centrism
6 Russian All-People's Movement ROD Alexander Bozhenov • Valery Moshnyakov • Vladimir Platonov Centre Cossacks interests
7 All-Russian Muslim Social Movement "NUR" NUR Halit Yakhin • Vafa Yarullin • Anver Shagidullin Centre Muslim interests / Islamic democracy
8 Federal Democratic Movement FDD Oleg Novikov • Oleg KaluginRimma Kazakova Centre Federalism
9 Cause of Peter the First DPP Valentin Dikul • Vadim Voevodin • Yan Koltunov Right-wing National conservatism / Monarchism
10 International Union MNS Abdulah MikitaevMakhmut Gareev • Alexander Zaytsev Centre Multiculturalism
11 Socio-Political Movement "Stable Russia" SR Oleg Petrov • Elina Bystritskaya • Alexander Gorlov Centre-right Conservatism
12 Frontier Generations PR Dmitry Solonnikov • Nikolay Pelepeshin • Marat Bariev Centre Youth politics
13 My Fatherland MO Boris GromovStanislav ShatalinJoseph Kobzon Centre-left Social democracy
14 For the Motherland! ZR Vladimir PolevanovYevgeny PodkolzinEduard Baltin Right-wing Conservatism / Anti-Reformism
15 Common Cause OD Irina KhakamadaRolan BykovVladimir Dzhanibekov Centre-right Liberalism
16 Bloc of Independents BN Yevgeny Fyodorov • Ilya Roitman • Vladimir Komchatov Centre-right Conservatism
17 style="background: Шаблон:Party color;"| Our Home – Russia NDR Viktor ChernomyrdinNikita MikhalkovLev Rokhlin Centre-right Liberal conservatism / Fiscal conservatism
18 Pamfilova–Gurov–Lysenko PGL Ella PamfilovaAlexander GurovVladimir Lysenko Centre-right Classical liberalism / Atlanticism
19 style="background: Шаблон:Party color;"| Social Association «Yabloko» Yabloko Grigory YavlinskyVladimir LukinTatiana Yarygina Centre-left Social democracy / Social liberalism
20 Forward, Russia! VR Boris FyodorovBela DenisenkoAlexander Vladislavlev Centre-right Liberal democracy / Liberal conservatism
21 89 Regions of Russia 89 Pavel Medvedev (only elected deputy) Centre Regionalism
22 style="background: Шаблон:Party color;"| Ecological Party of Russia "KEDR" KEDR Anatoly PanfilovLeonid YakubovichArtyom Tarasov Centre Green politics / Agrarianism
23 Democratic Choice of Russia – United Democrats DVR-OD Yegor GaidarSergei KovalevLidiya Fedoseyeva-Shukshina Centre-right Liberal conservatism / Anti-communism
24 style="background: Шаблон:Party color;"| Party of Russian Unity and Accord PRES Sergey ShakhrayValery Bykov • Vladimir Ivankov Centre-right Moderate liberalism / Conservatism / Regionalism
25 style="background: Шаблон:Party color;"| Communist Party of the Russian Federation CPRF Gennady ZyuganovSvetlana GoryachevaAman Tuleyev Left-wing to far-left Communism / Marxism–Leninism / Left-wing nationalism
26 Stanislav Govorukhin Bloc BSG Stanislav GovorukhinOleg RumyantsevViktor Aksyuchits Right-wing Statism / Conservatism
27 Association of Lawyers of Russia AAR Alexey MalayevGasan MirzoyevAnatoly Fedoseev Centre Rule of law
28 National Republican Party of Russia NRPR Nikolay LysenkoNikolay Pavlov • Konstantin Ovchinnikov Far-right Solzhenitsynism / Russian ultranationalism
29 Social Democrats SD Gavriil PopovVasily LipitskyOleg Bogomolov Centre-left Social democracy
30 Power to the People! VN Nikolai RyzhkovSergey Baburin • Elena Shuvalova Right-wing Patriotism / Social conservatism / Pochvennichestvo
31 Congress of Russian Communities KRO Yury SkokovAlexander LebedSergey Glazyev Right-wing to far-right Russian nationalism / National conservatism
32 Trade Unions and Industrialists – Union of Labour ST Vladimir ScherbakovMikhail ShmakovArkady Volsky Centre-left Labourism / Industrialism
33 style="background: Шаблон:Party color;"| Liberal Democratic Party of Russia LDPR Vladimir ZhirinovskySergey AbeltsevAlexander Vengerovsky Right-wing to far-right Right-wing populism / Pan-Slavism
34 Bloc of Djuna Djuna Eugenia DavitashviliAndrey VolkovAleksandr Pankratov-Chyorny Centre Populism
35 Party of Workers' Self-Government PST Svyatoslav FyodorovAlexey KazannikAleksandr Porokhovshchikov Centre-left Social democracy
36 Communists – Labour Russia – For the Soviet Union KTR Viktor TyulkinAnatoly KryuchkovViktor Anpilov Far-left Communism / Marxism–Leninism / Anti-revisionism
37 Beer Lovers Party PLP Konstantin Kalachyov • Dmitry Shestakov • Andrey Palchevsky Big tent Joke party / Protectionism / Anti-establishment
38 Ivan Rybkin Bloc BIR Ivan RybkinYury PetrovArtur Chilingarov Centre-left Agrarianism / Social democracy
39 Party of Economic Freedom PES Konstantin BorovoiLeonid NekrasovVladimir Kovalyonok Centre-right Liberalism / Neoconservatism / Economic liberalism
40 People's Union NS Vladimir Lukyanov • Dmitry Galagan • Gennady Mironov Big tent Interests of defrauded depositors
41 style="background: Шаблон:Party color;"| Agrarian Party of Russia APR Mikhail LapshinAleksandr NazarchukVasily Starodubtsev Left-wing Agrarian socialism / Collectivism
42 Christian Democratic Union – Christians of Russia HDS Vitaly SavitskyTatiana Ivanova • Alexander Kisilyov Centre-right Christian democracy
43 Union of Workers of Housing and Communal Services SRZhKKh Leonid Chernyshov • Pyotr Suvorov • Valery Avdeyev Big tent ZhKKh workers' interests

Campaign

Out of the forty three parties and coalitions contesting the elections, only four cleared the 5% threshold to qualify for the proportional seats.

Pro-Government parties

Our Home – Russia had weightier resources and soon acquired the nickname of "party of power" for its reliance on elite political and economic office holders. It was also referred to as "Our Home Is Gazprom" for its close ties to Gazprom's substantial financial resources. Most of the cabinet ministers joined the bloc, and a number of business leaders and regional political elites affiliated with it. However, almost no other parties entered it, and many SMD candidates who had initially affiliated with the party soon left it. One of the early parties to enter the bloc, Sergei Shakhrai's Party of Russian Unity and Accord, also deserted it in August.[3] The party program called for "stability and development, democracy and patriotism, confidence and order" as well as "pragmatism" and "a civilized market". Other proposals were contradictory as the party proposed, among other things, to encourage foreign investment while protecting Russian manufacturers, and to promote agricultural reform while regulating land ownership.

In the election, the Our Home Is Russia bloc took 10.1% of the vote, enough to form a faction in the State Duma but not enough to serve as a dominant or pivotal force in parliament or in the regions. At its peak, the party claimed the membership of around one third of Russia's governors. However, both the center and regional elites made only ephemeral commitments to Our Home is Russia.[4][5]

Opposition parties

As a result of these elections, the Communists and their satellites, the Agrarians and other left-wing deputies, controlled a little less than the half of the seats. The populist LDPR occasionally sided with the left majority, but often supported the government. As in the previous Duma, the parliamentary groups of independent deputies had a significant influence on the balance of power in the parliament.

On January 17, 1996 a Communist, Gennady Seleznyov, was elected the Speaker of the Duma.

Results

Шаблон:Election results

Parliamentary groups

Parliamentary group Leader Seats (Jan.'96)[1]
Communist Party of the Russian Federation Gennady Zyuganov 139
Our Home - Russia Sergei Belyaev 65
Liberal Democratic Party of Russia Vladimir Zhirinovsky 49
Yabloko Grigory Yavlinsky 45
"Regions of Russia (Independent Deputies)" Oleg Morozov 44
People's Power Nikolai Ryzhkov 41
Agrarian Group Nikolay Kharitonov 35
Democratic Choice of Russia (unregistered) Sergey Yushenkov 6
Independents 19
Total 450

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Шаблон:Russian elections