Russian legislative election, 1993

Russian State Duma election, 1993
Russia
12 December 1993

All 450 seats to the State Duma
226 seats needed for a majority
Turnout 54.81%
  Majority party Minority party Third party
 
Leader Vladimir Zhirinovsky Yegor Gaidar Gennady Zyuganov
Party LDPR Russia's Choice Communist Party
Seats won 70 96 65
Popular vote 12,318,562 8,339,345 6,666,402
Percentage 22.92% 15.51% 12.4%

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
 
Leader Alevtina Fedulova Mikhail Lapshin Grigory Yavlinsky
Party Women of Russia Agrarian Party of Russia Yabloko
Seats won 25 47 33
Popular vote 4,369,918 4,292,518 4,223,219
Percentage 8.13% 8% 7.9%

Chairman-designate

Ivan Rybkin
Agrarian Party

Russian Federation Council election, 1993
Russia
12 December 1993

All 178 seats to the Federation Council
  Majority party Minority party
 
Party Independent Vacant seats
Seats won 171 7
Popular vote 53,751,696
Percentage 100%

Chairman-designate

Vladimir Shumeyko
Independent

Parliamentary elections were held in Russia on 12 December 1993.[1] They included the last elections to the Federation Council of Russia.[2]

Background

The 1993 general election was taking place in the aftermath of the 1993 Russian constitutional crisis, a violent confrontation on the streets of Moscow which resulted in the dissolution of the previous Russian parliament by military force. Yeltsin hoped to resolve the political turmoil by decreeing for the election to the new Russian parliament and the constitutional referendum to take place on 12 December 1993.

Electoral system

The new election law adopted for the 1993 Duma election stipulated half the 450 Duma members were elected by a party-list system of proportional representation, and half were elected as individual representatives from single-member districts. Every Russian voter thus received two different ballots. The proportional representation ballot compelled each voter to endorse an electoral organization or vote against all of them. By contrast, the single-member district ballot required a voter to endorse an individual, whose party affiliation, if any, could not be given on the ballot.

In order to nominate a list of candidates in the proportional representation ballot, a party or electoral organization had to gather 100,000 signatures from the electorate, of which no more than 15% could be from any one region or republic. The method used to calculate the number of seats won by each party was the Hare method, with a threshold of 5.0 per cent of the valid vote, including votes cast against all, but excluding invalid ballots. To secure a place on a single-member district ballot, candidates had to gather the signatures of at least 1.0 percent of the constituency electorate. The winner in each single-member districts contest was simply the candidate with plurality of votes, regardless of the number of votes cast against all.

Results

State Duma

Party PR Constituency Total
seats
Votes % Seats Votes % Seats
Liberal Democratic Party12,318,56222.9591,577,4003.01170
Russia's Choice8,339,34515.5403,630,7996.85696
Communist Party6,666,40212.4321,848,8883.53365
Women of Russia4,369,9188.121309,3780.6425
Agrarian Party4,292,5188.0212,877,6105.42647
Yabloko4,223,2197.9201,849,1203.51333
Party of Russian Unity and Accord3,620,0356.7181,443,4542.7927
Democratic Party2,969,5335.5141,094,0662.1721
Russian Democratic Reform Movement2,191,5054.101,083,0632.088
Civic Union1,038,1931.901,526,1152.91818
Future of Russia–New Names672,2831.30411,4260.811
Cedar406,7890.80301,2660.600
Dignity and Charity375,4310.70445,1680.833
Other parties377,8630.700
Independents25,961,40548.73030
Against all2,267,9634.28,509,30016.0
Invalid/blank votes 4,248,927
Vacant seats[a]66
Total53,751,69610022557,495,248100225450
Registered voters/turnout106,170,835 106,170,83554.2
Source: Nohlen & Stöver, IPU

a Four seats were left vacant in Chechnya due to a boycott of the elections, whilst voting was postponed in two others.[3]

Federation Council

Party Votes % Seats
Independents53,751,696100171
Invalid/blank votes3,946,002
Vacant seats[a]7
Total57,697,698100178
Registered voters/turnout106,170,83554.3
Source: Nohlen & Stöver

a Five seats were elected at a later date, whilst two seats in Chechnya remained unfilled.[4]

Although the Federation Council was contested on a non-party basis,[2] 11 were members of the Communist Party, six were members of Russia's Choice and nine were members of other parties.[5]

Aftermath

The results of the polls proved to be disappointing for the Kremlin: the two competing pro-government parties, Russia's Choice and the Party of Russian Unity and Accord, gained 15.5% and 6.7% of the vote respectively and won 123 of the 450 seats in the State Duma. Neither party was able to control the parliamentary agenda nor impose the will of the president on the Duma. Lacking legislative success, both parties rapidly lost membership.

Parliamentary groups

The use of the mixed system for the election of the Duma produced a large number of deputies which were unaffiliated with any electoral bloc. By joining other parliamentary groups or forming groups of independent deputies, they could significantly influence the balance of power in the Duma. Hence, the parliamentary groups in the first two-year term of the Duma showed lack of stability and its numbers may be given only with approximation.

Parliamentary group Leader Seats
Liberal Democratic Party of Russia Vladimir Zhirinovsky 53-64
Russia's Choice Yegor Gaidar 47-78
Communist Party of the Russian Federation Gennady Zyuganov 45-47
Women of Russia Yekaterina Lakhova 20-24
Agrarian Party of Russia Mikhail Lapshin 50-55
Yabloko Grigory Yavlinsky 27-28
Party of Russian Unity and Accord Sergei Shakhrai 12-34
Democratic Party of Russia Nikolay Travkin 8-15
Liberal Democratic Union of 12 December Irina Khakamada 11-38
New Regional Politics - Duma-96 V. Medvedev 30-67
Russia I. Shichalin 34-38
Stability A. Leushkin 34-40
Russian Way (unregistered) Sergei Baburin 11-14
Strong State (Derzhava) (unregistered) V. Kobelev 4-5

References

  1. Nohlen, D & Stöver, P (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, p1642 ISBN 978-3-8329-5609-7
  2. 1 2 Nohlen & Stöver, p1656
  3. Russian Federation: Parliamentary Chamber: Gossoudarstvennaya Duma: Elections held in 1993 Inter-Parliamentary Union
  4. Nohlen & Stöver, p1659
  5. Nohlen & Stöver, p1658
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