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1995 Russian legislative election
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| Field | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| country | Russian Federation | |
| type | parliamentary | |
| ongoing | no | |
| previous_election | 1993 Russian legislative election | |
| previous_year | 1993 | |
| election_date | 17 December 1995 | |
| next_election | 1999 Russian legislative election | |
| next_year | 1999 | |
| seats_for_election | All 450 seats in the State Duma | |
| majority_seats | 226 | |
| turnout | 64.38% ( 9.57 pp) | |
| image1 | [[File:Gennady Zyuganov and Govorukhin in 1998 (cropped).jpg | 150x150px]] |
| leader1 | Gennady Zyuganov | |
| party1 | Communist Party of the Russian Federation | |
| leader_since1 | 14 February 1993 | |
| last_election1 | 42 seats, 11.55% | |
| seats1 | **157** | |
| seat_change1 | 115 | |
| popular_vote1 | **15,432,963** | |
| percentage1 | **22.30%** (PL) | |
| swing1 | 10.75% | |
| image2 | [[File:Viktor Chernomyrdin meeting to sign credit agreement 1994 (cropped) 1.jpg | 150x150px]] |
| leader2 | Viktor Chernomyrdin | |
| party2 | Our Home – Russia | |
| leader_since2 | 12 May 1995 | |
| last_election2 | *New* | |
| seats2 | 55 | |
| seat_change2 | *New* | |
| popular_vote2 | 7,009,291 | |
| percentage2 | 10.13% (PL) | |
| swing2 | *New* | |
| image4 | [[File:Vladimir Zhirinovsky 01-03-1995 (cropped).jpg | 150x150px]] |
| leader4 | Vladimir Zhirinovsky | |
| party4 | Liberal Democratic Party of Russia | |
| leader_since4 | 13 December 1989 | |
| last_election4 | 64 seats, 21.35% | |
| seats4 | 51 | |
| seat_change4 | 13 | |
| popular_vote4 | 7,737,431 | |
| percentage4 | 11.18% (PL) | |
| swing4 | 10.17% | |
| image5 | [[File:Ba-yavlinsky-g-a-1999-june (sq, cropped).jpg | 150x150px]] |
| leader5 | Grigory Yavlinsky | |
| party5 | Yabloko | |
| leader_since5 | 16 October 1993 | |
| last_election5 | 27 seats, 7.32% | |
| seats5 | 45 | |
| seat_change5 | 18 | |
| popular_vote5 | 4,767,384 | |
| percentage5 | 6.89% (PL) | |
| swing5 | 0.43% | |
| map | ||
| title | Chairman of the State Duma | |
| before_election | Ivan Rybkin | |
| before_party | Ivan Rybkin Bloc | |
| after_election | Gennadiy Seleznyov | |
| after_party | Communist Party of the Russian Federation |
Legislative elections was held in Russia on 17 December 1995 to elect all 450 seats in the 2nd State Duma of the Russian Federation.
The anti-government Communist Party won a total of 157 seats, the most deputies of any single bloc in the chamber. The pro-government Our Home – Russia came second with 55 seats, with the far-right Liberal Democratic Party of Russia falling to third place with 51. As well as the fourth placed Yabloko, only these four parties crossed the 5% threshold to win party-list seats.
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 | Abbr. | First troika | Political position | Ideologies | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Women of Russia}};" | Women of Russia | ZhR | Alevtina Fedulova • Ekaterina Lakhova • Galina Klimantova | Centre | |
| 2 | Social Patriotic Movement "Derzhava" | Derzhava | Alexander Rutskoy • Viktor Kobelev • Konstantin Dushenov | Right-wing | ||
| 3 | Social Political Movement "Duma-96" | Duma-96 | Vladimir Burenin • Mikhail Simonov • Georgy Kondratyev | Centre | ||
| 4 | Transformation of the Fatherland | |||||
| Transformation of the Fatherland, Free Democratic Party, All-Russian Party for Safety of Man | PO | Eduard Rossel • Yury Nozhikov • Viktor Yakimov | Centre | |||
| 5 | Tikhonov–Tupolev–Tikhonov | |||||
| Consolidation Party, League of Cooperatives and Entrepreneurs | TTT | Alexander Tikhonov • Aleksey Tupolev • Viktor Tikhonov | Centre | |||
| 6 | Russian All-People's Movement | ROD | Alexander Bozhenov • Valery Moshnyakov • Vladimir Platonov | Centre | ||
| 7 | All-Russian Muslim Social Movement "Nur" | NUR | Halit Yakhin • Vafa Yarullin • Anver Shagidullin | Centre | ||
| 8 | Federal Democratic Movement | FDD | Oleg Novikov • Oleg Kalugin • Rimma Kazakova | Centre | ||
| 9 | Cause of Peter the First | |||||
| Tourist and Sports Union of Russia, Union of TV and Radio Broadcasting Workers, Consumer Society of Automobile Equipment | DPP | Valentin Dikul • Vadim Voevodin • Yan Koltunov | Right-wing | |||
| 10 | Interethnic Union | |||||
| Congress of Civic Concord, RHDP, Association of Koreans in Russia | MNS | Abdulah Mikitaev • Makhmut Gareev • Alexander Zaytsev | Centre | |||
| 11 | Socio-Political Movement "Stable Russia" | SR | Oleg Petrov • Elina Bystritskaya • Alexander Gorlov | Centre-right | ||
| 12 | Frontier Generations | |||||
| Socio-Political Youth Movement, MZhK Union of Russia | PR | Dmitry Solonnikov • Nikolay Pelepeshin • Marat Bariev | Centre | |||
| 13 | My Fatherland | MO | Boris Gromov • Stanislav Shatalin • Joseph Kobzon | Centre-left | ||
| 14 | For the Motherland! | |||||
| RSVA, NPP, New Russia | ZR | Vladimir Polevanov • Yevgeny Podkolzin • Eduard Baltin | Right-wing | |||
| 15 | Common Cause | |||||
| Common Cause, Human Circle | OD | Irina Khakamada • Rolan Bykov • Vladimir Dzhanibekov | Centre-right | |||
| 16 | Bloc of Independents | |||||
| ODC, All-Russian Tatar Cultural and Educational Center | BN | Yevgeny Fyodorov • Ilya Roitman • Vladimir Komchatov | Centre-right | |||
| 17 | Our Home – Russia}};" | Our Home – Russia | NDR | Viktor Chernomyrdin • Nikita Mikhalkov • Lev Rokhlin | Centre-right | |
| 18 | Pamfilova–Gurov–Lysenko | |||||
| RPRF, Young Republicans Union | PGL | Ella Pamfilova • Alexander Gurov • Vladimir Lysenko | Centre-right | |||
| 19 | Yabloko}};" | "Yabloko" Social Association | Yabloko | Grigory Yavlinsky • Vladimir Lukin • Tatiana Yarygina | Centre-left | |
| 20 | Forward, Russia! | VR | Boris Fyodorov • Bela Denisenko • Alexander Vladislavlev | Centre-right | ||
| 21 | 89 Regions of Russia | |||||
| VR, ANP | 89 | Pavel Medvedev (only elected deputy) | Centre | |||
| 22 | Russian Ecological Party "The Greens"}};" | Ecological Party of Russia "KEDR" | KEDR | Anatoly Panfilov • Leonid Yakubovich • Artyom Tarasov | Centre | |
| 23 | Democratic Choice of Russia – United Democrats | |||||
| DVR, KPR, RPSD, KNOR | DVR-OD | Yegor Gaidar • Sergei Kovalev • Lidiya Fedoseyeva-Shukshina | Centre-right | |||
| 24 | Party of Russian Unity and Accord}};" | Party of Russian Unity and Accord | PRES | Sergey Shakhray • Valery Bykov • Vladimir Ivankov | Centre-right | |
| 25 | Communist Party of the Russian Federation}};" | Communist Party of the Russian Federation | CPRF | Gennady Zyuganov • Svetlana Goryacheva • Aman Tuleyev | Left-wing to far-left | |
| 26 | Stanislav Govorukhin Bloc | |||||
| All-Russian Trade Union Association, People's Alliance, RHDD | BSG | Stanislav Govorukhin • Oleg Rumyantsev • Viktor Aksyuchits | Right-wing | |||
| 27 | Association of Lawyers of Russia | AAR | Alexey Malayev • Gasan Mirzoyev • Anatoly Fedoseev | Centre | ||
| 28 | National Republican Party of Russia | NRPR | Nikolay Lysenko • Nikolay Pavlov • Konstantin Ovchinnikov | Far-right | ||
| 29 | Social Democrats | |||||
| SDS, Young Social Democrats of Russia, RDDR | SD | Gavriil Popov • Vasily Lipitsky • Oleg Bogomolov | Centre-left | |||
| 30 | Power to the People! | |||||
| ROS, Mothers for Social Justice | VN | Nikolai Ryzhkov • Sergey Baburin • Elena Shuvalova | Right-wing | |||
| 31 | Congress of Russian Communities | KRO | Yury Skokov • Alexander Lebed • Sergey Glazyev | Right-wing to far-right | ||
| 32 | Trade Unions and Industrialists – Union of Labour | |||||
| ROPP, Trade Unions of Russia to the Polls | ST | Vladimir Scherbakov • Mikhail Shmakov • Arkady Volsky | Centre-left | |||
| 33 | Liberal Democratic Party of Russia}};" | Liberal Democratic Party of Russia | LDPR | Vladimir Zhirinovsky • Sergey Abeltsev • Alexander Vengerovsky | Right-wing to far-right | |
| 34 | Bloc of Djuna | |||||
| Association of Military Journalists, AFZPP, ADVN, RKSP | Djuna | Eugenia Davitashvili • Andrey Volkov • Aleksandr Pankratov-Chyorny | Centre | |||
| 35 | Party of Workers' Self-Government | PST | Svyatoslav Fyodorov • Alexey Kazannik • Aleksandr Porokhovshchikov | Centre-left | ||
| 36 | Communists – Labour Russia – For the Soviet Union | |||||
| RKRP, RPK | KTR | Viktor Tyulkin • Anatoly Kryuchkov • Viktor Anpilov | Far-left | |||
| 37 | Beer Lovers Party | PLP | Konstantin Kalachyov • Dmitry Shestakov • Andrey Palchevsky | Big tent | ||
| 38 | Ivan Rybkin Bloc | |||||
| "Russia" People's Movement, Regions of Russia, RSM, Accord Movement, Union of Realists | BIR | Ivan Rybkin • Yury Petrov • Artur Chilingarov | Centre-left | |||
| 39 | Party of Economic Freedom | PES | Konstantin Borovoi • Leonid Nekrasov • Vladimir Kovalyonok | Centre-right | ||
| 40 | People's Union | NS | Vladimir Lukyanov • Dmitry Galagan • Gennady Mironov | Big tent | ||
| 41 | Agrarian Party of Russia}};" | Agrarian Party of Russia | APR | Mikhail Lapshin • Aleksandr Nazarchuk • Vasily Starodubtsev | Left-wing | |
| 42 | Christian Democratic Union – Christians of Russia | HDS | Vitaly Savitsky • Tatiana Ivanova • Alexander Kisilyov | Centre-right | ||
| 43 | Union of Workers of Housing and Communal Services | SRZhKKh | Leonid Chernyshov • Pyotr Surov • Valery Avdeyev | Big tent |
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 1995. 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 – 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 federal center and regional elites made only ephemeral commitments to Our Home – Russia.
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 17 January 1996, Gennady Seleznyov, a deputy of the Communist Party in the Duma, was elected the Speaker of the Duma.
Opinion polls
| Polling firm | Fieldwork date | CPRF | LDPR | NDR | Yabloko | ZhR | KRO | DVR–OD | APR | PST | VR! | Derzhava | Other | Unsure | Not | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| voting | Additional | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| options | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Communist Party of the Russian Federation}}" | Liberal Democratic Party of Russia}}" | Our Home – Russia}}" | Yabloko}}" | Women of Russia}}" | Congress of Russian Communities}}" | Democratic Choice of Russia – United Democrats}}" | Agrarian Party of Russia}}" | Party of Workers' Self-Government}}" | Forward, Russia!}}" | Derzhava (Russian party)}}" | |||||||||||||||||
| url=https://bd.fom.ru/report/map/finfo/finfo1995/of1995_27/of19952703 | title=Если бы выборы в Госдуму состоялись сегодня, то больше всего голосов набрали бы КПРФ и "Яблоко" | language=ru | website=fom.ru | date=14 July 1995 | access-date=9 August 2025}} | June 1995 | **8** | **5** | 4 | **7** | 4 | 4 | 3 | 3 | 3 | 4 | 1 | 48 | |||||||||
| FOM | July 1995 | **7** | 4 | **5** | **8** | 4 | **5** | 3 | 2 | 4 | **5** | 1 | 49 | ||||||||||||||
| VCIOM | July 1995 | **8.0** | **8.7** | **8.2** | 3.7 | 3.7 | 1.9 | **5.0** | 2.4 | 4.1 | 1.3 | 29.6 | 18.4 | ||||||||||||||
| FOM | September 1995 | **10** | **5** | **6** | **6** | **7** | 4 | ||||||||||||||||||||
| VCIOM | 15–19 Sep 1995 | **9** | **6** | **5** | **8** | **5** | 2 | 3 | 3 | 4 | 2 | 2 | 0.4 | 20 | 17 | ||||||||||||
| title=Общероссийские рейтинги, социологические опросы | url=http://www.fe.msk.ru/elect/vestnik/issue1/ratings.html | website=Russia: Elections-95 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/19970801043512/http://www.fe.msk.ru/elect/vestnik/issue1/ratings.html | archive-date=1 August 1997 | language=ru}} | 9 Oct 1995 | **14** | 2.4 | **10** | **8** | **7** | 2.5 | 4.6 | 1.8 | 4 | ||||||||||||
| title=Russian Duma Elections - '95: A Scorecard. Public Opinion Polls | url=http://users.aimnet.com/~ksyrah/ekskurs/elect.html | website=Ekskursii | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/19990424123649/http://users.aimnet.com/~ksyrah/ekskurs/elect.html#Polls | archive-date=24 April 1999 | language=en}} | 22 Nov 1995 | **14** | 4 | **5** | **8** | **5** | **5** | 3 | 2 | |||||||||||||
| title=Russian Presidential Elections-96: Opinion Poll Data | url=http://www.acs.brockport.edu/~dgusev/Russian/polls.html | website=acs.brockport.edu | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070220090312/http://www.acs.brockport.edu/~dgusev/Russian/polls.html | archive-date=20 February 2007 | language=en}} | 1 Dec 1995 | **23** | **11.5** | **13.1** | **13.1** | **13.1** | ||||||||||||||||
| FOM | December 1995 | **17** | 3 | **5** | **5** | **6** | 2 | 2 | 3 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 20 | 15 | |||||||||||||
| Vox Populi | 9 Dec 1995 | **22.9** | **5.7** | **10.9** | **9.5** | **6.5** | |||||||||||||||||||||
| VCIOM | 6–12 Dec 1995 | **13.7** | **7.6** | **6.7** | **6.5** | **6.6** | |||||||||||||||||||||
| ISSP | *n/a* | **17.3** | 4.2 | 4.6 | **5.3** | 3.8 | 2.4 | 2.2 | 2.8 | 3.7 | 3.7 |
Results
and Patriotic Orthodox Organisations|votes57=|seats57=|votes57_2=42269|seats57_2=0|totseats57=0|sc57=New
Parliamentary groups
| Parliamentary group | Leader | Seats (Jan.'96)[http://www.politika.su/fs/gd2frac.html](http://www.politika.su/fs/gd2frac.html) |
|---|---|---|
| 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** |
Notes
References
Sources
References
- [http://www.cikrf.ru/banners/vib_arhiv/gosduma/1995/files/1995-2-TIK-usech.xls Данные протоколов территориальных избирательных комиссий об итогах голосования по федеральному округу]
- (14 July 1995). "Если бы выборы в Госдуму состоялись сегодня, то больше всего голосов набрали бы КПРФ и "Яблоко"".
- (18 July 1995). "Социология грядущих выборов. Отношение к партиям и движениям (в % к числу опрошенных)". [[Kommersant]].
- (22 September 1995). "Если бы выборы состоялись в начале сентября, то все шансы оказаться на первом месте по числу голосов были бы у КПРФ".
- "Общероссийские рейтинги, социологические опросы".
- "Russian Duma Elections - '95: A Scorecard. Public Opinion Polls".
- "Russian Presidential Elections-96: Opinion Poll Data".
- (6 December 1995). "Социология грядущих выборов". [[Kommersant]].
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