1999 Russian gubernatorial elections
25 April – 26 December 1999
| |
16 Heads of Federal Subjects from 89 | |
|---|---|
|
| |
1999 Russian regional elections:
|
Gubernatorial elections in 1999 took place in 16 regions of the Russian Federation.
In 1999, the tenures of the governors of 12 provinces, elected in 1995, expired. An early election was held in Leningrad Oblast, year after resignation of Vadim Gustov. The first direct elections for the Head of Karachay-Cherkessia also took place that year.
In the last two parliamentary republics, Dagestan and Udmurtia, direct elections have not come any closer: in Dagestan, the referendum on the introduction of the presidency was held in the summer of 1999, with the majority voting against; and in Udmurtia, a new State Council was elected and its chairman Alexander Volkov was re-elected.
Race summary
| Federal Subject | Date | Incumbent | First elected |
Candidates[1] | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Karachay-Cherkessia[2] | 25 April (first round) |
Vladimir Khubiyev | —[a] |
|
Incumbent lost election. New head elected. |
| 16 May (runoff) |
| ||||
| Belgorod Oblast | 30 May | Yevgeny Savchenko | 1995 |
|
Incumbent re-elected. |
| Sverdlovsk Oblast[3] | 29 August (first round) |
Eduard Rossel | 1995 |
|
Incumbent re-elected. |
| 12 September (runoff) |
| ||||
| Novgorod Oblast[4] | 5 September | Mikhail Prusak | 1995 | Mikhail Prusak 91.56% | Incumbent re-elected. |
| Omsk Oblast[5] | 5 September | Leonid Polezhayev | 1995 |
|
Incumbent re-elected. |
| Leningrad Oblast[6] | 19 September | Vadim Gustov (resigned)[b] Valery Serdyukov (acting) |
1996 |
|
Acting governor elected to full term. |
| Tomsk Oblast | 19 September | Viktor Kress | 1995 |
|
Incumbent re-elected. |
| Moscow | 19 December | Yury Luzhkov | 1996 |
|
Incumbent re-elected. |
| Primorsky Krai[7] | 19 December | Yevgeny Nazdratenko | 1995 |
|
Incumbent re-elected. |
| Vologda Oblast[8] | 19 December | Vyacheslav Pozgalyov | 1996 |
|
Incumbent re-elected. |
| Yaroslavl Oblast[9] | 19 December | Anatoly Lisitsyn | 1995 |
|
Incumbent re-elected. |
| Orenburg Oblast[10] | 19 December (first round) |
Vladimir Yelagin | 1995 |
|
Incumbent lost re-election. New governor elected. |
| 26 December (runoff) |
| ||||
| Tambov Oblast[11] | 19 December (first round) |
Aleksandr Ryabov | 1995 |
|
Incumbent lost re-election. Former governor elected. |
| 26 December (runoff) |
| ||||
| Moscow Oblast[12] | 19 December (first round) |
Anatoly Tyazhlov | 1995 |
|
Incumbent lost re-election. New governor elected. |
| 9 January 2000 (runoff) |
| ||||
| Novosibirsk Oblast[13] | 19 December (first round) |
Vitaly Mukha | 1995 |
|
Incumbent lost re-election. New governor elected. |
| 9 January 2000 (runoff) |
| ||||
| Tver Oblast[14] | 19 December (first round) |
Vladimir Platov | 1995 |
|
Incumbent re-elected. |
| 9 January 2000 (runoff) |
|
Karachay-Cherkessia
In April and May 1999, elections were held for the head of Karachay-Cherkessia. The mayor of Cherkessk Stanislav Derev received 43.1% of the vote in the first round, surpassing former Commander-in-Chief of the Russian Ground Forces general Vladimir Semyonov, with 17.9% of the vote. After the first round, confrontation started to arise between the frontrunners. The rivalry of Semyonov and Derev was viewed as a confrontation between the Karachays and Circassians.
On the morning of May 16, the roads to areas with Karachay majority or mixed Karachay-Russian population were blocked by the police and OMON. By Derev's order, more than 60 polling stations were closed in Cherkessk, although later, through the efforts of the CEC, voting began in most of them. Semyonov received 75.5% of the vote, with about 18.6% for Derev. After the second round, Derev's supporters organized a rally in the center of Cherkessk, demanding the annulling of the falsified election results.[15]
On May 19, after negotiations in Moscow, Derev stated that he was demanding either the cancellation of the election results, or the secession of Cherkessia. At the same time, he applied to the Supreme Court of Russia and the Central Election Commission with a request to cancel the results of the second round. On May 24, after the visit of the Prime Minister of Russia Sergey Stepashin to Cherkessk, the head of Karachay-Cherkessia Vladimir Khubiyev resigned. Igor Ivanov, chairman of the People's Assembly of Karachay-Cherkessia, was appointed as the interim head of the region.
In July, the Supreme Court of the KChR recognized the results of the elections; later, this decision was overturned by the Supreme Court of Russia. In late August 1999, the republican court reaffirmed the results of the vote on May 16. On September 14, Semyonov took office as head of the republic, which marked the end of the conflict.[16]
Sverdlovsk Oblast
| Candidate | Party | First round | Second round | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Votes | % | Votes | % | |||
| Eduard Rossel | Transformation of Ural | 542,257 | 39.73 | 813,373 | 64.27 | |
| Alexander Burkov | Workers' Movement for Social Guarantees "May" | 256,916 | 18.83 | 364,301 | 28.79 | |
| Arkady Chernetsky | Our Home — Our City | 216,738 | 15.88 | |||
| Vladimir Kadochnikov | Communist Party | 134,607 | 9.86 | |||
| Igor Kovpak | Independent | 122,948 | 9.01 | |||
| Irina Belkova | Independent | 15,401 | 1.13 | |||
| Andrey Selivanov | Right Cause | 8,628 | 0.63 | |||
| Against all | 67,260 | 4.93 | 87,862 | 6.94 | ||
| Total | 1,364,755 | 100.00 | 1,265,536 | 100.00 | ||
| Source: IKSO[17][18] | ||||||
Moscow City
In June 1999 the Moscow City Duma decided to move the 2000 mayoral election six months ahead of schedule. The new voting day was set on 19 December 1999, when the elections to the 3rd State Duma of Russia were to take place.
On September 17, the incumbent mayor of Moscow Yury Luzhkov officially announced his intention to run for re-election, naming Valery Shantsev as his candidate for the vice mayor. Opposition, represented by the Union of Right Forces, nominated former prime minister of Russia Sergey Kiriyenko.[19] Luzhkov surpassed him by more than 58%. Two thirds of the voters came to the polling stations in Moscow on December 19.
| Candidate | Running mate | Party | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yury Luzhkov | Valery Shantsev | Fatherland – All Russia | 3,174,658 | 71.45 | |
| Sergey Kiriyenko | Vyacheslav Glazychev | Union of Right Forces | 510,958 | 11.50 | |
| Pavel Borodin | Leonid Troshin | Independent | 273,026 | 6.14 | |
| Yevgeny Martynov | Sergey Seryogin | Communist Party | 128,404 | 2.89 | |
| Dmitry Vasilyev | Alexander Netesov | Pamyat | 47,067 | 1.06 | |
| Aleksey Mitrofanov | Andrey Brezhnev | Independent | 27,528 | 0.62 | |
| Vladimir Voronin | Svetlana Savinova | Independent | 18,564 | 0.42 | |
| Vladimir Kiselyov | Valery Kireyev | Independent | 8,944 | 0.20 | |
| Against all | 254,013 | 5.72 | |||
| Total | 4,443,162 | 100.00 | |||
| Valid votes | 4,443,162 | 97.82 | |||
| Invalid/blank votes | 98,974 | 2.18 | |||
| Total votes | 4,542,136 | 100.00 | |||
| Source: Zakon[20] | |||||
Moscow Oblast
Gubernatorial election in Moscow Oblast was held on 19 December 1999, in parallel with the federal legislative election. The peculiarity of this campaign was that the candidates for the governor were running along with the candidates for the vice-governor (this office will be abolished in 2002).[21] The Fatherland – All Russia party (OVR), realizing low chances to win for incumbent governor Anatoly Tyazhlov, authorized the nomination of Soviet Army general Boris Gromov. That is, OVR had two candidates for governor at once.[22] On 9 January 2000, Boris Gromov was elected governor of Moscow Oblast in the second round of the election.
| Candidate | Running mate | Party | First round | Second round | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Votes | % | Votes | % | ||||
| Gennadiy Seleznyov | Vladimir Kashin | Communist Party | 908,874 | 27.52 | 46.39 | ||
| Boris Gromov | Mikhail Men | Fatherland – All Russia | 690,352 | 20.91 | 48.09 | ||
| Alexander Tikhonov | Sergey Selivyorstov | Independent | 494,231 | 15.12 | |||
| Anatoly Tyazhlov | Vasily Golubev | Fatherland – All Russia | 346,947 | 10.51 | |||
| Boris Fyodorov | Alexander Lebedev | Forward, Russia! | 302,081 | 9.15 | |||
| Vladimir Bryntsalov | Vladimir Alexeyev | Independent | 5.02 | ||||
| Anatoly Dolgolaptev | Vladimir Menshov | Independent | 1.38 | ||||
| Sergey Popov | Ilshat Safargaliyev | Independent | 1.19 | ||||
| Vladimir Klimenko | Yury Tebin | Independent | 1.13 | ||||
| Against all | 196,779 | 5.96 | |||||
| Total | |||||||
| Source: [23][24] | |||||||
Tver Oblast
19 December 1999 (first round)
9 January 2000 (runoff) | ||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||
Platov: 20–30% 30–40% 40–50% 50–60% 60–70% 70–80% Bayunov: 20–30% 30–40% 40–50% 50–60% 60–70% | ||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||
Incumbent governor Vladimir Platov ran for a second four-year term. In the first round, held on 19 December 1999, none of the candidates received an absolute majority. In the second round on 9 January 2000 Platov narrowly won over Communist challenger Vladimir Bayunov.[25]
Candidates
Source:[26]
- Vladimir Bayunov (CPRF), member of the State Duma for the Bezhetsk constituency (1994–2000)
- Viktor Opekunov (OVR), first deputy governor of Tver Oblast
- Anatoly Kleymenov, chairman of the economy committee of Tver Oblast administration
- Vladimir Platov, governor of Tver Oblast (1995–2003), 1999 State Duma Unity party-list candidate (refused to take his seat)[27]
- Nikolay Popov, member of the Legislative Assembly of Tver Oblast
- Arnold Pork, vice president of Trans Nafta CJSC
- Sergey Potapov, member of the Legislative Assembly of Tver Oblast
- Vasily Smirnov (RKPP), chairman of regional branch of the Russian Conservative Party of Entrepreneurs
- Andrey Stroyev, entrepreneur
- Andrey Trachenko, deputy director general of Rumelco LLC
- Gennady Vinogradov (Yabloko), employee at regional office of the Bank of Russia
Results
| Candidate | Party | First round | Second round | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Votes | % | Votes | % | |||
| Vladimir Platov | Independent | 257,483 | 32.51 | 299,832 | 46.54 | |
| Vladimir Bayunov | Communist Party | 181,413 | 22.91 | 296,465 | 46.02 | |
| Sergey Potapov | Independent | 98,911 | 12.49 | |||
| Gennady Vinogradov | Yabloko | 47,115 | 5.95 | |||
| Nikolay Popov | Independent | 43,494 | 5.49 | |||
| Viktor Opekunov | Fatherland – All Russia | 29,490 | 3.72 | |||
| Andrey Stroyev | Independent | 29,350 | 3.71 | |||
| Andrey Trachenko | Independent | 21,882 | 2.76 | |||
| Anatoly Kleymenov | Independent | 12,331 | 1.56 | |||
| Vasily Smirnov | Russian Conservative Party of Entrepreneurs | 10,166 | 1.28 | |||
| Arnold Pork | Independent | 2,461 | 0.31 | |||
| Against all | 48,930 | 6.18 | 42,242 | 6.56 | ||
| Invalid ballots | 8,893 | 1.12 | 5,641 | 0.88 | ||
| Total | ||||||
| Total votes | 791,919 | – | 644,180 | – | ||
| Registered voters/turnout | 1,214,878 | 65.19 | 1,214,694 | 53.03 | ||
| Source: [14][28] | ||||||
Notes
- ^ Appointed by federal president in 1992, re-appointed in 1995.
- ^ Resigned in September 1998 to take job as First Deputy Prime Minister of Russia.
References
- ^ "Губернаторские выборы - 1999" [Gubernatorial elections - 1999]. politika.su (in Russian). Retrieved 14 October 2025.
- ^ "Выборы Главы Карачаево-Черкесской Республики". cikrf.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 14 October 2025.
"Карачаево-Черкесская Республика". cikrf.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 14 October 2025. - ^ "Выборы Губернатора Свердловской области". cikrf.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 14 October 2025.
"Повторное голосование по выборам губернатора Свердловской области". cikrf.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 14 October 2025. - ^ "Выборы Губернатора Новгородской области". cikrf.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 14 October 2025.
- ^ "Выборы Главы администрации (Губернатора) Омской области". cikrf.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 14 October 2025.
- ^ "Выборы Губернатора Ленинградской области". old.izbirkom.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 14 October 2025.
- ^ "Выборы Губернатора Приморского края". cikrf.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 14 October 2025.
- ^ "Выборы губернатора Вологодской области". cikrf.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 14 October 2025.
- ^ "Выборы губернатора Ярославской области". cikrf.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 14 October 2025.
- ^ "Выборы главы исполнительной власти Оренбургской области 19 декабря 1999 года". elect.orb.ru (in Russian). Archived from the original on 3 February 2002.
"Выборы главы исполнительной власти Оренбургской области повторное голосование 26 декабря 1999 года". elect.orb.ru (in Russian). Archived from the original on 3 February 2002. - ^ "Выборы главы администрации Тамбовской области 19/26 декабря 1999 года". tambov.izbirkom.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 14 October 2025.
- ^ "Выборы Губернатора Московской области". cikrf.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 14 October 2025.
- ^ "Выборы главы администрации НСО 19.12.1999". novosibirsk.izbirkom.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 14 October 2025.
- ^ a b "Выборы Губернатора Тверской области". cikrf.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 14 October 2025.
"Повторное голосование по выборам Губернатора Тверской области". cikrf.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 14 October 2025. - ^ Elections of the head of Karachay-Cherkessia: from political confrontation to interethnic conflict, "International Institute for Humanitarian and Political Studies"
- ^ Karachay-Cherkess Republic: Chronicle of confrontation, "International Institute for Humanitarian and Political Studies"
- ^ Election of the Governor of Sverdlovsk Oblast on 28 August 1999, Bulletin of territorial election commissions of Sverdlovsk Oblast
- ^ Re-voting on election of the Governor of Sverdlovsk Oblast on 12 September 1999, Bulletin of territorial election commissions of Sverdlovsk Oblast
- ^ "Election of the mayor of Moscow is scheduled for December 7". 2003-09-08.
- ^ "РЕШЕНИЕ МОСГОРИЗБИРКОМА ОТ 22.12.1999 N 35/5 О ТЕКСТЕ СООБЩЕНИЯ МОСКОВСКОЙ ГОРОДСКОЙ ИЗБИРАТЕЛЬНОЙ КОМИССИИ ОБ ИТОГАХ ВЫБОРОВ МЭРА И ВИЦЕ МЭРА МОСКВЫ". Archived from the original on 2016-03-08. Retrieved 2014-07-24.
- ^ "Вице-губернатор Московской области ушел в отставку" [Vice Governor of Moscow Oblast resigned]. Kommersant (in Russian). 2002-11-01.
- ^ Иванов, В.В. (2019). Глава субъекта Российской Федерации. История губернаторов [Head of the subject of the Russian Federation. History of governors] (in Russian). p. 584. ISBN 978-5-907250-14-7.
- ^ "Обнародованы итоги выборов губернатора Московской области" [The results of the elections of the Governor of Moscow Oblast were announced] (in Russian). 1999-12-23. Archived from the original on 2009-02-11.
- ^ "История выборов и назначений губернатора Московской области" [History of elections and appointments of the Governor of Moscow Oblast]. TASS (in Russian). 2013-09-07.
- ^ Сергей Глушков. "Тверская область в декабре 1999 года" [Tver Oblast in January 2000]. International Institute for Humanitarian and Political Studies (in Russian). Archived from the original on 23 February 2020. Retrieved 17 September 2025.
- ^ "Губернаторские выборы - 1999" [Gubernatorial elections — 1999]. politika.su. 5 May 2002. Retrieved 12 September 2025.
- ^ "Платов Владимир Игнатьевич". TIA (in Russian). Retrieved 17 September 2025.
- ^ Results of elections in the Russian Federation. 19 December 1999. TVER OBLAST