Governor of Yaroslavl Oblast
| Governor of Yaroslavl Oblast | |
|---|---|
Seal of Governor of Yaroslavl Oblast | |
since 19 September 2022 | |
| Status | Head of Federal Subject |
| Seat | Yaroslavl |
| Nominator | Political parties or self-nomination |
| Term length | 5 years |
| Formation | 1991 |
| First holder | Anatoly Lisitsyn |
| Website | yarregion.ru |
The Governor of Yaroslavl Oblast (Russian: Губернатор Ярославской области) is the highest official of Yaroslavl Oblast. The oblast government is headed by the chairman of the government of Yaroslavl Oblast, a post separated from that of the governor in 2012.[1]
The position of governor was established on 3 December 1991. Currently the governor is elected by direct election for a five-year term.
The fourth governor Dmitry Mironov was elected in the elections on 10 September 2017.
List of governors
| No. | Portrait | Governor | Tenure | Time in office | Party | Election | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| — | Anatoly Lisitsyn (born 1947) |
3 December 1991 – 10 September 1992[2] |
16 years, 16 days | Independent → United Russia |
Acting | ||
| 1 | 10 September 1992 – 19 December 2007 (resigned) |
Appointed
| |||||
| — | Sergey Vakhrukov (born 1958) |
19 December 2007 – 25 December 2007 |
4 years, 131 days | United Russia | Acting | ||
| 2 | 25 December 2007 – 28 April 2012 (resigned) |
2007 | |||||
| — | Sergey Yastrebov (born 1954) |
28 April 2012 – 5 May 2012 |
4 years, 91 days | Independent | Acting | ||
| 3 | 5 May 2012 – 28 July 2016 (resigned) |
2012 | |||||
| — | Dmitry Mironov (born 1968) |
28 July 2016 – 10 September 2017 |
5 years, 76 days | Acting | |||
| 4 | 10 September 2017 – 12 October 2021 (resigned) |
2017 | |||||
| — | Mikhail Yevrayev (born 1971) |
12 October 2021 – 19 September 2022 |
4 years, 74 days | Acting | |||
| 5 | 19 September 2022 – present |
2022 | |||||
Notes
- ^ Ястребов отказался возглавить кабмин. «Российская газета». 30.10.2012
- ^ Zenkovich, Nikolay (2007). Губернаторы новой России. Энциклопедия карьер [Governors of the new Russia. Encyclopedia of careers]. Olma Media Grupp. ISBN 9785373005999.