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Russian legislative election, 2007

Russian legislative election, 2007
Russia
2003 ←
2 December 2007 → 2011

All 450 seats to the State Duma
226 seats needed for a majority
Turnout 63.71%
  Majority party Minority party
  2008-08-29 Владимир Путин (4).jpeg Gennady Zyuganov Crooped.png
Leader Vladimir Putin Gennady Zyuganov
Party United Russia Communist Party
Last election 223 seats, 37.57% 52 seats, 12.61%
Seats won 315 57
Seat change Increase92 Increase5
Popular vote 44,714,241 8,046,886
Percentage 64.30% 11.57%
Swing Increase26.73pp Decrease1.04pp

  Third party Fourth party
  Wladimir Schirinowski crooped.jpeg Siergiej Mironow.jpg
Leader Vladimir Zhirinovsky Sergey Mironov
Party LDPR A Just Russia
Last election 36 seats, 11.45% -
Seats won 40 38
Seat change Increase4 Increase38
Popular vote 5,660,823 5,383,639
Percentage 8.14% 7.74%
Swing Decrease3.31pp -

Chairman before election

Boris Gryzlov
United Russia

Chairman-designate

Boris Gryzlov
United Russia


Boris Gryzlov
United Russia

Boris Gryzlov
United Russia

Legislative elections were held in the Russian Federation on 2 December 2007. At stake were the 450 seats in the 5th State Duma, the lower house of the Federal Assembly of Russia (the legislature). Eleven parties were included in the ballot, including Russia's largest party, United Russia, which was supported by President of Russia Vladimir Putin. Official results showed that United Russia won 64.3% of the votes, the Communist Party of the Russian Federation 11.6%, the Liberal Democratic Party of Russia 8.1%, and Fair Russia won 7.7%, and none of the other parties won enough votes to gain any seats.

Although 400 foreign election monitors were present at the polling stations, the elections received mixed criticism internationally, largely from Western countries, and by some independent media and some opposition parties domestically. The observers stated that the elections were not rigged but that media coverage was heavily favoured towards United Russia. The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe and Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe stated that the elections were "not fair", while foreign governments and the European Union called on Russia to look for possible violations. The election commission responded saying that the allegations would be examined. The Kremlin insisted that the vote was fair and said it demonstrated Russia's political stability.


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