2002 Russian gubernatorial elections

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2002 Russian gubernatorial elections

← 2001 13 January – 27 October 2002 2003 →

12 Heads of Federal Subjects from 89

Gubernatorial elections in 2002 took place in twelve regions of the Russian Federation.

Race summary[]

Federal Subject[1] Date Incumbent First
elected
Candidates
Adygea 13 January Aslan Dzharimov 1992
Kabardino-Balkaria 13 January Valery Kokov 1992
North Ossetia 27 January Alexander Dzasokhov 1998
Tuva 17 March Sherig-ool Oorzhak 1992
Ingushetia 7 & 28 April Akhmed Malsagov (interim)
Lipetsk Oblast 14 April Oleg Korolyov 1998
Penza Oblast 14 April Vasily Bochkaryov 1998
Karelia 28 April Sergey Katanandov 1998
Smolensk Oblast 19 May 1998
Buryatia 23 June[2] Leonid Potapov (CPRF) 1994
Krasnoyarsk Krai 8 & 22 September Nikolay Ashlapov (interim)
Kalmykia 20 & 27 October Kirsan Ilyumzhinov 1993

Krasnoyarsk Krai[]

Background[]

From June 1998, Alexander Lebed was the governor of Krasnoyarsk Krai. On 22 April 2002 he died in a helicopter crash. Nikolay Ashlapov became interim governor until the new gubernatorial elections were held in September 2002.

A total of 32 people submitted documents, 16 of them were registered. Later, the Head of Khakassia and the brother of the late governor, Alexei Lebed, withdrew and another candidate was removed from the ballot by the election authorities. Thus, 14 candidates participated in the elections.

The elections were held in two rounds. In the first round, none of the candidates managed to gain more than 50% of the vote. Alexander Uss came the first, gaining 27.6% of the votes, Alexander Khloponin was second with 25%. Sergei Glazyev and Pyotr Pimashkov received fewer votes and did not qualify for the second round.

Results[]

First round of Krasnoyarsk Krai election:
Uss (green), Khloponin (blue), Glazyev (red), Pimashkov (yellow)
# Candidate Description 1st round 2nd round
Votes % Votes %
1 Alexander Khloponin Governor of Taymyr Autonomous Okrug from 2001, former chairman of Nornickel 262,251 25,25 % 496,415 48,07 %
2 Alexander Uss Chairman of Krasnoyarsk Krai legislature from 1998 286,882 27,62 % 431,924 41,83 %
3 Sergey Glazyev Economist, member of the State Duma 222,650 21,44 %
4 Pyotr Pimashkov Mayor of Krasnoyarsk from 1996 148,517 14,30 %
5 Artyom Tarasov Businessman, known as the first legal millionaire in the USSR 29,010 2,79 %
6 Igor Zakharov Member of Krasnoyarsk Krai legislature 10,138 0,98 %
7 Anatoly Gridyushkin Director of "Krasnoyarskoye" state enterprise 6,151 0,59 %
8 Aleftina Makovoz Chairman of the Krasnoyarsk regional branch of the Russian Red Cross Society 2,492 0,24 %
9 Igor Priymak Nornickel employee 1,687 0,16 %
10 Oleg Ulyanov Head of the Krasnoyarsk regional branch of the Russian National Military Fund 1,678 0,16 %
11 Andrey Zberovsky Assistant professor, Krasnoyarsk State Pedagogical University 1,501 0,14 %
12 Vladimir Yurchenko General Director of LLC "Krasnoyarsk Regional Technopark" 1,279 0,12 %
13 German Sterligov Businessman and traditionalist activist 1,006 0,10 %
14 Vasily Zhurko Chairman of the Board of Mikrostroytech LLC 529 0,05 %
Against all 51,847 4,99 % 94,469 9,15 %
Invalid ballots 10,869 1,05 % 9,818 0,95 %
Turnout 1,039,475 47,20 % 1,033,359 46,80 %
Total number of voters 2,202,219 2,207,960

Aftermath[]

On 29 September 2002, a week after the second round, the electoral commission of Krasnoyarsk Krai declared elections invalid following numerous complaints from the headquarters of the losing candidate Alexander Uss. The commission considered that the free vote was impeded by the use of administrative resources by candidates, bribery and deception of voters, spread of fake agitation materials and spending the campaign funds for another purposes. It was also announced at the meeting that it is not possible to determine the vote of about 200,000 people.[3]

Alexander Uss said that for him "the election is over" and he does not intend to participate in re-vote, scheduled in March 2003, he is not going to go to court and advises Khloponin to do the same. Uss also stated that "it is high time to stop electing governors by open ballot and henceforth appoint them directly from the Kremlin". On the same day, the leader of the Liberal Democratic Party, Vladimir Zhirinovsky, came up with a similar idea, even saying that LDPR was recalling their representative from the Central Election Commission, stating that the entire Russian electoral system is so rotten that a decent person will no longer get involved with it.[4]

On 1 October the court ruled that the decision of the regional electoral commission to annul the results was unauthorized and, in fact, officially recognized that Khloponin became the winner.[4] Two days later, the regional election commission complied with the court's decision, however, filing a cassation appeal against it. On the same day, Russian president Vladimir Putin signed a decree, appointing Khloponin the acting governor of Krasnoyarsk Krai. His inauguration was held on October 17. Month later, on November 19, 2002, the Supreme Court of Russia rejected the cassation appeal of the election commission of Krasnoyarsk Krai and confirmed the legality of the election of Alexander Khloponin as the governor.[5]

References[]

  1. ^ Gubernatorial elections — 2002, politika.su
  2. ^ "Presidential election took place in Buryatia". newsru.com (in Russian). 2002-06-23.
  3. ^ Election of the governor of Krasnoyarsk Krai invalidated, Channel One Russia (29 September 2002)
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b Election with a surprise, lenta.ru
  5. ^ A. Khloponin defended the right to be governor in the Supreme Court, RBC (19 November 2002)
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