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2010 Crimean parliamentary election

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2010 Crimean parliamentary election
Autonomous Republic of Crimea
← 2006 31 October 2010 2014 →

All 100 seats in the Verkhovna Rada of Crimea
51 seats needed for a majority
Party Vote % Seats +/–
Party of Regions

50.44 80 +36
KPU

7.65 5 −4
Qurultai-Rukh

7.24 5 −3
Soyuz

5.44 5 −5
Russian Unity

4.15 3 New
Strong Ukraine

3.75 2 New
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Chairman of the Council before Chairman of the Council after
Anatoliy Hrytsenko
Party of Regions
Vladimir Konstantinov
Party of Regions

The 2010 Crimean parliamentary election was held on 31 October 2010 as a part of the general 2010 Ukrainian local elections. Unlike the previous election to the Verkhovna Rada of Crimea, they were conducted on the mixed member proportional representation system. In order to gain representation in the Parliament of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea, a party or bloc had to garner at least 3 percent of the total vote. The Party of Regions won the elections with an overwhelming majority.[1]

Background

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Prior to 2009 amendments to the Crimean Constitution, the parliament's term was limited to four years. It has since been increased to five after Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko signed the amendments into law in April 2009.[2]

New elections where set for October 31, 2010 by the Supreme Council on August 4, 2010. In June 2010 the parliament had failed to fix the election date on October 31. The resolution was voted against by a number of coalition factions, including the ruling For Yanukovych! electoral bloc (that included the Party of Regions).[3] Early July 2010, the Verkhovna Rada (Ukraine's national parliament) supported by the Party of Regions’ initiative, announced local elections on the last day of October 2010.[3]

Results

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PartyVotes%Seats
Party-listConstituencyTotal
Party of Regions357,03050.44324880
Communist Party of Ukraine54,1727.65505
Qurultai-Rukh51,2537.24505
Soyuz38,5145.44325
Russian Unity29,3434.15303
Strong Ukraine26,5153.75202
Batkivshchyna19,5892.77000
Progressive Socialist Party of Ukraine12,6141.78000
Party of Pensioners of Ukraine11,1331.57000
Front for Change8,2811.17000
Ukrainian Peasant Democratic Party7,2681.03000
People's Party4,5630.64000
Socialist Party of Ukraine2,9090.41000
Party of Greens of Ukraine2,4930.35000
All-Ukrainian Party "Children of War"2,0300.29000
Justice Party1,8220.26000
Greens1,6990.24000
Peasant Party of Ukraine1,3960.20000
Motherland [uk]1,3950.20000
Svoboda1,3610.19000
New Politics1,2910.18000
United Centre1,2780.18000
Ukrainian Social Democratic Party1,2400.18000
Union of Left Forces1,1770.17000
Ukrainian People's Party1,1140.16000
Agrarian Party of Ukraine9800.14000
People's Power Party9340.13000
New Generation Party9040.13000
Socialist Ukraine8780.12000
Social Democratic Party of Ukraine (united)8030.11000
People's Labor Union of Ukraine7450.11000
Ukrainian Republican Party "Sobor"7430.10000
Congress of Ukrainian Nationalists7020.10000
Democratic Party of Ukraine6250.09000
Liberal Democratic Party of Ukraine6240.09000
Hromada4520.06000
European Party of Ukraine4320.06000
Against all57,5528.13
Total707,854100.00505050
Valid votes707,85497.01
Invalid/blank votes21,7942.99
Total votes729,648100.00
Registered voters/turnout1,522,00047.94
Source: Government of Crimea

References

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  1. ^ Local government elections in Ukraine: last stage in the Party of Regions’ takeover of power Archived August 13, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, Centre for Eastern Studies (October 4, 2010)
  2. ^ "Yushchenko signed a law increasing the legislative term of the Crimean parliament" (in Ukrainian). Korrespondent.net. April 5, 2009. Retrieved 2009-04-06.
  3. ^ a b Ukraine’s Crimea to hold parliamentary elections on October 31, ITAR-TASS (August 4, 2010)
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