| JRL HOME | SUPPORT | SUBSCRIBE | RESEARCH & ANALYTICAL SUPPLEMENT | |
Old Saint Basil's Cathedral in MoscowJohnson's Russia List title and scenes of Saint Petersburg
Excerpts from the JRL E-Mail Community :: Founded and Edited by David Johnson
#16 - JRL 2007-242 - JRL Home
Russian election chief rules out one-party parliament
Interfax

Moscow, 23 November. The election threshold for political parties to get into the Russian parliament is not rigid and in some cases it can be lowered, Central Electoral Commission [CEC] head Vladimir Churov has said.

"If a number of parties cross the 7 per-cent threshold level but win less than 60 per cent [of votes] in total, the next best party will get into the parliament even if it has not obtained 7 per cent [of the overall vote]. In other words, the Russian law is not rigid about the threshold, in some cases it can be lowered," Churov said in an interview with Vremya Novostey newspaper published on Friday [23 November].

The CEC chairman said that the Russian electoral legislation rules out a possibility of forming a single-party parliament. "According to the law, this cannot happen here. If only one party crosses the 7 per-cent threshold, another party will be automatically allowed to take part in the distribution of seats [in the State Duma]," Churov said. He added that Russia's transition to the proportional representation principle of elections, when people vote for a list of candidates nominated by a party, resulted in "a cleaner and better organized election campaign". [Passage omitted]