Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
2026 Russian legislative election
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Legislative elections are scheduled be held in Russia no later than 20 September 2026. At stake are 450 seats in the State Duma of the 9th convocation, the lower house of the Federal Assembly. Going into the election, United Russia is the ruling party after winning the 2021 election with 49.8% of the vote, taking 324 seats.
Remove ads
Electoral system
Summarize
Perspective
Under current Russian election laws, the State Duma service term is limited to five years and each seat is allotted through parallel voting. Half of the seats (225) are elected by party-list proportional representation with a 5% electoral threshold in number of votes. The other half elected in 225 single-member constituencies (circuits) by first-past-the-post voting (plurality voting).[1] In the proportional part, candidates can be nominated only by political parties, and the lists of parties must include at least 200 and no more than 400 candidates; the list may also include candidates who are not members of the party, but their number should not exceed 50% of the number of candidates on the list. The party list of candidates should be divided into federal and regional parts, which include regional groups of candidates corresponding to the group of bordering federal subjects of Russia. The number of regional groups must be at least 35, and no more than fifteen candidates may be included in the federal part of the list of candidates. The regional parts of the party list should cover the entire territory of Russia.[2]
In the majoritarian part, candidates can be nominated both by political parties and in the order of self-nomination. The political party must provide a list of candidates to the Central Election Commission, and the list must contain the name and number of the constituencies in which each candidate would run. Documents of candidates-self-nominees, unlike candidates from political parties, have to submit applications to District Election Commissions.[3] For registration, the self-nominated candidate must collect at least 3% of the signatures of voters residing in the constituency, or at least 3,000 signatures if the constituency has less than 100,000 voters.[4] One and the same candidate can be nominated both in the party list and in the single-member constituency; however, in the case of their passage to the State Duma and the party list and in the single-member constituency, they would need to give up one of the places. They usually refuse the seat received on the party list, as in this case the party does not lose this seat and simply would pass it on to another candidate.
Remove ads
Redistricting
Summarize
Perspective
In 2015 State Duma constituencies map was adopted for the period of ten years, so for the 2026 elections a new map should be drawn. In April 2025 Central Election Commission of Russia introduced a new map of 225 constituencies.[5] For the first time constituencies were created in the four Russian-occupied regions of Ukraine: Donetsk People's Republic (3), Lugansk People's Republic (2), Kherson Oblast (1), Zaporozhye Oblast (1). Three regions gained one constituency each: Moscow (16), Moscow Oblast (12) and Krasnodar Krai (9), while ten regions each saw losing one seat – Rostov Oblast (6), Altai Krai (3), Volgograd Oblast (3), Voronezh Oblast (3), Zabaykalsky Krai (1), Ivanovo Oblast (1), Kaluga Oblast (1), Smolensk Oblast (1), Tambov Oblast (1), Tomsk Oblast (1). Constituencies were significantly re-arranged in Crimea, Dagestan, Tatarstan, Chelyabinsk Oblast, Sverdlovsk Oblast and Saint Petersburg, minor changes were made to districts in Chuvashia, Kursk Oblast, Leningrad Oblast, Lipetsk Oblast, Samara Oblast, Ulyanovsk Oblast and Vladimir Oblast.[6] Furthermore, most of constituencies in Krasnodar Krai and Rostov Oblast were renamed.
On May 20, 2025, State Duma during the third reading adopted the new constituencies map by 396–3 vote with Galina Khovanskaya (SR–ZP), Marina Kim (SR–ZP) and Yevgeny Marchenko (Independent) voting against the map.[7] Only Khovanskaya raised vocal opposition to the new map, objecting the removal of Sokol District from her Leningradsky constituency.[8] On May 21 Federation Council unanimously approved the new map and on May 23 President Vladimir Putin signed the bill into law.[9][10] Unlike the previous constituencies map, the new one was adopted for the term of five years which means only the 2026 election will be conducted with the new constituencies.
New seatsTen new districts were created after the 2025 redistricting process:
|
Seats eliminatedThe following districts were eliminated and became obsolete:
|
Remove ads
Political parties
Summarize
Perspective
As of December 2023, 25 political parties are registered in Russia.[11] Parties represented in the State Duma (in this case, seats must be obtained in the vote on the party list), parties that received more than 3% of the vote (by party list) in the previous election or are represented at least in one of the regional parliaments (also by party list) are allowed to contest in the elections without collecting signatures. Other parties need to collect 200,000 signatures if they have also held conventions and nominated candidates to participate in the elections. The official list of parties entitled to participate in the elections without collection of signatures was announced before the election. After the 2022 regional elections, there are only 14 such parties.[12][13]
Parliamentary parties
Regional parliamentary parties
Parties represented in regional parliaments, which can also participate in legislative elections without collecting signatures (the list does not include parties already represented in the State Duma).
Remove ads
Opinion polls
Notes
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads