1990 Soviet Union regional elections


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In 1990, elections were held for the Congress of People's Deputies of Russia and the Supreme Soviets of 14 other republics of the Soviet Union.

The proposal to create a "two-story" system for the formation of the legislative branch (with a directly-elected Congress of People's Deputies and a Supreme Soviet elected by the Congress of People's Deputies) in the USSR and its constituent and autonomous republics was put forward by Mikhail Gorbachev at the 19th Conference of the Communist Party in summer of 1988. On 1 December, the corresponding changes were made to the Constitution of the USSR.

Most of the republics except for Russia and its autonomous region of Dagestan ignored this requirement of the Union Constitution. Under the constitutional reform of 1989–90, they retained direct elections to their Supreme Soviets, but unlike the campaigns of preceding 50 years, republican branches of the CPSU now were facing significant opposition from the nationalist forces, represented in organizations such as Lithuania's Sąjūdis and numerous "Popular Fronts" (Estonia, Latvia, Moldavia, Azerbaijan).

Republic Date Communist Party Result Opposition Parties Result Independents
Armenia 20 May Communist Party of Armenia

136 / 259

123 / 259

Azerbaijan[1] 30 September Azerbaijan Communist Party

280 / 366

Azerbaijani Popular Front

45 / 366

15 / 366

Byelorussia[2] 4 March Communist Party of Byelorussia

302 / 360

Belarusian Popular Front

26 / 360

Estonia[3] 18 March Communist Party of Estonia

27 / 105

Popular Front of Estonia

43 / 105

10 / 105

Joint Soviet of Work Collectives

25 / 105

Georgia[4] 28 October Communist Party of Georgia

64 / 250

Round Table—Free Georgia

155 / 250

9 / 250

People's Front

12 / 250

Kazakhstan 25 March Communist Party of Kazakhstan

342 / 360

18 / 360

Kirghizia 25 February Communist Party of Kirghizia

315 / 350

35 / 350

Latvia 18 March Communist Party of Latvia

55 / 201

Popular Front of Latvia

131 / 201

15 / 201

Lithuania[a] 24 February Communist Party of Lithuania (CPSU)

7 / 135

Lithuanian Social-Democratic Party

9 / 135

64 / 135

Communist Party of Lithuania (independent)

46 / 135

Others

9 / 135

Moldavia February–March Moldavian Communist Party

177 / 380

Popular Front of Moldova

101 / 380

102 / 380

Russia 4 March CPSU[b]

920 / 1,068

148 / 1,068

Tajikistan 25 February Communist Party of Tajikistan

221 / 230

9 / 230

Turkmenistan 7 January Communist Party of Turkmenistan

157 / 175

18 / 175

Ukraine 4 March Communist Party of Ukraine

331 / 450

Democratic Bloc

111 / 450

Uzbekistan 18 February Communist Party of Uzbekistan

456 / 500

Unity

40 / 500

4 / 500

  1. ^ CIA World Factbook (1995)
  2. ^ "What was the Belarusian parliament quarter of a century ago? The Supreme Council of XII convocation, 1990-1995". Nasha Niva. 26 May 2015. Retrieved 3 December 2016.
  3. ^ "Elections and Referendums in Estonia 1989-1999". Estonian National Electoral Committee. 2008-11-17.
  4. ^ Dieter Nohlen, Florian Grotz & Christof Hartmann (2001) Elections in Asia: A data handbook, Volume I, p382 ISBN 0-19-924958-X
  1. ^ In December 1989, majority of the Communist Party of Lithuania led by Brazauskas proclaimed it separate from the CPSU. Burokevičius headed pro-Union branch.
  2. ^ Since the creation of the Soviet Union, Russia was the only constituent republic without its own Communist Party. The short-lived CP RSFSR would be created three months after the 1990 election.