Presidential elections were held in Russia on 16 June 1996, with a second round being held on 3 July 1996. It resulted in a victory for the incumbent Russian president Boris Yeltsin, who ran as an independent politician. Yeltsin defeated the Communist Party of the Russian Federation challenger Gennady Zyuganov in the second round, receiving 54.4% of the vote. Yeltsin's second inauguration ceremony took place on 9 August 1996.

Yeltsin would not complete the second term for which he was elected, as he resigned on 31 December 1999, eight months before the scheduled end of his term on 9 August 2000; he was succeeded by his chosen successor, Vladimir Putin, whom he had appointed prime minister of Russia a few months earlier. This was the first presidential election to take place in post-Soviet Russia. As of 2024, this has also been the only Russian presidential election in which no candidate was able to win on the first round, and as such a runoff election was necessary.

Although most contemporaneous reports certified the 1996 election result, the election has been associated with various counts of pro-Yeltsin media bias and foreign influence, as well as allegations of electoral fraud or that it was an unfair election. Critics also argued that Yeltsin had engaged in vote buying by utilizing state finances to fund social programs, to which he responded he was merely doing his duties as president. Others argued that the allegations were exaggerated, and that the then United States government in fact refrained from covert operations and did not grant all of Yeltsin's requests.

Background

thumb|Voter invitation card for the election

In 1991, Boris Yeltsin was elected to a five-year term as president of Russia, which was still a part of the Soviet Union at the time. The next election was scheduled be held sometime in 1996. In late December 1991, Soviet Russia became a sovereign nation in wake of the dissolution of the Soviet Union. This meant that the scheduled election would now be the first ever presidential election to be held in a fully sovereign Russia.

In a 1993 Russian government referendum question (III), Russian voters rejected holding an early presidential election, and the presidential election remained scheduled to be held in the year 1996. Later in 1993, the Constitution of Russia was adopted. In the constitution, future presidential terms were stipulated to last for four years, meaning that the 1996 election would elect a president to serve a four-year term. When incumbent president Yeltsin launched his re-election campaign in early 1996, he was widely predicted to lose. Public opinion of Yeltsin was at a historical low point.

By early 1996, Yeltsin's public approval was so poor that he was polling at fifth place among presidential candidates, with only 8 percent support, while CPRF leader Gennady Zyuganov was in the lead with 21 percent support. When Zyuganov showed up at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, in February 1996, many Western leaders and the international media were eager to see him, and treated him with regards to believing that he would likely be the next president of Russia.

|-

| style="background:lavender;" |Mikhail Gorbachev<br />(65)<br />Independent

|130px

| style="background-color:;" |

|De facto leader of the Soviet Union<br />General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union<br /><small>(1985–1991)</small><br />President of the Soviet Union<br /><small>(1990–1991)</small><br />Chairman of the Supreme Soviet<br /><small>(1989–1990)</small><br />Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet<br /><small>(1988–1989)</small>

|campaign

|12 April 1996

|}

Withdrawn candidates

{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"

|-

! colspan="3" style="width:20%;"| Candidate name, age,<br />political party

! Political offices

! Campaign

! style="width:48%;"| Details

! Registration date

! Date of withdrawal

|-

| style="background:lavender;" |Aman Tuleyev<br />(52)<br />Independent

|130px

| style="background-color:;" |

|Chairman of the Kemerovo Oblast Council of People's Deputies

| (campaign)

|He was registered as a candidate on 26 April 1996 but withdrew his candidacy on 8 June 1996 to support Gennady Zyuganov. Since Tuleyev withdrew his candidacy after the deadline, he was included in the ballots and received 308 votes during the early voting.

| 26 April 1996 Despite being at the time a recently elected deputy of the State Duma, Brytsalov did not have a voting-record. In his legislative career, he had very low attendance and extremely little participation. Brytsalov was seen as a marginal candidate, and was generally regarded as unlikely to win the election. and asserted that, of those running for president, his was the voice of responsibility and moderation. His campaign was hampered both by strong public disdain towards him and a strong lack of media coverage for his candidacy. At one point, Gorbachev complained that there was less press freedom than when he was leader of the Soviet Union.

Gorbachev subsequently questioned the validity of the election results. While he acknowledged that he had lost by a significant margin, Gorbachev suspected that his actual vote count still exceeded what was reported in the official tally. In 2017, Gorbachev wrote in his book The New Russia that "there have been no fair and free elections in Russia since those of 1989, 1990 and the election of 1991 when Boris Yeltsin became the first president of Russia."

Svyatoslav Fyodorov

Svyatoslav Fyodorov, a politician and renown ophthalmologist, ran as the candidate of the Party of Workers' Self-Government. He was the founder and leader of the party, which at the time was arguably the most influential social-democratic movement in Russia. Fyodorov was considered to be on the center-left of the political spectrum. In 1994, Fyodorov had described his political objective by stating: "I want peasants to own farms, workers to own factories, physicians to own clinics, and everyone to pay a 30% tax, and the rest is theirs." Fyodorov advocated for economic freedom, simple and moderate taxation, stimulation of production, and a ban on exports of most raw materials. Fyodorov proclaimed to draw inspiration in his politics from both Ross Perot and Deng Xiaoping.

Alexander Lebed

General Alexander Lebed ran as the nominee of the Congress of Russian Communities, a centrist nationalist party. Lebed promoted himself as an authoritative leader that would introduce law and order, tackle corruption, and allow capitalism to blossom. While he presented an authoritarian personality, he held moderate positions. After reaching an informal agreement with Yeltsin in April (under which Lebed promised to endorse Yeltsin in the second round of the election), Lebed began to see positive news coverage, as well as a greater overall quantity of media coverage. This was done as part of an effort by Yeltsin's camp to promote Lebed in the hopes that he would syphon off votes from other nationalist candidates in the first-round. The head of the Kemerovo Oblast legislature, Tuleyev was considered to be charismatic, energetic, and well-liked by the CPRF's political base. Despite the fact that Tuleyev dropped out of the race before the election, he had already been on the ballot during a portion of the early voting period, and he turned-in his signatures the day before the deadline. He was considered to be a fallback CPRF candidate in case Zyuganov's candidacy faltered. Tuleyev dropped out of the race on 8 June 1996 and endorsed Zyuganov.

Yury Vlasov

Politician and former Olympic weightlifter Yury Vlasov ran as an independent candidate. His politics were characterized as nationalist. Vlasov dubbed his politics as "people's patriotism". His campaign platform proclaimed: "There is only one single force that is able to unite almost all and at the same time become the ideological basis of the Russian state – popular patriotism." While he had been a supporter of democratic reforms in the Soviet Union, Vlasov had embraced authoritarian political views following its collapse. Vlasov likened his politics to Gaullism. He argued that his politics were a more effective unifying force than communist or liberal-democratic ideals. Despite polling at under one percent, Vlasov had stated that he anticipated capturing between six and seven percent of the vote. He swore to refuse supporting either Yeltsin or support Zyuganov in the runoff. In terms of economic issues, Yavlinsky occupied the far right of the Russian political spectrum. His ideology most strongly appealed to Russia's population of young intellectuals. this strategy was ultimately abandoned in favor of one devised by reformists and British and American consultants. Yeltsin's new campaign strategy was, essentially, to convince voters that they had to choose him as the lesser of two evils. This strategy sought to recast Yeltsin as an individual single-handedly fighting to stave off Communist control. The campaign framed a narrative that portrayed Yeltsin as Russia's best hope for stability. Lebed in turn endorsed Yeltsin in the runoff election. Meanwhile, Yeltsin suffered from a serious heart attack and disappeared from public view. His condition was kept secret through the second-round election on 3 July 1996. During this period of time, Yeltsin's campaign team created a "virtual Yeltsin" shown in the media through staged interviews that never happened and pre-recorded radio addresses.

Gennady Zyuganov

The Communist Party of the Russian Federation (CPRF) leader Gennady Zyuganov successfully advanced to the second-round of the election, where he was defeated by Yeltsin. Coming off of a very successful CPRF performance in the 1995 Russian legislative election, when he launched his campaign, Zyuganov had originally been seen as the frontrunner to win the election. In their 1996 analysis, the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs declared that, while the election failed to be "free and fair" in regards to media coverage and campaign financing, it appeared to have largely succeeded in being "free and fair" in regards to the administration of voting and vote-counting.

Observers from the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) reported in 1996 that the first round of the election "appeared to be generally well run, and not seriously marred by some problems which occurred in the pre-election campaign. The delegation considered the first round of the Russian Presidential elections to have been conducted in a generally free and fair manner." The OSCE also reported: "Delegation members considered voter participation in the political campaign to be quite active compared to previous Russian elections. A relatively open flow of information concerning candidates and their platforms was made available to voters during the pre-election campaign; opposition candidates charged that the state controlled electronic broadcast media did not provide fair and balanced coverage, and this was also observed to be the case by delegation members. The bias appeared to be primarily in favor of the President." Yeltsin had been utilizing state finances to fund programs (such as pensions) with the aim of convincing voters of his willingness to fulfill promises he was making on the campaign trail.

Pro-Yeltsin media bias

Yeltsin benefited from an immense media bias favoring his campaign. In 1991, at the time of the previous presidential election, Russia had only two major television channels. RTR had supported Yeltsin, while the Programme One (the predecessor of ORT, and later, the present-day Channel One) had criticized him and provided broad coverage of the views of his opponents. Additionally, Programme One was still the main channel of the Soviet Central Television. In the 1996 presidential election, none of Russia's major television networks were critical of Yeltsin.

One of the reasons for the media's overwhelming favoritism of Yeltsin was their fear that a Communist government would dismantle Russia's right to a free press. In return, Yeltsin's presidential administration allowed well-connected Russian business leaders to acquire majority stakes in some of Russia's most valuable state-owned assets.

To further guarantee consistent media coverage, Yeltsin had fired the chairperson of the All-Russia State Television and Radio Broadcasting Company and replaced him with Eduard Sagalaev in February 1996. While the anti-Communist pro-Yeltsin media bias certainly contributed to Yeltsin's victory, it was not the sole factor. A similar anti-Communist media bias in the run-up to the 1995 parliamentary elections had failed to prevent a Communist victory. Additionally, Yeltsin himself had been able to win the 1991 presidential election in spite of a strongly unfavorable media bias towards him.

Violations of campaign laws

Following the election, a financial fraud investigation (the Xerox affair) was launched against Yeltsin's campaign. Yeltsin's campaign disregarded numerous campaign regulations. Analysis has indicated that Yeltsin's campaign spent well in excess of spending limits. Yeltsin undertook many abuses of his power in order to assist his campaign effort.

Fraud

Some instances of fraud were indicated to have taken place; the various political actors, including the opposition, did not challenge the result. The Central Election Commission (CEC) found in 1996 that the original second-round results reported from Mordovia were falsified. A significant number of votes that had been cast for Zyuganov were recorded as "Against All Candidates". The vote totals from Mordovia were subsequently adjusted by the CEC in order to remedy this. The CEC also discovered fraud in Dagestan, an ethnic republic which had experienced a very improbable change in voting patterns between rounds, and the vote totals were revised to remedy this. Another instance of fraud was discovered in Karachay-Cherkessia by the CEC. The vote totals were adjusted to remedy for this as well.

Allegations of unfairness and fraud

There have been a number of allegations claiming further and greater instances of fraud than the instances that had been discovered by the CEC. They include a number of allegations that assert that the election was unfair and favored Yeltsin, as well as some allegations that go as far as to assert that the entire election was fraudulent. In addition to federal subjects in which fraud was discovered by the CEC, some results, such as those from Russia's ethnic republics of Tatarstan and Bashkortostan, showed highly-unlikely changes in voting patterns between the two rounds of voting. That has aroused suspicions of election fraud, One hypothesis that has been given for the dramatic increase in support that Yeltsin saw in some regions was that prior to the second round vote, administrative pressure was applied in those regions to coerce voters into supporting Yeltsin.

Allegations have been made by some that in the first round of the election, several regions of Russia committed electoral fraud in favor of Zyuganov. It has also been further alleged by some that several of the republics switched the direction of their fraud during the second round to favor Yeltsin instead. At a meeting with opposition leaders in 2012, the then Russian president Dmitry Medvedev was reported to have said: "There is hardly any doubt who won [that race]. It was not Boris Nikolaevich Yeltsin." Their account was later the basis of the 2003 comedy Spinning Boris. There was separate reporting that indicated that their work for Yeltsin's campaign did not play a consequential role in shaping the campaign, with Time receiving accusations of poor journalism and sensationalism for publishing the consultants' claims about their importance to the campaign without practicing skepticism. Additionally, it had not at all been unusual for foreign consultants to work on campaigns in the nation's fledgling electoral politics.

Knowing that his voter base was pro-Western, Yeltsin lobbied the then United States president Bill Clinton to speak in praising terms of Russia's transition to democracy. Yeltsin believed that this would strengthen his support from voters. Yeltsin warned Clinton of the possible ramifications of a Zyuganov victory, saying: "There is a U.S. press campaign suggesting that people should not be afraid of the communists; that they are good, honorable and kind people. I warn people not to believe this. More than half of them are fanatics; they would destroy everything. It would mean civil war. They would abolish the boundaries between the republics. They want to take back Crimea; they even make claims against Alaska. ... There are two paths for Russia's development. I do not need power. But when I felt the threat of communism, I decided that I had to run. We will prevent it." In their conversations, Clinton assured Yeltsin that he would give him his publicly declared personal endorsement, saying: "I've been trying to find a way to say to the Russian people 'this election will have consequences,' and we are clear about what it is we support." Yeltsin made other requests, such as admission into the G8 (not granted), a $2.5 billion direct cash loan to the government (not granted), and a delay in NATO expansion (granted). Clinton refrained from undertaking covert operations to support Yeltsin in order to prevent spurring backlash if such efforts were to be discovered.

In 1995, Clinton urged Yeltsin to sign Russia's participation plan in the NATO Partnership for Peace program and to send a peacekeeper detachment for the NATO mission in Bosnia-Herzegovina. He also asked Yeltsin to end his opposition to the first stage of NATO expansion into Eastern Europe, and in return Clinton offered to support his re-election campaign. Among other things, this included not taking any visible steps towards expanding NATO until after the election. Yeltsin agreed, and authorized his foreign minister Andrei Kozyrev to sign the Partnership for Peace participation plan.

In January 1997, observing the support Yeltsin had received in 1996 from the Clinton administration, former candidate Alexander Lebed visited the United States to rally support from American businesses for a potential run in the 2000 Russian presidential election. As one analyst wrote at the time, "[Lebed] may perceive that Yeltsin benefited greatly from support from the Americans in the last campaign. Clinton made a trip to Moscow during the campaign. And the International Monetary Fund extended loans that enabled the Government to make credible promises to pay wages." Some argued that the role of the Clinton administration in securing an International Monetary Fund loan for Russia had an impact on the election, with some critics characterizing it as an act of foreign electoral intervention.

Opinion polls

Results

<!--

First round results by federal subject

{|class="wikitable"

|-style="background:#C0DBFC" |

|Federal subjects with a plurality of vote for Yeltsin

|-style="background:#F8C1BE"

|Federal subjects with a plurality of vote for Zyuganov

|}

{| class="wikitable sortable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" style="text-align:right"

|+List of federal subjects by results

|-

!

! style="text-align:center;" colspan="2"| Boris<br />Yeltsin<br />Independent

! style="text-align:center;" colspan="2"| Gennady<br />Zyuganov<br />CPRF

! style="text-align:center;" colspan="2"| Alexander<br />Lebed<br />KRO

! style="text-align:center;" colspan="2"| Grigory<br />Yavlinsky<br />Yabloko

! style="text-align:center;" colspan="2"| Vladimir<br />Zhirinovsky<br />LDPR

! style="text-align:center;" colspan="2"| Vladimir<br />Bryntsalov<br />RSP

! style="text-align:center;" colspan="2"| Svyatoslav<br />Fyodorov<br />PST

! style="text-align:center;" colspan="2"| Mikhail<br />Gorbachev<br />Independent

! style="text-align:center;" colspan="2"| Martin<br />Shakkum<br />Independent

! style="text-align:center;" colspan="2"| Yury<br />Vlasov<br />Independent

! style="text-align:center;" colspan="2"| Aman<br />Tuleyev<br />Independent

! style="text-align:center;" colspan="2"| Against all

! style="text-align:center| Total

! style="text-align:center| Invalid ballots

! style="text-align:center;" colspan="2"| Registered voters/turnout

|-

! align=center | Federal subject

! style="text-align:center;" data-sort-type="number"| No.

! style="text-align:center;" data-sort-type="number"| %

! style="text-align:center;" data-sort-type="number"| No.

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! style="text-align:center;" data-sort-type="number"| No.

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! style="text-align:center;" data-sort-type="number"| No.

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! style="text-align:center;" data-sort-type="number"| No.

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! style="text-align:center;" data-sort-type="number"| No.

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! style="text-align:center;" data-sort-type="number"| No.

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! style="text-align:center;" data-sort-type="number"| No.

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! style="text-align:center;" data-sort-type="number"| No.

! style="text-align:center;" data-sort-type="number"| %

! style="text-align:center;" data-sort-type="number"| No.

! style="text-align:center;" data-sort-type="number"| %

! style="text-align:center;" data-sort-type="number"| No.

! style="text-align:center;" data-sort-type="number"| %

! style="text-align:center;" data-sort-type="number"| No.

! style="text-align:center;" data-sort-type="number"| %

! style="text-align:center;" data-sort-type="number" | No.

! style="text-align:center;" data-sort-type="number" | No.

! style="text-align:center;" data-sort-type="number"| No.

! style="text-align:center;" data-sort-type="number"| %

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Adygea

|45,374

|20.0%

|116,701

|51.5%

|31,710

|14.0%

|11,977

|5.3%

|11,494

|5.1%

|319

|0.1%

|2,245

|1.0%

|557

|0.3%

|720

|0.3%

|342

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|2,380

|1.1%

|223,819

|2,799

|338,369

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Agin-Buryat Autonomous Okrug

|13,647

|44.7%

|10,903

|35.7%

|1,630

|5.3%

|794

|2.6%

|1,732

|5.7%

|72

|0.2%

|231

|0.7%

|340

|1.1%

|77

|0.3%

|42

|0.1%

|0

|0.0%

|384

|1.3%

|29,852

|656

|44,176

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Altai Krai

|300,499

|21.8%

|578,478

|42.0%

|267,212

|19.4%

|69,619

|5.1%

|101,669

|7.4%

|1,642

|0.1%

|9,439

|0.7%

|6,387

|0.5%

|4,688

|0.3%

|1,861

|0.1%

|0

|0.0%

|18,521

|1.3%

|1,360,019

|18,140

|1,950,248

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Altai Republic

|27,562

|28.5%

|42,204

|43.6%

|12,614

|13.0%

|3,347

|3.5%

|4,671

|4.8%

|173

|0.2%

|836

|0.9%

|967

|1.0%

|473

|0.5%

|228

|0.2%

|2

|0.0%

|1,552

|1.6%

|94,629

|2,158

|130,610

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Amur Oblast

|127,223

|26.6%

|200,186

|41.9%

|56,610

|11.8%

|28,985

|6.1%

|37,852

|7.9%

|756

|0.2%

|5,651

|1.2%

|2,374

|0.5%

|1,484

|0.3%

|867

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|10,222

|2.1%

|472,210

|6,105

|697,451

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Arkhangelsk Oblast

|288,225

|40.9%

|129,200

|18.3%

|121,910

|17.3%

|76,136

|10.8%

|46,277

|6.6%

|1,440

|0.2%

|11,037

|1.6%

|3,981

|0.6%

|3,805

|0.5%

|1,590

|0.2%

|34

|0.0%

|13,874

|2.0%

|697,608

|8,045

|1,056,542

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Astrakhan Oblast

|150,190

|29.5%

|185,925

|36.5%

|82,140

|16.1%

|30,710

|6.0%

|36,407

|7.2%

|704

|0.1%

|4,674

|0.9%

|1,623

|0.3%

|916

|0.2%

|762

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|7,018

|1.4%

|501,069

|7,699

|734,487

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Bashkortostan

|769,089

|34.2%

|941,539

|41.9%

|200,859

|8.9%

|152,557

|6.8%

|64,541

|2.9%

|3,949

|0.2%

|12,256

|0.5%

|17,411

|0.8%

|7,202

|0.3%

|2,992

|0.1%

|0

|0.0%

|31,861

|1.4%

|2,204,156

|45,139

|2,846,065

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Belgorod Oblast

|189,320

|22.9%

|383,688

|46.4%

|140,322

|17.0%

|47,592

|5.8%

|35,666

|4.3%

|1,018

|0.1%

|4,336

|5.8%

|2,777

|0.3%

|1,220

|0.2%

|1,106

|0.1%

|0

|0.0%

|10,373

|1.3%

|817,418

|10,397

|1,093,357

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Bryansk Oblast

|210,257

|26.2%

|397,454

|49.6%

|92,948

|11.6%

|27,904

|3.5%

|40,777

|5.1%

|856

|0.1%

|4,746

|0.6%

|2,657

|0.3%

|1,190

|0.2%

|1,035

|0.1%

|0

|0.0%

|10,247

|1.3%

|790,071

|11,528

|1,110,307

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Buryatia

|134,856

|30.6%

|177,293

|40.2%

|46,609

|10.6%

|33,451

|7.6%

|21,329

|4.8%

|554

|0.1%

|5,464

|1.2%

|2,544

|0.6%

|1,190

|0.3%

|770

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|6,185

|0.4%

|430,245

|10,541

|688,483

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Chechnya

|239,905

|65.1%

|60,119

|16.3%

|9,371

|2.5%

|15,666

|4.3%

|5,172

|1.4%

|817

|0.2%

|3,804

|1.0%

|6,508

|1.8%

|1,118

|0.3%

|1,489

|0.4%

|0

|0.0%

|8,190

|2.2%

|352,159

|16,318

|507,243

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Chelyabinsk Oblast

|685,273

|36.6%

|463,071

|24.7%

|371,120

|19.8%

|164,230

|8.8%

|97,937

|5.2%

|2,703

|0.2%

|13,732

|0.7%

|8,936

|0.5%

|6,594

|0.4%

|2,716

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|25,542

|1.4%

|1,841,854

|30,487

|2,663,820

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Chita Oblast

|130,011

|24.5%

|207,282

|39.1%

|61,981

|11.7%

|29,071

|5.5%

|68,603

|13.0%

|840

|0.2%

|6,688

|1.3%

|2,870

|0.5%

|1,794

|0.3%

|949

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|11,116

|2.1%

|521,205

|8,645

|823,229

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Chukotka Autonomous Okrug

|20,859

|48.5%

|5,808

|13.5%

|7,337

|17.1%

|2,741

|6.4%

|3,254

|7.6%

|114

|0.3%

|844

|2.0%

|264

|0.6%

|116

|0.3%

|124

|0.3%

|17

|0.0%

|1,123

|2.6%

|42,601

|418

|58,848

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Chuvashia

|132,422

|20.6%

|347,524

|53.9%

|49,296

|7.7%

|29,446

|3.2%

|27,381

|4.3%

|977

|0.2%

|20,906

|3.2%

|2,329

|4.3%

|2,166

|0.3%

|916

|0.1%

|0

|0.0%

|7,068

|1.1%

|620431

|23,945

|959,432

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Dagestan

|230,614

|28.5%

|511,202

|63.2%

|10,799

|1.3%

|13,753

|1.7%

|9,041

|1.1%

|1,026

|0.1%

|2,208

|0.3%

|2,791

|0.4%

|703

|0.1%

|622

|0.1%

|15

|0.0%

|4,336

|0.5%

|787,110

|21,418

|1,172,872

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Evenk Autonomous Okrug

|3,678

|43.4%

|1,694

|20.0%

|1,390

|16.4%

|553

|6.3%

|597

|7.1%

|16

|0.2%

|140

|1.7%

|69

|0.8%

|41

|0.5%

|30

|0.4%

|0

|0.0%

|157

|1.9%

|8,345

|125

|12,932

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Ingushetia

|37,129

|46.3%

|19,653

|24.5%

|1,786

|2.2%

|12,195

|15.2%

|1,398

|1.7%

|305

|0.4%

|616

|0.8%

|3,574

|4.5%

|299

|0.4%

|148

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|1,534

|1.9%

|78,647

|1,614

|114,605

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Irkutsk Oblast

|363,648

|32.2%

|311,353

|27.6%

|183,962

|16.3%

|100,075

|8.9%

|95,810

|8.5%

|1,698

|0.2%

|22,271

|2.0%

|7,150

|0.6%

|4,552

|0.4%

|2,635

|0.2%

|11

|0.0%

|19,003

|1.7%

|1,112,168

|17,019

|1,798,752

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Ivanovo Oblast

|204,084

|29.6%

|160,105

|23.2%

|203,997

|29.6%

|41,38

|6.1%

|48,275

|7.0%

|1,128

|0.2%

|4,215

|0.6%

|2,549

|0.4%

|1,864

|0.3%

|1,082

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|11,199

|1.6%

|642,094

|8,954

|957,607

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Jewish Autonomous Oblast

|28,859

|30.4%

|31,220

|32.8%

|14,544

|15.3%

|6,134

|6.5%

|7,594

|8.0%

|201

|0.2%

|1,725

|1.8%

|626

|0.7%

|348

|0.4%

|190

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|2,318

|2.4%

|93,759

|1,294

|140,631

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Kabardino-Balkaria

|163,872

|43.8%

|139,521

|37.3%

|36,685

|9.8%

|12,590

|3.4%

|5,358

|1.4%

|465

|0.1%

|1,809

|0.5%

|1,290

|0.3%

|712

|0.2%

|452

|0.1%

|0

|0.0%

|2,824

|0.8%

|365,578

|8,947

|507,194

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Kaliningrad Oblast

|173,769

|33.5%

|119,830

|23.1%

|110,264

|19.3%

|66,703

|12.9%

|37,412

|7.2%

|878

|0.2%

|3,189

|0.6%

|2,245

|0.4%

|821

|0.2%

|823

|0.2%

|9

|0.0%

|7,506

|1.5%

|513,449

|5,818

|724,142

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Kalmykia

|88,615

|58.5%

|38,954

|25.7%

|8,215

|5.4%

|3,791

|2.5%

|5,407

|3.6%

|177

|0.1%

|633

|0.4%

|531

|0.4%

|227

|0.2%

|121

|0.1%

|0

|0.0%

|1,372

|0.9%

|148,053

|3,443

|200,224

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Kaluga Oblast

|190,706

|31.4%

|241,933

|35.4%

|94,650

|15.6%

|45,258

|7.5%

|31,018

|5.1%

|1,140

|0.2%

|5,249

|0.9%

|2,379

|0.4%

|2,791

|0.5%

|1,158

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|9,194

|1.5%

|598,476

|8,352

|832,954

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Kamchatka Oblast

|57,435

|34.3%

|31,307

|18.8%

|23,549

|14.1%

|28,935

|17.3%

|16,689

|10.0%

|347

|0.2%

|1,731

|1.0%

|872

|0.5%

|542

|0.3%

|487

|0.3%

|20

|0.0%

|3,840

|2.3%

|165,754

|1,740

|282,857

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Karachay-Cherkessia

|54,823

|25.8%

|117,677

|55.4%

|18,624

|8.8%

|6,527

|3.1%

|5,286

|2.5%

|616

|0.3%

|1,014

|0.5%

|1,060

|0.5%

|525

|0.3%

|229

|0.1%

|0

|0.0%

|1,619

|0.8%

|208,000

|4,322

|293,024

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Karelia

|165,584

|42.4%

|66,428

|17.0%

|47,0543

|12.0%

|55,768

|14.3%

|33,134

|8.5%

|744

|0.2%

|3,817

|1.0%

|1,914

|0.5%

|2,066

|0.5%

|722

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|7,573

|1.9%

|384,803

|6,137

|577,087

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Kemerovo Oblast

|332,376

|23.0%

|561,397

|38.9%

|220,789

|15.3%

|77,099

|5.3%

|167,925

|11.6%

|1,565

|0.1%

|23,566

|1.6%

|7,154

|0.5%

|5,260

|0.4%

|1,967

|0.1%

|0

|0.0%

|23,640

|0.6%

|1,422,738

|21,111

|2,167,343

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Khabarovsk Krai

|288,585

|39.0%

|169,586

|22.9%

|90,550

|12.2%

|77,077

|10.4%

|64,007

|8.7%

|988

|0.1%

|15991

|2.2%

|5,097

|0.7%

|2,680

|0.4%

|1,391

|0.2%

|5

|0.0%

|16,239

|2.2%

|732,196

|7,580

|1,103,898

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Khakassia

|75,801

|29.2%

|91,956

|35.5%

|32,491

|12.5%

|18,784

|7.3%

|25,108

|9.7%

|458

|0.2%

|3,098

|1.2%

|1,643

|0.6%

|1,074

|0.4%

|677

|0.3%

|0

|0.0%

|4,255

|1.6%

|255,345

|3,866

|393,711

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug

|271,345

|52.5%

|66,241

|12.8%

|78,175

|15.1%

|34,138

|6.6%

|39,217

|7.6%

|799

|0.2%

|7,178

|1.4%

|2,984

|0.6%

|2,424

|0.5%

|822

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|7,040

|1.4%

|510,363

|6,143

|827,553

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Kirov Oblast

|272,471

|31.2%

|252,624

|29.0%

|119,504

|13.7%

|105,934

|12.2%

|75,155

|8.6%

|1,688

|0.2%

|7,232

|0.8%

|3,706

|0.4%

|3,499

|0.4%

|1,609

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|17,554

|2.0%

|860,976

|11,194

|1,199,668

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Komi Republic

|202,373

|40.5%

|81,572

|16.3%

|90,830

|18.2%

|47,240

|9.5%

|49,103

|9.8%

|878

|0.18%

|4,262

|0.9%

|2,992

|0.6%

|1,990

|0.4%

|949

|0.2%

|3

|0.0%

|9,193

|1.8%

|491,385

|8,572

|799,889

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Komi-Permyak Autonomous Okrug

|37,649

|53.3%

|16,751

|23.7%

|3,850

|5.5%

|2,116

|3.0%

|6,013

|8.5%

|174

|0.3%

|360

|0.5%

|603

|0.9%

|208

|0.3%

|116

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|1,460

|2.01%

|69,300

|1,350

|102,136

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Koryak Autonomous Okrug

|7,270

|46.0%

|2,367

|15.0%

|2,497

|15.8%

|1,411

|8.9%

|1,028

|6.5%

|55

|0.4%

|208

|1.3%

|136

|0.9%

|66

|0.4%

|45

|0.3%

|0

|0.0%

|459

|2.9%

|15,542

|267

|21,783

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Kostroma Oblast

|122,971

|28.0%

|125,399

|28.6%

|102,078

|23.3%

|34,112

|7.8%

|33,426

|7.6%

|747

|0.2%

|3,357

|0.8%

|2,024

|0.5%

|1,197

|0.3%

|875

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|6,940

|1.6%

|433,126

|5,730

|596,580

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Krasnodar Krai

|682,602

|26.3%

|1,024,603

|39.4%

|454,555

|17.5%

|165,231

|6.4%

|165,721

|6.4%

|4,284

|0.2%

|23,266

|0.9%

|8,092

|0.3%

|5,498

|0.2%

|4,002

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|31,460

|1.2%

|2,569,314

|29,791

|3,878,024

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC" or F8C1BE

|align=left|Krasnoyarsk Krai

|523,135

|34.8%

|428,781

|28.5%

|208,494

|13.9%

|150,527

|10.0%

|113,853

|7.6%

|1,947

|0.1%

|13,264

|0.9%

|8,885

|0.6%

|6,127

|0.4%

|2,471

|0.2%

|20

|0.0%

|26,434

|1.8%

|1,484,038

|19,410

|2,141,669

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Kurgan Oblast

|170,311

|29.3%

|218,464

|37.5%

|64,877

|11.1%

|38,479

|6.6%

|58,143

|10.0%

|1,071

|0.2%

|4,582

|0.8%

|3,112

|0.5%

|2,029

|0.4%

|958

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|12,139

|2.1%

|574,165

|7,996

|786,510

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Kursk Oblast

|177,328

|24.1%

|376,880

|51.1%

|81,555

|11.1%

|39,641

|5.4%

|28,666

|3.9%

|971

|0.1%

|4,280

|0.6%

|2,661

|0.4%

|1,145

|0.2%

|1,140

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|9,626

|1.3%

|723,893

|13,244

|1,007,467

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Leningrad Oblast

|348,505

|37.5%

|215,511

|23.2%

|168,540

|18.1%

|107,896

|11.6%

|39,882

|4.3%

|2,210

|0.2%

|11,038

|1.2%

|5,757

|0.6%

|3,491

|0.4%

|1,812

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|15,735

|1.7%

|920,377

|9,858

|1,329,030

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Lipetsk Oblast

|168,077

|25.1%

|310,671

|46.4%

|88,165

|13.2%

|37,251

|5.6%

|35,638

|5.3%

|750

|0.1%

|4,616

|0.7%

|1,898

|0.3%

|1,279

|0.2%

|1,070

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|10,084

|1.5%

|659,499

|10,535

|945,709

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Magadan Oblast

|40,679

|36.9%

|17,666

|16.0%

|26,288

|23.9%

|6,770

|6.2%

|12,021

|10.9%

|259

|0.2%

|1,570

|1.4%

|517

|0.5%

|421

|0.4%

|296

|0.3%

|5

|0.0%

|2,677

|2.4%

|109,169

|987

|170,058

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Mari El Republic

|93,124

|24.4%

|166,131

|43.4%

|41,948

|11.0%

|28,179

|7.4%

|28,418

|7.4%

|650

|0.2%

|5,047

|1.3%

|1,790

|0.5%

|2,327

|0.6%

|696

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|7,395

|1.9%

|375,705

|6,756

|550,104

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Mordovia

|116,693

|24.1%

|240,263

|49.7%

|51,434

|10.6%

|14,493

|3.0%

|33,138

|6.9%

|627

|0.1%

|3,323

|0.7%

|1,439

|0.3%

|652

|0.1%

|961

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|4,396

|0.9%

|467,419

|15,927

|688,846

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Moscow

|2,861,058

|61.2%

|694,862

|14.9%

|449,900

|9.6%

|372,524

|8.0%

|68,285

|1.5%

|8,891

|0.2%

|37,790

|0.8%

|23,524

|0.5%

|29,858

|0.6%

|20,614

|0.4%

|0

|0.0%

|67,873

|1.5%

|4,635,180

|42,771

|6,784,920

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Moscow Oblast

|1,675,374

|44.2%

|912,684

|24.1%

|571,886

|15.1%

|298,656

|7.9%

|113,883

|3.0%

|9,575

|0.3%

|34,510

|0.9%

|17,478

|0.5%

|31,929

|0.8%

|11,721

|0.3%

|0

|0.0%

|65,959

|1.7%

|3,743,655

|50,920

|5,375,052

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Murmansk Oblast

|190,719

|40.6%

|56,789

|12.1%

|119,396

|25.4%

|45,435

|9.7%

|32,775

|7.0%

|1,154

|0.3%

|4,177

|0.9%

|2,447

|0.5%

|1,166

|0.3%

|1,743

|0.4%

|0

|0.0%

|9,345

|2.0%

|465,188

|4,355

|787,978

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Nenets Autonomous Okrug

|9,033

|42.6%

|3,891

|18.4%

|2,537

|12.0%

|1,619

|7.6%

|2,104

|9.9%

|64

|0.3%

|465

|2.2%

|215

|1.0%

|105

|0.5%

|68

|0.3%

|12

|0.0%

|738

|3.5%

|20,851

|332

|29,097

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Nizhny Novgorod Oblast

|657,961

|34.8%

|614,467

|32.5%

|279,053

|14.8%

|134,905

|7.1%

|102,621

|5.4%

|4,426

|0.2%

|16,620

|0.9%

|8,070

|0.4%

|5,074

|0.3%

|4,220

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|32,601

|1.7%

|1,860,018

|29,046

|2,852,173

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|North Ossetia-Alania

|57,849

|19.3%

|187,007

|62.3%

|28,895

|9.6%

|5,390

|1.8%

|9,703

|3.2%

|460

|0.2%

|1,705

|0.6%

|861

|0.3%

|503

|0.2%

|556

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|3,303

|1.1%

|296,132

|3,899

|435,145

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Novgorod Oblast

|148,515

|35.7%

|98,682

|23.7%

|76,912

|18.5%

|45,786

|11.0%

|25,813

|6.2%

|960

|0.2%

|3,398

|0.8%

|2,437

|0.6%

|1,250

|0.3%

|773

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|7,045

|1.7%

|411,531

|4,734

|577,881

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Novosibirsk Oblast

|371,210

|25.6%

|506,791

|35.0%

|144,918

|10.0%

|202,117

|13.9%

|141,440

|9.8%

|1,505

|0.1%

|14,609

|1.0%

|16,106

|1.1%

|3,086

|0.2%

|1,864

|0.1%

|2

|0.0%

|24,735

|1.7%

|1,428,383

|21,131

|2,036,398

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Omsk Oblast

|369,782

|32.8%

|417,029

|37.0%

|94,396

|8.4%

|101,027

|9.0%

|78,352

|7.0%

|1,364

|0.1%

|8,693

|0.8%

|5,061

|0.5%

|7,961

|0.7%

|1,907

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|23,244

|2.1%

|1,108,816

|18,689

|1,528,138

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Orenburg Oblast

|288,865

|26.0%

|468,689

|42.1%

|151,489

|13.6%

|65,027

|5.8%

|83,523

|8.5%

|1,836

|0.2%

|10,316

|0.9%

|7,036

|0.6%

|2,378

|0.2%

|1,620

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|13,920

|1.3%

|1,094,699

|17,835

|1,582,780

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Oryol Oblast

|109,020

|21.5%

|275,643

|54.3%

|59,782

|11.8%

|19,788

|3.9%

|22,402

|4.4%

|589

|0.1%

|3,187

|0.6%

|1,580

|0.3%

|783

|0.2%

|788

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|8,002

|1.6%

|501,754

|6,377

|687,020

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Penza Oblast

|181,839

|20.8%

|442,066

|50.6%

|105,389

|12.1%

|60,565

|6.9%

|46,188

|5.3%

|1,055

|0.1%

|5,775

|0.7%

|2,447

|0.3%

|1,724

|0.2%

|1,289

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|12,508

|1.4%

|860,845

|12,836

|1,166,105

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Perm Krai

|742,968

|55.3%

|216,713

|16.1%

|130,203

|6.7%

|96,926

|7.2%

|83,952

|6.2%

|2,346

|0.2%

|12,410

|0.9%

|8,303

|0.6%

|4,295

|0.3%

|2,367

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|23,795

|1.8%

|1,324,278

|20,067

|2,020,049

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Primorsky Krai

|308,747

|29.6%

|256,574

|24.6%

|203,384

|19.5%

|74,840

|7.2%

|133,029

|12.7%

|1,889

|0.2%

|13,094

|1.3%

|5,751

|0.6%

|8,692

|0.8%

|2,084

|0.2%

|42

|0.0%

|23,619

|2.3%

|1,031,745

|13,097

|1,580,011

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Pskov Oblast

|121,667

|24.8%

|149,056

|30.4%

|115,549

|23.6%

|34,537

|7.0%

|49,999

|10.2%

|832

|0.2%

|3,319

|0.7%

|2,028

|0.4%

|1,196

|0.2%

|738

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|7,023

|1.4%

|485,935

|4,497

|648,971

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Rostov Oblast

|725,949

|29.1%

|873,609

|35.0%

|500,263

|20.0%

|192,273

|7.7%

|115,162

|4.6%

|3,114

|0.1%

|15,082

|0.6%

|7,925

|0.3%

|5,312

|0.2%

|3,591

|0.1%

|2

|0.0%

|26,318

|1.1%

|2,468,600

|27,853

|3,301,262

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Ryazan Oblast

|186,477

|24.7%

|302,484

|40.1%

|149,544

|19.8%

|42,242

|5.6%

|40,968

|5.4%

|1,089

|0.1%

|4,981

|0.7%

|2,641

|0.4%

|2,347

|0.3%

|1,372

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|12,206

|1.6%

|746,351

|8,525

|1,027,429

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Sakha Republic

|228,398

|51.9%

|90,529

|20.6%

|55,551

|12.6%

|20,620

|4.7%

|16,099

|3.7%

|715

|0.2%

|1158

|0.3%

|3,459

|0.8%

|1,158

|0.3%

|770

|0.2%

|12

|0.0%

|7,342

|1.7%

|429,300

|11,178

|611,990

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Sakhalin Oblast

|87,577

|29.9%

|78,935

|26.9%

|54,755

|18.7%

|27,174

|9.3%

|26,581

|9.1%

|569

|0.2%

|4,030

|1.4%

|1,683

|0.6%

|1,207

|0.4%

|566

|0.2%

|32

|0.0%

|6,181

|2.1%

|289,290

|4,018

|462,223

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Saint Petersburg

|1,137,382

|49.6%

|342,466

|14.9%

|321,244

|14.0%

|347,488

|15.2%

|49,273

|2.2%

|4,114

|0.2%

|25,410

|1.1%

|17,640

|0.8%

|6,748

|0.3%

|6,320

|0.3%

|0

|0.0%

|25,467

|1.1%

|2,283,552

|9,415

|3,695,014

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Samara Oblast

|620,526

|36.1%

|604,110

|35.2%

|200,054

|11.7%

|105,776

|6.2%

|96,378

|5.6%

|1,807

|0.1%

|16,932

|1.0%

|8,198

|0.5%

|11,351

|0.7%

|4,471

|0.3%

|0

|0.0%

|27,684

|1.6%

|1,697,287

|20,298

|2,459,138

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Saratov Oblast

|426,533

|28.4%

|624,996

|41.6%

|191,822

|12.8%

|79,404

|5.3%

|106,482

|7.1%

|2,201

|0.2%

|14,135

|0.9%

|5,445

|0.4%

|4,131

|0.3%

|2,854

|0.2%

|2

|0.0%

|25,043

|1.7%

|1,483,048

|19,830

|2,045,823

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Smolensk Oblast

|141,854

|22.0%

|287,621

|44.6%

|102,726

|15.9%

|32,942

|5.1%

|53,764

|8.3%

|783

|0.1%

|3,834

|0.6%

|2,347

|0.4%

|1,603

|0.3%

|918

|0.1%

|0

|0.0%

|9194

|1.4%

|637,586

|7,675

|885,377

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Stavropol Krai

|302,236

|22.0%

|603,570

|43.9%

|265,729

|19.3%

|56,353

|4.1%

|84,991

|6.2%

|2,133

|0.2%

|10,654

|0.8%

|8,219

|0.6%

|5,397

|0.4%

|2,091

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|16,479

|1.2%

|1,357,852

|15,933

|1,862,784

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Sverdlovsk Oblast

|1,302,951

|59.5%

|255,514

|11.7%

|310,841

|14.2%

|117,496

|5.4%

|107,039

|4.9%

|2,980

|0.1%

|23,103

|1.1%

|9,368

|0.5%

|5,850

|0.3%

|3,671

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|30,353

|1.4%

|2,169,166

|22,506

|3,440,385

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Tambov Oblast

|144,669

|20.9%

|361,552

|52.3%

|81,045

|11.7%

|32,003

|4.6%

|42,183

|6.1%

|991

|0.1%

|5,576

|0.8%

|2,103

|0.3%

|1,343

|0.2%

|1,174

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|9,413

|1.4%

|682,052

|9,829

|976,750

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Tatarstan

|745,181

|38.4%

|740,451

|38.1%

|143,429

|7.4%

|134,161

|6.9%

|50,119

|2.6%

|3,553

|0.2%

|17,895

|0.9%

|15,775

|0.8%

|4,620

|0.2%

|3,289

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|31,374

|1.6%

|1,889,847

|53,720

|2,635,844

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Taymyr Autonomous Okrug

|9,434

|49.7%

|2,304

|12.1%

|2,843

|15.0%

|1,234

|6.5%

|1,920

|10.1%

|33

|0.2%

|292

|1.5%

|192

|1.0%

|100

|0.5%

|35

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|386

|2.0%

|18,773

|207

|28,940

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Tomsk Oblast

|178,881

|36.0%

|113,281

|22.1%

|100,788

|19.7%

|55,780

|10.9%

|36,419

|7.1%

|725

|0.1%

|4,026

|0.8%

|3,096

|0.6%

|1,525

|0.3%

|881

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|8,224

|1.6%

|503,626

|8,252

|745,336

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Tula Oblast

|311,280

|30.0%

|314,098

|30.2%

|249,663

|24.0%

|68,439

|6.6%

|47,545

|4.6%

|1,462

|0.1%

|6,196

|0.6%

|3,334

|0.3%

|3,543

|0.3%

|1,762

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|15,702

|1.5%

|1,023,024

|16,031

|1,440,267

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Tuva

|69,971

|59.9%

|24,716

|21.2%

|5,297

|4.5%

|4,926

|4.2%

|3,529

|3.0%

|175

|0.2%

|532

|0.5%

|1,167

|1.0%

|246

|0.2%

|169

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|1,170

|1.0%

|111,898

|4,851

|170,685

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Tver Oblast

|299,435

|32.1%

|313,168

|33.6%

|159,813

|17.1%

|64,843

|7.0%

|51,496

|5.5%

|1,587

|0.2%

|6,799

|0.7%

|3,551

|0.4%

|3,820

|0.4%

|1,804

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|16,367

|1.8%

|922,683

|9,750

|1,256,109

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Tyumen Oblast

|238,171

|39.1%

|116,491

|27.3%

|80,961

|13.3%

|34,850

|5.7%

|57,206

|9.4%

|982

|0.2%

|4,988

|0.8%

|3,224

|0.5%

|2,150

|0.4%

|982

|0.2%

|18

|0.0%

|10,770

|1.77%

|600,693

|8,920

|907,788

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Udmurtia

|271,865

|36.8%

|225,074

|30.5%

|85,125

|11.5%

|68,215

|9.2%

|44,243

|6.0%

|1,404

|0.2%

|6,802

|0.9%

|5,092

|0.7%

|3,056

|0.4%

|1,679

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|14,731

|2.0%

|727,286

|11,375

|1,151,991

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Ulyanovsk Oblast

|184,218

|23.8%

|355,066

|45.8%

|95,559

|12.3%

|45,748

|5.9%

|57,67

|7.4%

|989

|0.1%

|7,158

|0.9%

|2,557

|0.3%

|2,061

|0.3%

|1,136

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|11,355

|1.5%

|763,014

|11,682

|1,090,344

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Ust-Orda Buryat Autonomous Okrug

|21,827

|37.0%

|23,604

|40.0%

|5,041

|8.5%

|2,335

|4.0%

|2,691

|4.6%

|107

|0.2%

|663

|1.1%

|419

|0.7%

|161

|0.3%

|98

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|811

|1.4%

|57,757

|1,244

|82,940

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Vladimir Oblast

|270,736

|30.9%

|261,808

|29.9%

|174,490

|19.9%

|64,783

|7.4%

|58,774

|6.7%

|1,591

|0.2%

|6,980

|0.8%

|3,618

|0.4%

|3,923

|0.5%

|1,957

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|14,222

|1.6%

|862,882

|13,592

|1,243,738

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Volgograd Oblast

|411,822

|28.6%

|576,802

|40.0%

|196,609

|13.7%

|92,623

|6.4%

|94,418

|6.6%

|1,995

|0.1%

|19,237

|1.3%

|6,055

|0.4%

|3,543

|0.3%

|2,572

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|19,832

|1.4%

|1,425,508

|14,897

|2,003,793

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Vologda Oblast

|306,663

|45.2%

|126,665

|18.7%

|119,719

|17.6%

|40,200

|5.9%

|48,338

|7.1%

|1,320

|0.2%

|5,894

|0.9%

|4,633

|0.7%

|2,295

|0.3%

|1,302

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|14,799

|2.2%

|671,828

|7,054

|983,482

|

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Voronezh Oblast

|319,402

|22.7%

|641,540

|45.5%

|246,234

|17.5%

|62,458

|4.4%

|82,429

|5.8%

|1,846

|0.1%

|10,767

|0.8%

|4,316

|0.3%

|2,247

|0.2%

|2,428

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|19,982

|1.4%

|1,393,649

|16,799

|1,963,015

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug

|104,486

|55.3%

|17,360

|9.2%

|29,789

|15.8%

|11,824

|6.3%

|14,304

|7.6%

|352

|0.2%

|2,975

|1.6%

|1,286

|0.7%

|1,086

|0.6%

|315

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|2,713

|1.43%

|186,490

|2,577

|296,650

|

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Yaroslavl Oblast

|260,919

|32.9%

|144,188

|18.2%

|245,613

|31.0%

|65,886

|8.3%

|38,380

|4.8%

|1,157

|0.2%

|4,896

|0.6%

|3,338

|0.4%

|4,113

|0.5%

|1,464

|0.2%

|0

|0.0%

|12,865

|1.6%

|782,819

|9,462

|1,098,249

|

|-

|align=left colspan=29|Sources: Central Election Commission International Republican Institute;Electoral Geography 2.0

|}

Second round results by federal subject

{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:right"

|-style="background:#C0DBFC" |

|Federal subjects with a plurality of vote for Yeltsin

|-style="background:#F8C1BE"

|Federal subjects with a plurality of vote for Zyuganov

|}

{| class="wikitable sortable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" style="text-align:right"

|+List of federal subjects by results

|-

!

! style="text-align:center;" colspan="2"| Boris Yeltsin<br />Independent

! style="text-align:center;" colspan="2"| Gennady Zyuganov<br />CPRF

! style="text-align:center;" colspan="2"| Against all

! style="text-align:center| Total

! style="text-align:center| Invalid ballots

! style="text-align:center;" colspan="2"| Registered voters/turnout

|-

! align=center | Federal subject

! style="text-align:center;" data-sort-type="number"| No.

! style="text-align:center;" data-sort-type="number"| %

! style="text-align:center;" data-sort-type="number"| No.

! style="text-align:center;" data-sort-type="number"| %

! style="text-align:center;" data-sort-type="number"| No.

! style="text-align:center;" data-sort-type="number"| %

! style="text-align:center;" data-sort-type="number"| No.

! style="text-align:center;" data-sort-type="number"| %

! style="text-align:center;" data-sort-type="number"| No.

! style="text-align:center;" data-sort-type="number"| %

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Adygea

|76,146

|34.5%

|133,665

|60.5%

|7,575

|3.4%

|217,386

|3,435

|340,508

|64.9%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Agin-Buryat Autonomous Okrug

|14,405

|49.2%

|13,839

|47.2%

|599

|

|28,843

|457

|44,231

|66.3%

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Altai Krai

|505,270

|38.6%

|727,548

|55.5%

|65,029

|5.0%

|1,297,847

|12,605

|1,953,564

|67.1%

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Altai Republic

|40,026

|43.0%

|48,057

|51.7%

|3,527

|

|91,610

|1,385

|131,097

|71.0%

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Amur Oblast

|186,867

|40.7%

|243,823

|53.1%

|24,993

|5.4%

|455,683

|3,733

|700,393

|65.6%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Arkhangelsk Oblast

|448,477

|63.9%

|194,704

|27.8%

|52,315

|7.5%

|695,496

|6,215

|1,058,566

|66.4.%

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Astrakhan Oblast

|229,153

|47.3%

|233,738

|48.2%

|21,623

|4.5%

|484,514

|4,567

|735,471

|66.6%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Bashkortostan

|1,170,774

|52.2%

|990,148

|44.1%

|83,484

|3.7%

|2,244,406

|50,577

|2,851,338

|80.6%

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Belgorod Oblast

|300,481

|36.3%

|485,024

|58.6%

|33,850

|4.1%

|819,355

|8,779

|1,098,946

|75.4%

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Bryansk Oblast

|286,515

|36.3%

|467,552

|59.2%

|27,173

|3.4%

|781,240

|8,186

|1,114,079

|70.9%

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Buryatia

|192,933

|45.3%

|210,791

|49.5%

|16,036

|3.8%

|419,760

|6,108

|689,933

|61.8%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Chechnya

|275,455

|73.4%

|80,877

|21.5%

|15,184

|4.0%

|371,516

|3,887

|503,671

|74.9%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Chelyabinsk Oblast

|1,081,811

|58.5%

|646,306

|35.0%

|98,015

|

|1,826,132

|22,594

|2,667,324

|69.5%

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Chita Oblast

|209,803

|40.9%

|269,459

|52.5%

|27,348

|

|506,510

|6,553

|827,378

|62.1%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Chukotka Autonomous Okrug

|30,009

|74.3%

|7,730

|19.1%

|2,435

|6.0%

|40,174

|223

|52,771

|76.8%

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Chuvashia

|205,959

|31.8%

|405,129

|62.6%

|21,614

|

|632,702

|14,564

|962,349

|67.3%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Dagestan

|471,231

|53.1%

|401,069

|44.3%

|7,423

|0.8%

|879,723

|15,263

|1,208,348

|73.8%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Evenk Autonomous Okrug

|5,273

|65.8%

|2,272

|28.3%

|409

|5.1%

|7,954

|65

|12,852

|62.3%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Ingushetia

|75,768

|79.8%

|14,738

|15.5%

|3,136

|3.3%

|93,642

|1,308

|113,849

|83.5%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Irkutsk Oblast

|578,469

|52.6%

|437,105

|39.8%

|69,087

|

|1,084,661

|14,331

|1,802,839

|61.1%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Ivanovo Oblast

|349,433

|53.2%

|256,556

|39.1%

|45,408

|6.9%

|651,407

|5,392

|957,311

|68.7%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Jewish Autonomous Oblast

|45,791

|49.4%

|40,464

|43.7%

|5,333

|

|91,588

|1,057

|141,466

|65.6%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Kabardino-Balkaria

|259,313

|63.6%

|135,287

|33.2%

|7,952

|2.0%

|402,552

|5,133

|513,132

|79.7%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Kaliningrad Oblast

|289,088

|57.7%

|177,077

|35.3%

|30,770

|6.1%

|496,935

|4,144

|724,343

|69.3%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Kalmykia

|103,515

|70.3%

|39,354

|26.7%

|2,919

|2.0%

|145,788

|1,523

|200,806

|73.4%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Kaluga Oblast

|290,595

|49.0%

|272,592

|46.0%

|29,800

|5.0%

|592,987

|5,036

|839,267

|71.4%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Kamchatka Krai

|99,980

|62.3%

|47,664

|29.7%

|12,901

|8.0%

|160,454

|1,210

|274,830

|58.9%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Karachay-Cherkessia

|109,747

|50.7%

|101,379

|46.9%

|5,286

|2.4%

|216,412

|3,546

|296,321

|74.4%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Karelia

|251,205

|66.8%

|100,104

|26.6%

|25,025

|6.6%

|376,334

|3,059

|580,909

|65.4%

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Kemerovo Oblast

|567,761

|42.0%

|704,322

|52.1%

|80,109

|5.9%

|1,352,182

|14,501

|2,169,590

|63.1%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Khabarovsk Krai

|430,870

|59.4%

|246,378

|34.0%

|47,765

|6.6%

|725,013

|5,539

|1,106,030

|66.2%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Khakassia

|116,729

|

|116,644

|

|11,842

|

|491,550

|4,877

|814,347

|62.5%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug

|368,650

|75.0%

|100,303

|20.4%

|22,707

|4.6%

|491,660

|4,877

|814,664

|61.1%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Kirov Oblast

|425,465

|51.2%

|348,835

|42.0%

|56,929

|6.8%

|831,229

|7,887

|1,201,171

|69.9%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Komi Republic

|308,250

|65.0%

|134,224

|28.3%

|31,577

|6.7%

|474,051

|4,889

|791,846

|60.6%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Komi-Permyak Autonomous Okrug

|44,136

|63.6%

|22,908

|33.0%

|2,384

|3.4%

|69,428

|879

|102,567

|68.6%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Koryak Autonomous Okrug

|10,364

|70.6%

|3,401

|23.2%

|915

|6.2%

|14,680

|173

|21,889

|67.9%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Kostroma Oblast

|208,153

|50.3%

|178,238

|43.0%

|27,709

|6.7%

|414,110

|3,358

|598,475

|69.8%

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Krasnodar Krai

|1,116,007

|44.3%

|1,308,765

|51.9%

|96,752

|3.8%

|2,521,524

|20,997

|3,904,612

|65.2%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Krasnoyarsk Krai

|764,633

|53.9%

|572,555

|40.4%

|80,834

|5.7%

|1,418,022

|12,987

|2,145,968

|66.8%

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Kurgan Oblast

|246,097

|43.4%

|284,731

|50.2%

|30,668

|5.4%

|561,495

|5,436

|786,547

|72.1%

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Kursk Oblast

|258,183

|36.8%

|419,756

|59.7%

|24,699

|3.5%

|702,638

|9,739

|1,010,449

|70.5%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Leningrad Oblast

|570,702

|61.8%

|300,501

|32.5%

|52,915

|5.7%

|924,118

|6,123

|1,344,260

|69.3%

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Lipetsk Oblast

|259,529

|39.0%

|378,393

|56.9%

|27,217

|4.1%

|665,139

|6,947

|948,106

|71.0%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Magadan Oblast

|65,965

|64.0%

|28,573

|27.7%

|8,528

|8.3%

|103,066

|703

|166,632

|62.4%

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Mari El

|154,301

|41.3%

|199,872

|53.5%

|19,628

|5.2%

|373,801

|4,904

|550,715

|68.8%

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Mordovia

|238,441

|47.3%

|249,451

|49.8%

|16,328

|2.9%

|504,220

|18,283

|692,878

|75.5%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Moscow

|3,629,464

|77.8%

|842,092

|18.1%

|193,785

|4.1%

|4,665,341

|30,767

|6,672,788

|70.6%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Moscow Oblast

|2,462,197

|64.7%

|1,146,348

|30.1%

|194,639

|5.2%

|3,803,184

|31,745

|5,417,224

|70.9%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Murmansk Oblast

|303,401

|70.6%

|94,664

|22.0%

|31,851

|7.4%

|429,916

|2,726

|763,877

|56.7%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Nenets Autonomous Okrug

|11,919

|62.3%

|5,596

|29.2%

|1,625

|8.5%

|19,140

|229

|28,606

|67.6%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Nizhny Novgorod Oblast

|967,307

|

|791,738

|

|91,315

|

|2,860,893

|19,108

|1,850,360

|65.5%

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|North Ossetia-Alania

|133,748

|43.8%

|164,308

|53.8%

|7,317

|2.4%

|305,373

|5,691

|441,614

|70.8%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Novgorod Oblast

|244,129

|59.6%

|140,329

|34.2%

|25,371

|6.2%

|409,829

|2,999

|584,018

|70.8%

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Novosibirsk Oblast

|596,564

|43.7%

|666,858

|48.9%

|85,698

|6.3%

|1,349,120

|14,673

|2,039,828

|67.0%

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Omsk Oblast

|514,384

|46.8%

|528,562

|48.1%

|57,177

|5.1%

|1,100,123

|12,464

|1,525,989

|73.0%

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Orenburg Oblast

|160,162

|32.3%

|316,213

|63.8%

|1,151

|3.9%

|495,526

|4,180

|686,945

|67.9%

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Oryol Oblast

|441,163

|42.1%

|583,090

|55.7%

|45,423

|2.2%

|1,047,660

|11,408

|1,595,245

|62.8%

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Penza Oblast

|299,780

|37.3%

|497,773

|61.9%

|38,734

|0.8%

|804,316

|8,118

|1,168,541

|72.4%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Perm Krai

|933,294

|71.6%

|310,546

|23.8%

|60,109

|4.6%

|1,303,949

|13,446

|2,022,676

|65.2%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Primorsky Krai

|524,428

|52.8%

|395,463

|39.8%

|74,206

|7.4%

|994,107

|9,300

|1,586,108

|63.4%

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Pskov Oblast

|217,500

|45.6%

|231,201

|48.5%

|28,212

|5.9%

|476,913

|3,932

|656,216

|73.3%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Rostov Oblast

|1,219,594

|51.1%

|1,063,135

|44.6%

|102,293

|4.3%

|2,385,022

|21,740

|3,295,420

|73.2%

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Ryazan Oblast

|313,087

|43.0%

|379,626

|52.1%

|36,175

|4.9%

|728,888

|65,75

|1,031,496

|71.4%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Sakha Republic

|274,570

|64.7%

|126,888

|29.9%

|17,293

|4.1%

|428,752

|5,979

|601,252

|70.7%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC" or F8C1BE

|align=left|Sakhalin Oblast

|152,795

|54.0%

|111,085

|39.2%

|19,578

|6.8%

|283,458

|2,792

|461,110

|62.6%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Samara Oblast

|910,134

|52.4%

|747,946

|43.1%

|79,083

|4.5%

|1,737,163

|14,781

|2,455,498

|71.5%

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Saratov Oblast

|664,799

|44.6%

|753,173

|50.5%

|73,309

|4.9%

|1,491,281

|16,910

|2,042,831

|73.9%

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Smolensk Oblast

|234,125

|38.5%

|345,190

|56.7%

|29,352

|4.8%

|608,667

|4,990

|887,257

|69.2%

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Stavropol Krai

|548,749

|41.3%

|722,889

|54.4%

|56,324

|4.3%

|1,327,962

|12,576

|1,870,996

|71.8%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC" or F8C1BE

|align=left|Saint Petersburg

|1,759,950

|74.1%

|502,553

|21.2%

|112,723

|4.7%

|2,375,206

|7,571

|3,659,544

|65.3%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC" or F8C1BE

|align=left|Sverdlovsk Oblast

|1,726,549

|77.5%

|401,515

|18.0%

|98,563

|4.5%

|2,226,627

|17,934

|3,452,336

|65.1%

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Tambov Oblast

|217,499

|32.9%

|419,639

|63.4%

|24,705

|3.7%

|661,843

|5,882

|980,607

|68.1%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Tatarstan

|1,253,121

|63.1%

|658,782

|33.2%

|74,178

|3.7%

|1,986,081

|53,145

|2,632,389

|77.5%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Taymyr Autonomous Okrug

|12,787

|72.2%

|3,851

|21.7%

|1,082

|6.1%

|17,720

|135

|28,920

|61.8%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Tomsk Oblast

|290,199

|59.8%

|165,241

|34.1%

|29,667

|6.1%

|485,107

|5,328

|744,010

|66.01

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Tula Oblast

|536,783

|53.0%

|421,169

|41.6%

|54,934

|5.4%

|1,012,866

|11,042

|1,440,510

|71.2%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Tuva

|73,113

|64.8%

|37,227

|33.0%

|2,433

|2.2%

|112,763

|3,160

|171,742

|67.6%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Tver Oblast

|455,731

|50.5%

|396,627

|44.0%

|40,877

|5.5%

|902,235

|6,387

|1,268,488

|71.7%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Tyumen Oblast

|343,391

|56.0%

|234,743

|38.6%

|30,539

|5.4%

|608,673

|6,528

|915,585

|67.3%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Udmurtia

|392,551

|53.4%

|302,649

|41.2%

|40,302

|5.4%

|735,502

|7,513

|1,156,145

|64.3%

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Ulyanovsk Oblast

|286,860

|38.1%

|426,778

|57.0%

|35,168

|4.9%

|748,806

|9,460

|1,093,057

|69.4%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Ust-Orda Buryat Autonomous Okrug

|29,014

|49.5%

|28,016

|47.8%

|1,610

|2.7%

|58,640

|974

|82,814

|72.0%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Vladimir Oblast

|421,352

|52.1%

|342,077

|42.3%

|46,057

|5.6%

|809,486

|7,661

|1,250,544

|65.4%

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Volgograd Oblast

|616,368

|44.2%

|703,784

|50.5%

|63,496

|4.5%

|1,383,648

|10,546

|2,006,436

|69.6%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Vologda Oblast

|426,532

|64.4%

|189,989

|28.7%

|45,558

|6.9%

|661,979

|4,814

|989,121

|67.5%

|-align=right style="background:#F8C1BE"

|align=left|Voronezh Oblast

|501,114

|37.3%

|781,260

|58.1%

|62,022

|4.6%

|1,344,396

|11,052

|1,968,924

|68.9%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug

|467,896

|60.2%

|243,526

|31.4%

|55,520

|8.4%

|776,932

|6,004

|1,100,070

|66.2%

|-align=right style="background:#C0DBFC"

|align=left|Yaroslavl Oblast

|467,896

|60.0%

|243,526

|31.8%

|55,510

|8.2%

|766,932

|6,004

|1,100,080

|70.3%

|-

|align=left colspan=29|Sources: Central Election Commission; Central Election Commission; Central Election Commission; International Republican Institute;Electoral Geography 2.0

|}

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See also

  • Red Belt (Russia), term describing federal subjects that had strong support for Zyuganov's Communist Party of the Russian Federation
  • Third force (1996 Russian presidential election), a proposed electoral bloc

References