Russian All-People's Union
- View a machine-translated version of the Russian article.
- Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia.
- Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low-quality. If possible, verify the text with references provided in the foreign-language article.
- You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation. A model attribution edit summary is
Content in this edit is translated from the existing Russian Wikipedia article at [[:ru:Российский общенародный союз]]; see its history for attribution.
- You may also add the template
{{Translated|ru|Российский общенародный союз}}
to the talk page. - For more guidance, see Wikipedia:Translation.
Russian All-People's Union Российский общенародный союз Rossiyskiy obshchenarodnyy soyuz | |
---|---|
Abbreviation | ROS (English) РОС (Russian) |
Leader | Sergey Baburin |
Founded | 26 October 1991; 33 years ago (1991年10月26日) 13 December 2008; 16 years ago (2008年12月13日) (refoundation) |
Split from | CPSU |
Headquarters | 11th building, Trokhgornyy pereulok, Moscow, Russia |
Newspaper | Russian herald |
Youth wing | Union of Russian Students |
Ideology | Russian conservatism [1] Pochvennichestvo Right-wing socialism |
Political position | Right-wing |
Colours | Black Gold White |
Slogan | "Let's build the Russia of our dreams!" (Russian: "Построим Россию нашей мечты!") |
Seats in the Federation Council | 0 / 170 |
Seats in the State Duma | 0 / 450 |
Seats in the Regional Parliaments | 0 / 3,994 |
Party flag | |
Website | |
rospartya | |
The Russian All-People's Union (ROS; Russian: Российский общенародный союз; РОС; Rossiyskiy obshchenarodnyy soyuz, ROS) is a Russian conservative political party formed in October 1991. In 2001, it merged into the People's Union (Russian: Народная Воля, romanized: Narodnaya Volya). In 2008, it was reorganized when the Narodnaya Volya dissolved itself. Its leader is Sergey Baburin.
The organization was founded by Russian nationalist-oriented members of the Russian Platform of the CPSU, and was launched on 26 October 1991 by Russian Supreme Soviet deputies of the faction Rossiya. According to Nikolai Pavlov, one of the ROS leaders, the party was established as a "patriotic and democratic" force with the aim of uniting parties of socialist orientation. Pavlov also stated that they had similar positions with more centrist organizations like the Cadet Party of Mikhail Astafyev, Viktor Aksiuchits' Christian Democratic Party of Russia, and the Democratic Party of Russia; one of the ROS member organizations in 1992 was the Russian Party of Communists, which was led by A. Kryuchkov. The ROS was part of the United Opposition and later National Salvation Front, belonging to the FNS right-wing faction.[2] Besides socialist tendencies, the ROS had connections with traditional Russian nationalists and monarchists, and promoted pan-Slavist policies, including support for Serbia's expansion.[3]
The party published newspaper Vremya (Time). The ROS took part in the 1995 Russian legislative election within the bloc Power to the People!, which was led by Baburin and Nikolai Ryzhkov. It won 1.6% of votes, failing to pass the 5% barrier; the ROS got nine seats, all from majoritarian districts. The party co-operated with other formations of nationalist-communist orientation, such as the Communist Party of Russian Federation, whose candidate Gennady Zyuganov (supported by the ROS) was defeated in the 1996 Russian presidential election by incumbent Boris Yeltsin. In 2001, the ROS joined with three other nationalist parties to form the People's Union (Narodnaya Volya). In 2008, the ROS was reorganized when Narodnaya Volya dissolved itself.
On 22 December 2017, the ROS nominated Sergey Baburin as its candidate for the 2018 Russian presidential election.[4] On 24 December, Baburin filed registration documents with the Central Election Commission (CEC).[5] The CEC rejected Baburin's bid on 25 December because it identified violations in the information provided regarding 18 of his party's 48 representatives.[6] Baburin resubmitted the documents, and they were approved by the CEC.[7]
Baburin was nominated by his party again in December 2023 during the party's congress. He submitted documents to participate in the election on 26 December, which were registered on 29 December.[8] [9] Baburin collected the required number of signatures, but decided to withdraw on the day before the deadline to submit signatures 30 January 2024 and endorsed Putin for the 2024 election.[10] [11]
Electoral results
[edit ]Presidential elections
[edit ]Election | Candidate | First round | Second round | Result | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | % | Votes | % | |||
1996 | Endorsed Gennady Zyuganov | 24,211,686 | 32.03% |
30,102,288 | 40.31% |
Lost Red XN |
2000 | Endorsed Vladimir Putin | 39,740,434 | 52.94% |
Elected Green tickY | ||
2004 | Endorsed Sergey Glazyev | 2,850,063 | 4.10% |
Lost Red XN | ||
2008 | Did not contest | |||||
2012 | ||||||
2018 | Sergey Baburin | 479,013 | 0.65% |
Lost Red XN | ||
2024 | Endorsed Vladimir Putin | 76,277,708 | 88.48% |
Elected Green tickY |
Legislative elections
[edit ]Election | Party leader | Performance | Rank | Government | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | % | ± pp | Seats | +/– | ||||
1995 | Sergey Baburin | 1,112,873 | 1.61% |
New | 9 / 450
|
New | 13th | Opposition |
1999 | 245,266 | 0.37% |
Decrease 1.24 | 2 / 450
|
Decrease 7 | Decrease 18th | Opposition | |
2003 | 5,470,429 | 9.02% |
New | 38 / 450
|
Increase 36 | Increase 4th | Opposition | |
2007 | People's Will was not admitted to the elections; supported the CPRF | Extra-parliamentary | ||||||
2011 | People's Union did not contest; supported the LDPR | Extra-parliamentary | ||||||
2016 | Did not contest | Extra-parliamentary | ||||||
2021 | Did not contest | Extra-parliamentary |
See also
[edit ]- Liberal Democratic Party of Russia
- List of political parties in Russia
- Paternalistic conservatism
- Pochvennichestvo
- Social conservatism
References
[edit ]- ^ Goncharenko, Roman (8 February 2018). "Russia election: Who are Vladimir Putin's challengers?". Deutsche Welle. Retrieved 20 August 2022.
- ^ Hahn, G. M. (1994). "Opposition Politics in Russia". Europe-Asia Studies. 46 (2): 308.
- ^ Hahn, G. M. (1994). "Opposition Politics in Russia". Europe-Asia Studies. 46 (2): 309.
- ^ "Российский общенародный союз" выдвинул Бабурина кандидатом в президенты. РИА Новости (in Russian). 2017年12月22日. Retrieved 2017年12月22日.
- ^ Бабурин подал в ЦИК документы для выдвижения в президенты от своей партии. РИА Новости (in Russian). 2017年12月24日. Retrieved 2017年12月25日.
- ^ ЦИК предложил трем потенциальным кандидатам устранить процедурные нарушения
- ^ "ЦИК разрешил Бабурину открыть избирательный счет и начать сбор подписей".
- ^ "Партия РОС определилась с кандидатом на выборах президента РФ - Газета.Ru | Новости".
- ^ Новости, Р. И. А. (2023年12月26日). "Бабурин подал документы в ЦИК на выдвижение кандидатом в президенты". РИА Новости (in Russian). Retrieved 2023年12月27日.
- ^ "Бабурин снялся с выборов президента". Коммерсантъ (in Russian). 2024年01月30日. Retrieved 2024年01月30日.
- ^ "Бабурин заявил, что снимает свою кандидатуру с выборов президента РФ". TASS . Retrieved 2024年01月30日.
External links
[edit ]- Official website (in Russian)
- 1991 establishments in Russia
- 1991 establishments in the Soviet Union
- National conservative parties
- Nationalist parties in Russia
- Political organizations based in Russia
- Political parties established in 1991
- Political parties in the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic
- Registered political parties in Russia
- Right-wing parties in Europe
- Russian nationalist parties
- Social conservative parties