Democratic Party of Russia

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Democratic Party of Russia
 
Leader Andrei Vladimirovich Bogdanov
 
Founded 1990
 
Ideology Populism
 
Website
democrats.ru

The Democratic Party of Russia or DPR (Russian: Демократи́ческая Па́ртия Росси́и, Demokraticheskaya Partiya Rossii) is a Russian political party founded between April 21 and May 3, 1990 by Nikolai Travkin.[1] It initially featured Stanislav Govorukhin and Sergey Glazyev, and was part of the first State Duma. Glazyev was made leader in 1994 but was disbanded before the following year's legislative election.[1]

In 2001 it was reformed by Mikhail Prusak. In 2005 Mikhail Kasyanov tried to be elected chairman of the party, but lost to Andrei Vladimirovich Bogdanov.[1] In June 2007 the party proposed a referendum for joining the European Union and in December it took part in the legislative election, but it did not win any seats.[1][2] The DPR has been accused of being a virtual party used to draw away votes from the real opposition parties.[3]

In the Russian legislative election, 2007 the party won 0.13% of votes, not breaking the 7% barrier, and thus no seats in the Duma. As of January 1, 2007, according to the Federal Registration Service, the party had 82183 members.


[edit] Top positions

  • Leader and Chairman of the DPR's Central Committee - Andrei Vladimirovich Bogdanov
  • Chairman of the DPR's Executive Committee - Vyacheslav Nikolaevich Smirnov
  • Permanent Acting Governing Body - Political Council (7 members)
  • Party's Upper Governing Body between congresses - The DPR's Central Committee (76 members)


[edit] References

[edit] External links