3rd State Duma of the Russian Federation

Russia State Duma of the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation
at the 3rd convocation
2nd State Duma 4th State Duma

Seat composition of the 3rd State Duma
Overview
Meeting place State Duma Building
Moscow, 1 Okhotny Ryad street
Term 19 December 1999 (1999-12-19) – 7 December 2003 (2003-12-07)
Election 1999 parliamentary election
Government 28 committees
Website State Duma
Members
441 / 450
Chairman Gennadiy Seleznyov
(from Communist Party)
Party control 1st coalition: Unity and Communist Party
2nd coalition: Unity and Fatherland – All Russia
State Duma Building
President Vladimir Putin in the State Duma, May 18, 2000

The State Duma of the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation, the 3rd convocation (Russian: Государственная Дума Федерального Собрания Российской Федерации III созыва) was the third session of the legislative branch of the State Duma, Lower House of the Russian Parliament. The 3rd convocation met at the State Duma building in Moscow from December 19, 1999 to December 7, 2003.

Leadership

Until the election of the Chairman of the State Duma of the meeting, the position was filled by the oldest deputy – 79 year-old of Yegor Ligachyov – according to traditions.

On January 18, 2000, the parliament elected Gennadiy Seleznyov as the Chairman of the State Duma.[1]

Factions

Leaders of the State Duma factions with Acting President Vladimir Putin, January 5, 2000
Faction Leader Seats
Communist Party of the Russian Federation Gennady Zuganov 113
Unity Boris Gryzlov 73
Fatherland – All Russia Yevgeny Primakov (until 2001) 66
Vyacheslav Volodin (since 2001)
Union of Right Forces Sergey Kiriyenko 29
Yabloko Grigory Yavlinsky 20
Zhirinovsky Bloc Igor Lebedev 17
Independents 123
Vacant 9

Coalitions

In the State Duma at the 3rd convocation, two coalitions functioned at different times as the majority. In both cases, the coalitions were initiated by the "Unity" faction.

The first coalition was formed immediately after the announcement of election results, during the preparations for the first meeting of the new parliament. The "Unity" faction and the Communist Party (the largest in the State Duma) signed a package agreement, according to which they shared the top positions of the Duma and the chairmanships of parliamentary committees. As for "Unity" it was mainly to keep the levers of control of the State Duma from its main competitors at that time - "Fatherland-All Russia". The Communists made an agreement on favorable terms.

During the session, the parliament consolidated pro-government forces around President Vladimir Putin: the merger of public movements "Unity" and "Fatherland" was announced,[2] which led to corresponding changes in the State Duma. In April 2002, the newly formed majority of the State Duma cleaned house and deprived the Communists of the benefits they received at the beginning. They were deprived of the majority of management positions. This caused a crisis within the Communist Party faction - Chairman of the State Duma Gennady Seleznyov, as well as heads of two committees (Svetlana Goryacheva and Nikolai Gubenko) chose to leave the faction, and to keep their positions.[3]

Major legislation

Committees

28 committees operated in the State Duma at the 3rd convocation.

References

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