Mogilev | |
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Former Civilian constituency for the All-Russian Constituent Assembly | |
Former constituency | |
Created | 1917 |
Abolished | 1918 |
Number of members | 15 |
Number of Uyezd Electoral Commissions | 11 |
Number of Urban Electoral Commissions | 2 |
Number of Parishes | 146 |
Sources: |
The Mogilev electoral district (Russian: Могилевский избирательный округ) was a constituency created for the 1917 Russian Constituent Assembly election.
The electoral district covered the Mogilev Governorate. The SRs benefited from the fact that the leader heading the Mogilev Provincial Soviet of Peasants Deputies was largely popular in the province.
According to U.S. historian Oliver Henry Radkey, whose account forms the basis of the results in the table below, the vote count in Mogilev is largely incomplete. He claims to have the data for Gomel (with the votes for all 11 lists), Mogilev (with votes for the 7 most voted lists) and Orsha (with votes for the 6 most votes lists) towns as well as 80 precincts in Gomel uezd (but in these precincts, only the vote for SR and Bolshevik lists). The account of Soviet historian L. M. Spirin, shown to the right in the table and which Radkey did not consider reliable, includes a much greater number of votes accounted for the Mogilev electoral district.
In Gomel town, per Spirin's account, the Jewish National Electoral Committee obtained 6,010 votes (27.6%), Kadets 3,957 (18.2%), Menshevik-Bund 3,370 votes (15.5%), Bolsheviks 2,012 (9.3%), SRs 1,848 votes (8.5%), Polish list 1,584 votes (7.3%), United Jewish Socialist Labour Party 1,497 votes (6.9%), Poalei-Zion 761 votes (3.5%), White Russians 370 votes (1.7%), Landowners 220 votes (1%) and Folkspartei 114 votes (0.5%). Per the Menshevik newspaper Vpered the Zionists got 6,173 votes in Gomel town, the Kadets 4,051 votes, the Mensheviks and Bund 3,448 votes, the Bolsheviks 2,139 votes, the SRs 1,912 votes, the Poles 1,620 votes and the Jewish Socialists 1,539 votes.
Results
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References
- И. С. Малчевский (1930). Всероссийское учредительное собрание. Гос изд-во. pp. 140–142.
- Б. Ф Додонов; Е. Д Гринько; О. В.. Лавинская (2004). Журналы заседаний Временного правительства: Сентябрь-октябрь 1917 года. РОССПЭН. pp. 206–208.
- Татьяна Евгеньевна Новицкая (1991). Учредительное собрание: Россия 1918 : стенограмма и другие документы. Недра. p. 13.
- Oliver Henry Radkey (1989). Russia goes to the polls: the election to the all-Russian Constituent Assembly, 1917. Cornell University Press. p. 34. ISBN 978-0-8014-2360-4.
- Oliver Henry Radkey (1989). Russia goes to the polls: the election to the all-Russian Constituent Assembly, 1917. Cornell University Press. pp. 161–163. ISBN 978-0-8014-2360-4.
- ^ Л. М Спирин (1987). Россия 1917 год: из истории борьбы политических партий. Мысль. pp. 273–328.
- , in Vpered, November 17 (O.S.), 1917. p. 3
- The votes of the Folkspartei list might have been included in the total of the Jewish National Electoral Committee list above
- Oliver Henry Radkey (1989). Russia goes to the polls: the election to the all-Russian Constituent Assembly, 1917. Cornell University Press. pp. 148–160. ISBN 978-0-8014-2360-4.
- Лев Григорьевич Протасов (2008). Люди Учредительного собрания: портрет в интерьере эпохи. РОССПЭН. ISBN 978-5-8243-0972-0.
Electoral Districts of the 1917 Russian Constituent Assembly election | ||
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Northern/Northwestern | ||
Baltic/White Russian | ||
Central Industrial | ||
Central Black Earth | ||
Volga | ||
Kama-Ural | ||
Ukraine | ||
Southern-Black Sea/Southeastern | ||
Caucasus | ||
Turkestan | ||
Siberia | ||
Military districts |