Priamur electoral district (Russian Constituent Assembly election, 1917)

The Priamur electoral district (Russian: Приамурский избирательный округ) was a constituency created for the 1917 Russian Constituent Assembly election. The Priamur electoral district consisted of the Amur Oblast, the Maritime Province and the Sakhalin Oblast.[3][4][5] However, local leaders had preferred to have three separate constituencies.[5] The election was held on time in the constituency.[6]

Priamur
Former Civilian Constituency
for the All-Russian Constituent Assembly
Former constituency
Created1917
Abolished1918
Number of members7
Number of Uyezd Electoral Commissions8
Number of Urban Electoral Commissions4
Number of Parishes70
Sources:[1][2]

Parties in the fray

In the wake of the 1917 February Revolution, the Russian Far East was teeming with political activities. New political organizations, across the ideological spectrum, popped up in various locations.[7]

Socialist-Revolutionaries

The branches of the Socialist-Revolutionary Party (SR) were established in Amur and Maritime in March–April 1917, in Vladivostok (Committee Chairman V.K. Vykhristov), Khabarovsk (Chairman M.A. Timofeev) and Blagoveshchensk (Chairman N.G. Kozhevnikov).[7] However, the SRs suffered a four-way split in the constituency, with the branches in Amur and Maritime contesting separately. Ahead of the election the Maritime Province Peasants Soviets threw out the SR party representatives and fielded a separate list (in Amur, however, the peasants soviets stayed loyal to the SR party).[4] Nevertheless these three different lists had formed an electoral bloc.[8] There was also a leftist SR dissident list, distinctively urban.[4]

Social Democrats

Social Democratic organizations took shape around March 1917. The first formal Social Democratic meeting occurred in Vladivostok on March 10, 1917, with twenty attendees. Five days later, a second meeting was held with a hundred party members in attendance and electing a provisional committee chaired by A. Antonov. On March 12, 1917 the first Menshevik Social Democratic party meeting was held in Blagoveshchensk, which elected S. G. Bukharevich as chair of the Party Branch Committee. Social Democratic organizations were established in Khabarovsk, Nikolsk-Ussuriysky, Suchan, Muraev-Amursky, Razdolnoye, Bozkarevo, Magdagachi and Gondatti.[7]

By July 1917, there were some 2,850 Social Democratic party members in the Russian Far East. In the fall of 1917, the number had increased to 4,700 (out of whom some 3,000 were Bolsheviks).[7]

Cossacks

The Ussuri Cossack Host held its congress March 11–13, 1917, which removed the incumbent ataman Lt. Gen. V. A. Tolmachev and placed Major-General E. B. Kruse as new chairman. The congress called for new local leaderships to be elected by general assemblies.[7] Likewise, the congress of the Amur Cossack Host (March 21-April 22) removed the incumbent ataman and other leaders. I. M. Gamov emerged as the new leader of the Amur Cossack Host. The Amur Cossack congress called for a democratic republic and Constituent Assembly.[7] The Amur Cossack congress was chaired by the Amur right-wing SR leader N. G. Kozhevnikov, and was attended by 46 delegates.[9]

Kadets

The Constitutional Democrats, the Kadets, established party branches in Vladivostok, Khabarovsk and Nikolsk-Ussuriysk and with a regional committee headed by I. A. Fichmann. In Amur Oblast, a pro-Kadet organization called the Union of Amur Republicans was established.[7]

Ukrainians

The constituency had no significant ethnic minority except Ukrainians.[6]

Results

District-wide

From the Maritime Province the results available to U.S. historian Oliver Henry Radkey, which forms the basis of the results table below, were seemingly complete. In areas north of the Amur river some problems in voting occurred, with 312 polling stations reporting and 77 didn't (another reference stated that no election had been held in some 50 polling stations).[6]

Amur-Maritime
Party Vote %
List 2 - Maritime Province Soviet of Peasants Deputies 56,718 27.08
List 7 - Amur Oblast Organization of Socialist-Revolutionaries 41,152 19.65
List 5 - Bolsheviks 40,850 19.50
List 3 - Amur and Ussuri Cossacks 22,612 10.80
List 9 - Kadets 17,233 8.23
List 4 - Mensheviks 15,458 7.38
List 1 - Maritime Province Socialist-Revolutionaries 6,513 3.11
List 8 - SRs of Vladivostok, Nikolayevsk-on-Amur
and Spassk (leftist Socialist-Revolutionaries)
5,805 2.77
List 6 - Amur Oblast Ukrainian Council 3,125 1.49
Total: 209,466

[10]

Deputies Elected
Mandrikov Maritime Peasants Soviet
Petrov Maritime Peasants Soviet
Sorokin Maritime Peasants Soviet
Vykhristov Maritime Peasants Soviet
Kozhevnikov Amur and Ussuri Cossacks
Neibut Bolshevik
Alekseevsky Amur SR

[11]

Khabarovsk

In Khabarovsk, 5,445 out of 12,727 eligible voters cast their votes; Kadets 1,639 votes (30.10%), Maritime Province SR 968 votes (17.78%), Maritime Peasants Soviet 712 votes (13.08%), Mensheviks 662 votes (12.16%), Bolsheviks 652 votes (11.97%), Cossacks 623 votes (11.44%), Ukrainian Bloc 85 votes (1.56%), Amur SR 24 votes (0.44%) and Left SR 18 votes (0.33%).[12]

Vladivostok

In Vladivostok town, Bolsheviks won a majority of votes (16,616 votes, 50.1%). The Kadets obtained 5,651 votes (17%), the leftist SRs 4,596 votes (13.8%), Maritime Peasants Soviet 4,398 votes (13.2%), Mensheviks 1,214 votes (3.7%), Cossacks 258 votes (0.8%), Ukrainians 195 votes (0.6%), Amur SRs 128 (0.4%) and Maritime SRs 123 votes (0.4%).[8]

Blagoveshchensk

In Blagoveshchensk the Kadets finished in first place (with some 2,800 votes), followed by the Mensheviks (2,300 votes), Bolsheviks (1,983 votes) and Amur SRs (1,267) votes.[12]

Nikolayevsk-on-Amur

In Nikolayevsk-on-Amur 1,529 votes were cast; Kadets 411 votes (26.88%), Maritime Province SRs 400 votes (26.16%), Mensheviks 311 votes (20.34%), Bolsheviks 287 votes (18.77%) and others 120 votes (7.85%).[12]

References

  1. И. С. Малчевский (1930). Всероссийское учредительное собрание. Гос изд-во. pp. 140–142.
  2. Б. Ф Додонов; Е. Д Гринько; О. В.. Лавинская (2004). Журналы заседаний Временного правительства: Сентябрь-октябрь 1917 года. РОССПЭН. pp. 206–208.
  3. Татьяна Евгеньевна Новицкая (1991). Учредительное собрание: Россия 1918 : стенограмма и другие документы. Недра. p. 13.
  4. Oliver Henry Radkey (1989). Russia goes to the polls: the election to the all-Russian Constituent Assembly, 1917. Cornell University Press. pp. 107–110. ISBN 978-0-8014-2360-4.
  5. И. А Сенченко (2006). Сахалин и Курилы: история освоения и развития. Моя Россия. p. 234.
  6. Oliver Henry Radkey (1989). Russia goes to the polls: the election to the all-Russian Constituent Assembly, 1917. Cornell University Press. pp. 108–109, 161. ISBN 978-0-8014-2360-4.
  7. Gallyamova, Ludmila Ivanova. 1917 год на Дальнем Востоке России: региональные особенности социально-политических трансформаций
  8. Л. М Спирин (1987). Россия 1917 год: из истории борьбы политических партий. Мысль. pp. 273–328.
  9. В. Н Абеленцев; Амурский областной краеведческий музей им. Г.С. Новикова-Даурского; Амурское областное общество краеведов (2003). Материалы региональной научно-практической конференции "Приамурье от первопроходцев до наших дней", посвященной 360-летию похода В.Д. Пояркова и 150-летию первого Муравьевского сплава по Амуру (люди, события, факты), 23-24 октября 2003 г. Амурский областной краеведческий музей. p. 148.
  10. 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.
  11. Лев Григорьевич Протасов (2008). Люди Учредительного собрания: портрет в интерьере эпохи. РОССПЭН. ISBN 978-5-8243-0972-0.
  12. Результаты выборов в Учр. Соб Archived 2018-10-14 at the Wayback Machine, in Известия Совета Рабочих и Солдатских Депутатов г. Никольск-Уссуршскаго, November 24, 1917, p. 4
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