Chairs of polling stations with low turnout and weak support for Putin more likely to be fired, Novaya Gazeta study finds

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In nearly half of Russia’s regions, chairs of precinct election commissions are more likely to be dismissed if they failed to deliver a high turnout and strong results for Putin. The findings come from a data-driven investigation by Novaya Gazeta.

The journalists analyzed the data compiled by electoral analyst Ivan Shukshin on changes in the composition of precinct election commissions that occurred between the 2018 and 2024 presidential elections. By law, the composition of these commissions must be renewed at least once every five years. However, in some cases, entirely new commissions were formed and new chairs appointed, while in others, the previous chairs remained in place.

Chairs of polling stations with low turnout and weak support for Putin more likely to be fired, Novaya Gazeta study finds

As Novaya Gazeta found, in 41 Russian regions precinct chairs were dismissed more often in districts with lower turnout and/or a lower percentage of votes for Vladimir Putin. The difference was statistically significant, and the reverse trend was observed in only two regions: Novosibirsk and Omsk. In both Moscow and St. Petersburg, commission chairs who delivered lower support for Putin tended to be replaced.

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Although the study focuses on the period 2018-2024, its author notes that similar trends likely held in past cycles, further distorting the official election results that have been produced in recent years: “It is quite possible that dismissals were common before. By the time of the 2024 elections, there were even fewer precincts in the country where the results were previously low, meaning it has become almost impossible to estimate the real percentage of support for the authorities.”

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