1991 Ukrainian presidential election

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Presidential elections were held in Ukraine on 1 December 1991,[1] the first direct presidential elections in the country's history. Leonid Kravchuk, the Chairman of the Verkhovna Rada and de facto acting president, ran as an independent candidate and was elected for a five-year term with 62% of the vote.[2]

Quick facts Turnout, Nominee ...
1991 Ukrainian presidential election

1 December 1991
1994 
Turnout84.18%
 
Nominee Leonid Kravchuk Viacheslav Chornovil
Party Independent Rukh
Popular vote 19,643,481 7,420,727
Percentage 61.59% 23.27%

Results by oblast

President before election

Leonid Kravchuk (acting)
Independent

Elected President

Leonid Kravchuk
Independent

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An independence referendum held on the same day saw 92% of voters voting to secede from the Soviet Union.[2] All six presidential candidates supported independence and had campaigned for a "yes" vote in the referendum.

Results

More information Candidate, Party ...
CandidatePartyVotes%
Leonid KravchukIndependent19,643,48161.59
Viacheslav ChornovilPeople's Movement of Ukraine7,420,72723.27
Levko LukianenkoUkrainian Republican Party1,432,5564.49
Volodymyr HrynyovParty of Democratic Revival of Ukraine1,329,7584.17
Ihor YukhnovskyiIndependent554,7191.74
Leopold TaburyanskyiPeople's Party of Ukraine182,7130.57
Against all and invalid votes1,327,7884.16
Total31,891,742100.00
Total votes31,891,742
Registered voters/turnout37,885,55584.18
Source: Nohlen & Stöver[3]
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By region

More information Region, Winner ...
Region Winner Runner-up Third
Candidate % Candidate % Candidate %
CherkasyLeonid Kravchuk67.1Viacheslav Chornovil25.0Levko Lukianenko2.0
ChernihivLeonid Kravchuk74.2Viacheslav Chornovil12.3Levko Lukianenko6.7
ChernivtsiLeonid Kravchuk43.6Viacheslav Chornovil42.7Levko Lukianenko4.4
DnipropetrovskLeonid Kravchuk69.7Viacheslav Chornovil18.2Volodymyr Hrynyov3.2
DonetskLeonid Kravchuk71.5Volodymyr Hrynyov11.0Viacheslav Chornovil9.6
Ivano-FrankivskViacheslav Chornovil67.1Leonid Kravchuk13.7Levko Lukianenko11.8
KharkivLeonid Kravchuk60.9Viacheslav Chornovil19.7Volodymyr Hrynyov10.9
KhersonLeonid Kravchuk70.2Viacheslav Chornovil18.1Volodymyr Hrynyov3.3
KhmelnytskyiLeonid Kravchuk75.5Viacheslav Chornovil15.4Levko Lukianenko3.3
KirovohradLeonid Kravchuk74.8Viacheslav Chornovil15.6Levko Lukianenko3.5
KyivLeonid Kravchuk66.0Viacheslav Chornovil21.2Levko Lukianenko5.6
LuhanskLeonid Kravchuk76.2Viacheslav Chornovil9.9Volodymyr Hrynyov6.8
LvivViacheslav Chornovil75.9Leonid Kravchuk11.5Levko Lukianenko4.7
MykolaivLeonid Kravchuk72.3Viacheslav Chornovil15.1Volodymyr Hrynyov5.6
OdesaLeonid Kravchuk70.7Viacheslav Chornovil12.8Volodymyr Hrynyov8.4
PoltavaLeonid Kravchuk75.1Viacheslav Chornovil13.6Levko Lukianenko4.2
RivneLeonid Kravchuk53.1Viacheslav Chornovil25.7Levko Lukianenko13.4
SumyLeonid Kravchuk72.4Viacheslav Chornovil14.7Levko Lukianenko3.8
TernopilViacheslav Chornovil57.5Levko Lukianenko19.6Leonid Kravchuk16.8
TranscarpathiaLeonid Kravchuk58.0Viacheslav Chornovil27.6Levko Lukianenko5.0
VinnytsiaLeonid Kravchuk72.3Viacheslav Chornovil18.2Levko Lukianenko3.3
VolynLeonid Kravchuk51.7Viacheslav Chornovil31.4Levko Lukianenko8.9
ZaporizhzhiaLeonid Kravchuk74.7Viacheslav Chornovil13.0Volodymyr Hrynyov3.9
ZhytomyrLeonid Kravchuk77.6Viacheslav Chornovil14.0Levko Lukianenko3.3
Crimean ASSRLeonid Kravchuk56.6Volodymyr Hrynyov9.4Viacheslav Chornovil8.0
Kyiv CityLeonid Kravchuk56.1Viacheslav Chornovil26.7Levko Lukianenko6.4
SevastopolLeonid Kravchuk54.7Viacheslav Chornovil10.9Volodymyr Hrynyov8.4
TotalLeonid Kravchuk61.6Viacheslav Chornovil23.3Levko Lukianenko4.5
Source: Electoral Geography
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Analysis

Anti-communist opposition leader Vyacheslav Chornovil won the majority of the vote in three regions of historical Galicia. His worst results were in Russified Donetsk and Luhansk Oblasts, as well as in Crimea. According to Ukrainian publicist and political analyst Mykola Riabchuk, the result of the election was a clear sign that the majority of the population preferred to see the newly proclaimed independent state as a continuation of the old Soviet Ukraine, and tended to demonize the democratic opposition as "nationalists". The failure to make a clear break with the Soviet legacy resulted in Ukraine emerging as a "hybrid state", where old Soviet identities and institutions coexisted with modern national ones.[4]

References

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