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2025 Transnistrian parliamentary election

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2025 Transnistrian parliamentary election

← 2020
30 November 2025 (2025-11-30)
2030 →

All 33 seats in the Supreme Council
17 seats needed for a majority
Registered394,000
Turnout26.01% (Decrease 2.05 pp)
  First party
 
Leader Galina Antyufeyeva
Party Obnovlenie
Last election 29 seats
Seats won 33
Seat change Increase 4

Speaker before election

Alexander Korshunov
Obnovlenie

Elected Speaker

Tatyana Zalevskaya
Obnovlenie

Parliamentary elections were held in Moldova's Russian-backed unrecognized breakaway region of Transnistria on 30 November 2025 to fill all 33 seats in the Supreme Council. Legislation passed in July 2024 set the date and electoral framework.[1]

Background

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Since 2005 Obnovlenie, led by Galina Antyufeeva (its Chairperson and Deputy Speaker), has dominated the Supreme Council. In the 2020 election, Obnovlenie secured 29 seats with independents taking the remaining 4 seats.

Election

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Early voting for the election began on 24 November. Those who could not go to the polling stations on 30 November for a justified reason were allowed to vote early.[2]

Moldova's official position on the election was that it contradicted the Constitution of Moldova and the country's legislation and that it had no legal consequences for the region.[3]

Parties and candidates

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Party Leader Seats before election Seats needed for majority
Obnovlenie Galina Antyufeeva 29 0
Independent N/A 4 13

45 candidates ran for a seat in the Supreme Council. In 21 electoral districts, there was only one candidate; since there was no voter turnout threshold in Transnistria, a single vote would be enough for them to win. Nevertheless, Transnistrian elections feature an "against all" option. On the other hand, in 12 electoral districts, there were two candidates.[2]

Minor parties remained weak or inactive in this electoral round.

Conduct

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No independent Western election observers were present, and media and civil society continued to operate under constraints. Freedom House and other reports classified Transnistria as not meeting democratic standards, highlighting limited pluralism and candidate access.[4]

Results

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The official turnout was 26.01%, a record low, with 102,600 voters out of a total 394,000 people registered to vote. As of 2 December, only a preliminary list of the 33 elected parliament members had been published, with all belonging to the party Obnovlenie, which was under the control of oligarch Viktor Gushan's Sheriff company.[3]

According to Ukraine's Foreign Intelligence Service (SZRU), the election demonstrated that Transnistria's "rupture with Moscow is deepening". In a report, the SZRU stated that the extremely low turnout, the lack of competition in the election and Obnovlenie's absolute control over the Supreme Council indicated a growing gap between "the occupation administration and the population", predicting that social discontent in Transnistria would intensify amid economic problems, pressure from tariffs and reduced Russian support.[3]

By constituency

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Constituency Candidate Votes %
1 – Solnechny Aleksandr Viktorovich Korshunov 1,982 88.29
Mikhail Vasilevich Babiy 146 6.50
Against all 117 5.21
2 – Memorialny Yuriy Yurevich Kucherenko 2,275 92.59
Against all 182 7.41
3 – Borisovsky Oleg Anatolevich Petrik 2,068 91.59
Sergey Mikhaylovich Zakharov 93 4.12
Against all 97 4.30
4 – Leninsky Yuriy Iosifovich Kara 1,894 86.05
Tatyana Ivanovna Rybachenko 159 7.22
Against all 148 6.72
5 – Tsentralny Sergey Andreevich Pisarenko 1,259 62.70
Vladimir Vladimirovich Kornievskiy 532 26.49
Against all 217 10.81
6 – Pervomaisky Aleksandr Ivanovich Ilin 1,662 81.75
Against all 371 18.25
7 – Tsentralny Oleg Sergeevich Leontev 2,078 81.46
Evgeniya Nikolaevna Bekher 283 11.09
Against all 190 7.45
8 – Yuzhny Yuriy Fedorovich Evtodiev 2,784 85.16
Against all 485 14.84
9 – Severny Dmitriy Vasilevich Ogirchuk 3,671 97.66
Against all 88 2.34
10 – Severny Dmitriy Olegovich Durnopyan 3,249 94.06
Against all 205 5.94
11 – Tsentralny Boris Ilich German 2,600 82.30
Yana Sergeevna Kovalchuk 241 7.63
Against all 318 10.07
12 – Kamensky Valeriy Grigorevich Babchinetskiy 1,566 58.48
Sergey Fedorovich Groza 860 32.11
Against all 252 9.41
13 – Khrustovskoy Oleg Ivanovich Narichuk 3,475 89.19
Against all 421 10.81
14 – Metallurgicheskiy Vadim Viktorovich Kravchuk 2,139 88.98
Against all 265 11.02
15 – Kirovsky Andrey Mikhaylovich Safonov 1,218 59.94
Irina Petrovna Svetlakova 271 13.34
Against all 543 26.72
16 – Michurinsky Yakov Efimovich Galak 1,860 87.94
Against all 255 12.06
17 – Bolshemolokishsky Vasiliy Anatolevich Kunitskiy 3,453 91.20
Against all 333 8.80
18 – Popenksky Valentin Nikolaevich Matveychuk 2,778 91.14
Against all 270 8.86
19 – Krasnyansky Tatyana Dmitrievna Zalevskaya 2,643 90.98
Against all 262 9.02
20 – Pervomaisky Sergey Ivanovich Samoylov 2,237 78.91
Against all 598 21.09
21 – Slobodzeysky Pavel Viktorovich Shinkaryuk 2,815 90.40
Against all 299 9.60
22 – Sukleysky Stepan Ivanovich Stepanov 2,024 75.49
Vladimir Valerevich Shvets 477 17.79
Against all 180 6.71
23 – Kitskansky Igor Teodorovich Yarych 2,439 80.63
Against all 586 19.37
24 – Parkansky Vladimir Nikolaevich Timofeev 2,348 76.86
Larisa Viktorovna Talmazan 322 10.54
Against all 385 12.60
25 – Zapadny Galina Mikhaylovna Antyufeeva 2,558 82.25
Shtefan Borisovich Muntyan 329 10.58
Against all 223 7.17
26 – Borodinsky Vitaliy Ivanovich Kalin 1,145 47.95
Natalya Aleksandrovna Golub 901 37.73
Against all 342 14.32
27 – Partizansky Nataliya Kirillovna Durbala 2,649 91.00
Against all 262 9.00
28 – Tsentralny Elena Ilinichna Soboleva 2,532 92.61
Against all 202 7.39
29 – Odessky Igor Semyonovich Buga 1,548 65.98
Against all 798 34.02
30 – Kirovsky Grigoriy Ivanovich Dyachenko 1,945 80.24
Against all 479 19.76
31 – Krasnodonsky Vadim Fyodorovich Levitskiy 2,511 94.19
Against all 155 5.81
32 – Komsomolsky Andrey Viktorovich Mezhinskiy 2,461 92.03
Against all 213 7.97
33 – Vostochny Natalya Yurevna Sitkina 1,663 88.18
Against all 223 11.82
Source: CIKPMR

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Transdniestria sets date of next parliamentary elections". Infotag. 4 July 2024.
  2. ^ a b Vyprickikh, Anna (24 November 2025). "В Приднестровье началось досрочное голосование на выборах в местный парламент". NewsMaker (in Russian).
  3. ^ a b c Zinenko, Yuriy (2 December 2025). "У Придністров'ї посилюється розрив між окупаційною адміністрацією та населенням – українська розвідка". Gordon (in Ukrainian).
  4. ^ "Moldova's pro-Russian separatists extend state of emergency". Reuters. 10 January 2025.