[3] 6 out of the 15 submitted lists in Transbaikal were rejected by the electoral authorities.
As of July 1917 Bolsheviks and Mensheviks were still holding joint meetings in Chita.
[5] The city was ruled by a People's Soviet, gathering SRs (both right and left-wing factions), Mensheviks and Bolsheviks.
[6] Only in the immediate run-up to the October Revolution was an All-Siberian Executive Bureau of the Bolshevik Party formed and the Siberian Bolsheviks began to conform with the party line.
[5] [7][8][9] [10] Rupen (1964) lists largely similar results as Radkey, but with different totals for the Union of Transbaikal Old Believers (176 votes) and instead of the Popular Socialists he mentions a "Barguzin Branch, RSDRP" with 1,248 votes.