Novgorod constituency

Last updated
Novgorod single-member constituency
Flag of Russia.svg
State Duma
constituency
Gosduma OIK 134.png
Deputy
Federal Subject Novgorod Oblast
Districts Batetsky, Borovichi, Borovichsky, Chudovsky, Demyansky, Kholmsky, Khvoyninsky, Krestetsky, Lyubytinsky, Malovishersky, Maryovsky, Moshenskoy, Novgorodsky, Okulovsky, Parfinsky, Pestovsky, Poddorsky, Shimsky, Soletsky, Staraya Russa, Starorussky, Valdaysky, Veliky Novgorod, Volotovsky [1]
Voters482,440 (2021) [2]

The Novgorod Constituency (No.134 [lower-alpha 1] ) is a Russian legislative constituency covering the entirety of Novgorod Oblast.

Contents

Members elected

ElectionMemberParty
1993 Oleg Ochin Party of Russian Unity and Accord
1995 Yevgeny Zelenin Independent
1999
2003 Aleksandr Filippov [lower-alpha 2] Independent
2007 Proportional representation - no election by constituency
2011
2016 Aleksandr Korovnikov [lower-alpha 3] United Russia
2019 Yury Bobryshev United Russia
2021 Artyom Kiryanov United Russia

Election results

1993

Summary of the 12 December 1993 Russian legislative election in the Novgorod constituency
CandidatePartyVotes%
Oleg Ochin Party of Russian Unity and Accord 96,34329.41%
Leonid Dyakonov Independent -22.80%
Total327,620100%
Source: [3]

1995

Summary of the 17 December 1995 Russian legislative election in the Novgorod constituency
CandidatePartyVotes%
Yevgeny Zelenov Independent 99,33026.44%
Nikolay Bindyukov Communist Party 52,46413.96%
Anatoly Kuznetsov Independent 50,73013.50%
Natalya Malakhatkina Women of Russia 39,84310.61%
Aleksandr Terentyev Party of Russian Unity and Accord 39,13710.42%
Vladimir Kondratyev Liberal Democratic Party 37,2869.92%
against all42,03211.19%
Total375,690100%
Source: [4]

1999

Summary of the 19 December 1999 Russian legislative election in the Novgorod constituency
CandidatePartyVotes%
Yevgeny Zelenov (incumbent) Independent 115,45432.43%
Gennady Burbulis Independent 88,41124.83%
Nikolay Bindyukov Communist Party 48,47813.62%
Aleksandr Kostyukhin Yabloko 21,6606.08%
Vladimir Ulyanov Union of Right Forces 19,0585.35%
Nadezhda Lisitsyna Andrey Nikolayev and Svyatoslav Fyodorov Bloc11,7313.30%
Gennady Khrolenko Independent 6,6841.88%
Viktor Berkunov Independent 6,2871.77%
Viktor Kukushkin Independent 3,8191.07%
Gennady Ignatyev Independent 3,5711.00%
Vyacheslav Borovkov Spiritual Heritage 1,5370.43%
against all24,5606.90%
Total355,999100%
Source: [5]

2003

Summary of the 7 December 2003 Russian legislative election in the Novgorod constituency
CandidatePartyVotes%
Aleksandr Filippov Independent 98,27635.43%
Yevgeny Zelenov (incumbent) United Russia 69,25924.97%
Valery Gaydym Communist Party 40,80114.71%
Nikolay Tikhomirov Party of Russia's Rebirth-Russian Party of Life 14,8255.34%
Vladimir Dugenets Independent 8,6733.13%
Tatyana Ivanova Liberal Democratic Party 8,4993.06%
Nikolay Velichansky Yabloko 6,6312.39%
Irina Lebedeva Union of Right Forces 5,7242.06%
Aleksandr KhudyakovUnited Russian Party Rus'1,1190.40%
Oleg NikitinGreat Russia–Eurasian Union7670.28%
against all20,0607.23%
Total277,528100%
Source: [6]

2016

Summary of the 18 September 2016 Russian legislative election in the Novgorod constituency
CandidatePartyVotes%
Aleksandr Korovnikov United Russia 75,28437.33%
Aleksey Afanasyev A Just Russia 33,06716.39%
Sergey Boyarov Liberal Democratic Party 23,53111.67%
Andrey Shustrov Communist Party 22,49511.15%
Yevgeny Bogdanov Party of Growth 12,6246.26%
Vyacheslav Ivanov Communists of Russia 12,5576.23%
Konstantin Khivrich Yabloko 7,2123.58%
Sergey Dobrovolsky People's Freedom Party 4,0312.00%
Nikolay Stolyarov Civic Platform 2,1781.08%
Total201,669100%
Source: [7]

2019

Summary of the 8 September 2019 by-election in the Novgorod constituency
CandidatePartyVotes%
Yury Bobryshev United Russia 40,29335.39%
Nina Ostanina Communist Party 23,15420.33%
Dmitry Ignatov A Just Russia 14,74512.95%
Anna Cherepanova Yabloko 9,1538.04%
Aleksey Chursinov Liberal Democratic Party 7,3666.47%
Olga Yefimova Communist Party of Social Justice 6,1445.40%
Aleksandr Grishin Party of Pensioners 3,6213.18%
Dmitry Perevyazkin Communists of Russia 2,4832.18%
Dmitry Tarasov Party of Growth 2,1311.87%
Total113,865100%
Source: [8]

2021

Summary of the 17-19 September 2021 Russian legislative election in the Novgorod constituency
CandidatePartyVotes%
Artyom Kiryanov United Russia 53,24327.18%
Aleksey Afanasyev A Just Russia — For Truth 35,99718.38%
Nikita Makarevich Communist Party 30,37615.51%
Aleksey Chursinov Liberal Democratic Party 14,3957.35%
Ilya Prikhodko New People 12,8956.58%
Nikolay Zakharov Party of Pensioners 12,6766.47%
Anna Cherepanova Yabloko 11,4625.85%
Dmitry Perevyazkin Communists of Russia 8,8234.50%
Yelena Maksimova The Greens 6,7093.43%
Total195,880100%
Source: [9]

Notes

  1. No.123 in 1993-2007
  2. appointed as Deputy Governor of Novgorod Oblast in September 2007
  3. died in August 2018

Related Research Articles

Nizhny Novgorod constituency

The Nizhny Novgorod Constituency is a Russian legislative constituency in Nizhny Novgorod Oblast.

Sakhalin constituency Russian legislative constituency

The Sakhalin Constituency (No.167) is a Russian legislative constituency in the Sakhalin Oblast. The constituency is the only one in Sakhalin Oblast, and occupies the whole of its territory. It is also the only Russian constituency situated exclusively on islands.

Samara constituency Russian legislative constituency

Samara constituency is a Russian legislative constituency in Samara Oblast. In its current configuration the constituency covers parts of Samara, Novokuybyshevsk and south-eastern Samara Oblast. Until 2007 the constituency was based entirely in metropolitan Samara.

Amur constituency Russian legislative constituency

The Amur Constituency (No.71) is a Russian legislative constituency in Amur Oblast. The constituency is the only one in Amur Oblast, and occupies the whole of its territory.

Kaliningrad constituency Russian legislative constituency

The Kaliningrad Constituency (No.97) is a Russian legislative constituency in Kaliningrad Oblast. Until 2007 Kaliningrad Oblast had a single constituency but its received a second one in 2016 redistricting. Since 2016 Kaliningrad constituency covers parts of Kaliningrad and northern Kaliningrad Oblast.

Serov constituency

The Serov Constituency (No.174) is a Russian legislative constituency in Sverdlovsk Oblast. The constituency covers northern Sverdlovsk Oblast.

Prioksky constituency

The Prioksky constituency is a Russian legislative constituency in Nizhny Novgorod Oblast. Until 2007 it covered southwestern Nizhny Novgorod Oblast, including Arzamas, Sarov and Vyksa. In 2016 most of former Arzamassky constituency was placed into Prioksky constituency, which was stretched to the Prioksky District of Nizhny Novgorod, however, the constituency lost its western part.

Kanavinsky constituency

The Kanavinsky constituency (No.132) is a Russian legislative constituency in Nizhny Novgorod Oblast. Until 2007 the constituency covered Kanavinsky, Moskovsky, Nizhegorodsky and Sormovsky City Districts of Nizhny Novgorod. In 2016 Kanavinsky constituency was stretched to the west to take parts of the dismantled Dzerzhinsk constituency.

Bor constituency

The Bor constituency (No.133) is a Russian legislative constituency in Nizhny Novgorod Oblast. It covers northern Nizhny Novgorod Oblast.

The Dzerzhinsk constituency (No.119) was a Russian legislative constituency in the Nizhny Novgorod Oblast in 1993–2007. The constituency covered western Nizhny Novgorod Oblast, including Dzerzhinsk and Pavlovo. In 2016 Nizhny Novgorod Oblast lost one of its constituencies and Dzerzhinsk constituency was partitioned between Avtozavodsky and Kanavinsky constituencies.

Kirovo-Chepetsk constituency

The Kirov-Chepetsk constituency (No.106) is a Russian legislative constituency in Kirov Oblast. The constituency covers parts of Kirov and southern Kirov Oblast.

Kotlas constituency

The Kotlas constituency (No.73) is a Russian legislative constituency in Arkhangelsk Oblast. In 1993-2007 the constituency covered upstate southern Arkhangelsk Oblast, however, in 2016 the constituency was changed: it took parts of Arkhangelsk and traded several districts in western Arkhangelsk Oblast with Arkhangelsk constituency for some territories in the north.

Tula constituency

The Tula constituency (No.183) is a Russian legislative constituency in Tula Oblast. Until 2007 the constituency was based entirely in metropolitan Tula. In 2016 Tula Oblast lost one of its three constituencies, which resulted in Tula constituency taking nearly all of former Shchyokino constituency while shedding half of Tula to Novomoskovsk constituency.

Southern constituency (Dagestan)

The Southern constituency (No.12) is a Russian legislative constituency covering the southwestern areas of Dagestan. Until 2003 the constituency covered the entirety of Southern Dagestan, however, due to population growth in the region Buynaksk constituency lost its Caspian Sea coast part to newly-established Derbent constituency.

Orenburg constituency

The Orenburg constituency (No.142) is a Russian legislative constituency in Orenburg Oblast. Until 2007 the constituency covered the entirety of Orenburg and central Orenburg Oblast, however, since 2016 Orenburg constituency covers only half of Orenburg and southwestern Orenburg Oblast.

Orsk constituency

The Orsk constituency (No.144) is a Russian legislative constituency in Orenburg Oblast. The constituency covers eastern Orenburg Oblast.

Iskitim constituency

The Iskitim constituency (No.137) is a Russian legislative constituency in Novosibirsk Oblast. Until 2007, the constituency covered suburban and rural territories around Novosibirsk in eastern Novosibirsk Oblast. However, in 2015 the constituency was heavily gerrymandered: it currently takes parts of Novosibirsk itself and stretches alongside oblast's southern border as far as Bagan in the west.

Kungur constituency

The Kungur constituency (No.60) is a Russian legislative constituency in Perm Krai. The constituency previously covered the entirety of southern Perm Oblast but in 2015 it gained parts of Perm and was reconfigured to southeastern Perm Krai.

Volzhsky constituency

The Volzhsky constituency (No.84) is a Russian legislative constituency in Volgograd Oblast. Until 2007 the constituency covered rural districts in northeastern Volgograd Oblast as well as the city of Volzhsky, however, after 2015 redistricting the constituency was extended southwards to urban Volgograd.

Sverdlovsk constituency

The Sverdlovsk constituency (No.168) is a Russian legislative constituency in Sverdlovsk Oblast. Until 2007 the constituency covered western half of Yekaterinburg, however, after 2015 redistricting the constituency was expanded to Yekaterinburg satellite cities of Verkhnyaya Pyshma and Sredneuralsk.

References

  1. ФЕДЕРАЛЬНЫЙ ЗАКОН Об утверждении схемы одномандатных избирательных округов для проведения выборов депутатов Государственной Думы Федерального Собрания Российской Федерации
  2. "Сведения о проводящихся выборах и референдумах". .novgorod.vybory.izbirkom.ru. Retrieved 23 October 2021.
  3. Результаты выборов по одномандатному избирательному округу, 1993
  4. Результаты выборов по одномандатному избирательному округу, 1995
  5. Результаты выборов по одномандатному избирательному округу, 1999
  6. Результаты выборов по одномандатному избирательному округу, 2003
  7. Результаты выборов по одномандатному избирательному округу, 2016
  8. Результаты дополнительных выборов по одномандатному избирательному округу, 2019
  9. Результаты выборов по одномандатному избирательному округу, 2021