Ryazan constituency

Last updated
Ryazan single-member constituency
Flag of Russia.svg
State Duma
constituency
Gosduma OIK 156.png
Deputy
Federal Subject Ryazan Oblast
Districts Chuchkovsky, Kadomsky, Kasimov, Kasimovsky, Klepikovsky, Pitelinsky, Putyatinsky, Ryazan (Moskovsky, Sovetsky), Ryazansky (Dubrovichskoye, Dyadkovskoye, Korablinskoye, Lgovskoye, Listvyanskoye, Murminskoye, Polyanskoye, Varskovskoye, Vyshgorodskoye, Zaboryevskoye, Zaokskoye), Sarayevsky, Sasovo, Sasovsky, Shatsky, Shilovsky, Spassky, Yermishinsky
Other territory Belarus (Minsk-1) [1]
Voters442,796 (2021) [2]

The Ryazan constituency (No.156 [lower-alpha 1] ) is a Russian legislative constituency in Ryazan Oblast. Until 2007 the constituency covered Ryazan and its surroundings in northwestern part of Ryazan Oblast. However, in 2016 Ryazan Oblast constituencies were gerrymandered with Ryazan constituency now covering only half of Ryazan and gaining large eastern rural portion of eliminated Shilovo constituency. Most of former territory of the Ryazan constituency was redistricted to nearby Skopin constituency.

Contents

Members elected

ElectionMemberParty
1993 Konstantin Laikam Civic Union
1995 Leonid Kanayev Communist Party
1999 Nadezhda Korneyeva Communist Party
2003 Nikolay Bulayev [lower-alpha 2] United Russia
2007 Proportional representation - no election by constituency
2011
2016 Andrey Krasov United Russia
2021

Election results

1993

Summary of the 12 December 1993 Russian legislative election in the Ryazan constituency
CandidatePartyVotes%
Konstantin Laikam Civic Union 56,00117.53%
Sergey Komarov Independent -10.90%
Total319,520100%
Source: [3]

1995

Summary of the 17 December 1995 Russian legislative election in the Ryazan constituency
CandidatePartyVotes%
Leonid Kanayev Communist Party 93,45326.55%
Mikhail Malakhov Independent 36,63110.41%
Yevgeny Stroyev Independent 26,1307.42%
Nina Aleshina Independent 25,7747.32%
Konstantin Laikam (incumbent) Stable Russia 19,0845.42%
Sergey Voblenko Our Home – Russia 16,8034.77%
Vyacheslav Kichenin Independent 14,9034.23%
Anatoly Kapustin Liberal Democratic Party 14,0543.99%
Sergey Kosourov Communists and Working Russia - for the Soviet Union 10,8293.08%
Igor Trushin Yabloko 10,2352.91%
Anatoly Grynin Congress of Russian Communities 9,7882.78%
Aleksandr Gavrilov Power to the People 9,6292.74%
Anatoly Alekseyev Independent 6,5511.86%
Gennady Telnykh Stanislav Govorukhin Bloc 5,5321.57%
Yevgeny Podkolzin For the Motherland! 5,0201.43%
Aleksandr Yudin Party of Workers' Self-Government 4,0461.15%
Aleksandr Nazarkin Independent 3,8511.09%
Vladislav LomizovRussian Lawyers' Association3,7811.07%
Mikhail TaraskinUnion of ZhKKh Workers2,9110.83%
Vyacheslav Tkachenko Independent 2,7350.78%
Aleksandr Belyakov Independent 4,7671.52%
Aleksandr AbramovichWorking Collectives and Greens for SSR1,4420.41%
Boris Gusev Independent 9100.26%
Boris Gereyev Federal Democratic Movement 8320.24%
against all21,5136.11%
Total351,946100%
Source: [4]

1999

Summary of the 19 December 1999 Russian legislative election in the Ryazan constituency
CandidatePartyVotes%
Nadezhda Korneyeva Communist Party 61,25819.27%
Mikhail Malakhov Union of Right Forces 42,55313.39%
Nikolay Bulayev Fatherland – All Russia 30,5129.60%
Mikhail Lipatov Movement in Support of the Army 25,2377.94%
Leonid Kanayev (incumbent) Independent 17,4765.50%
Vladimir Aksyonov Independent 15,8865.00%
Boris Khramov Yabloko 13,9904.40%
Valery Danilchenko Our Home – Russia 13,6034.28%
Alina Milekhina Independent 12,0903.80%
Nadezhda Kulikova Independent 11,7583.70%
Stanislav Terekhov Stalin Bloc – For the USSR 6,7772.13%
Sofya Petrova Independent 4,8681.53%
Cheslav Mlynnik Independent 3,5821.13%
Stanislav Karpov Peace, Labour, May 3,4581.09%
Sergey Yudin Independent 3,1961.01%
Yury Malistov Independent 2,9420.93%
against all42,79213.46%
Total317,840100%
Source: [5]

2003

Summary of the 7 December 2003 Russian legislative election in the Ryazan constituency
CandidatePartyVotes%
Nikolay Bulayev United Russia 78,93831.42%
Nadezhda Korneyeva (incumbent) Communist Party 40,03915.94%
Igor Trubitsyn Independent 25,88311.45%
Aleksandr Sherin Liberal Democratic Party 11,8544.72%
Sergey Tabolin Yabloko 10,7104.26%
Viktor Milekhin Independent 10,1844.05%
Boris Dmitriyev Union of Right Forces 5,3792.14%
Aleksey Mikhaylov Independent 5,0051.99%
Vladimir Viktorov Independent 4,5831.82%
Sergey Kprf Independent 4,3941.75%
Igor Potapov Great Russia – Eurasian Union 4,1071.63%
Aleksandr SidorovUnited Russian Party Rus'3,1811.27%
against all39,06415.55%
Total251,472100%
Source: [6]

2016

Summary of the 18 September 2016 Russian legislative election in the Ryazan constituency
CandidatePartyVotes%
Andrey Krasov United Russia 99,76849.09%
Galina Gnuskina Communist Party 29,84114.68%
Yury Kravchenko Liberal Democratic Party 25,74312.66%
Andrey Lyablin A Just Russia 12,7876.29%
Denis Desinov Communists of Russia 9,7034.77%
Maria Yepifanova Yabloko 7,0603.47%
Vladimir Rogov Rodina 5,4492.68%
Irina Kusova People's Freedom Party 4,7382.33%
Andrey Tumashev The Greens 2,3911.18%
Total203,267100%
Source: [7]

2021

Summary of the 17-19 September 2021 Russian legislative election in the Ryazan constituency
CandidatePartyVotes%
Andrey Krasov (incumbent) United Russia 81,02439.57%
Oleg Strukov Communist Party 28,22613.78%
Aleksandr Averin A Just Russia — For Truth 22,76711.12%
Dmitry Detinov New People 15,5947.62%
Andrey Lyubimov Yabloko 15,3417.49%
Maksim Mustafin Liberal Democratic Party 11,4085.57%
Sergey Perimbayev Communists of Russia 11,1855.46%
Pavel Voronin Party of Pensioners 10,8805.31%
Aleksandr Rzhanov Rodina 2,5091.23%
Total204,774100%
Source: [8]

Notes

  1. No.148 in 1993-1995, No.149 in 1995-2007
  2. appointed Chairman of the Federal Agency on Education in October 2007

Related Research Articles

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.

Engels constituency

The Engels single-member constituency is a Russian legislative constituency in the Saratov Oblast. The constituency covers southern and southeastern parts of Saratov Oblast and is anchored in the city of Engels.

Angarsk constituency Russian legislative constituency

The Angarsk Constituency (No.94) is a Russian legislative constituency in Irkutsk Oblast. It was previously located in south-central Irkutsk Oblast, anchoring in Angarsk, Cheremkhovo, Shelekhov and Usolye-Sibirskoye. In 2003 Irkutsk Oblast lost one of its constituencies, so Angarsk constituency absorbed most of former Tulun constituency, which pitted incumbents in both districts against each other. In its current configuration Angarsk constituency stretches from northern Irkutsk to parts of former Ust-Orda Buryat Autonomous Okrug, which had its own constituency in 1993-2007.

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.

Unecha constituency Russian legislative constituency

The Unecha Constituency (No.78) is a Russian legislative constituency in Bryansk Oblast. In 1993-2007 the constituency, named Pochep, included most of rural Bryansk Oblast west of Bryansk. In 2016 redistricting Pochepsky District was placed into Bryansk constituency and most of old Pochep constituency was relocated to northern Bryansk Oblast, gaining the name Unecha.

Serov constituency

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

Kursk constituency

The Kursk Constituency (No.109) is a Russian legislative constituency in the Kursk Oblast. In 1993-2007 the constituency covered Eastern Kursk Oblast, the cities of Kursk and Shchigry, but in 2016 Lgov constituency in Western Kursk Oblast was extended to Kursk and gained the name "Kursk constituency", while the territory of former Kursk constituency was placed into Seimsky constituency.

Tver constituency

The Tver Constituency (No.179) is a Russian legislative constituency in the Tver Oblast. In 1993-2007 the constituency covered Western Tver Oblast, including the city of Tver, but in 2016 Bezhetsk constituency in Eastern Tver Oblast was extended to Tver and gained the name "Tver constituency", while the territory of former Tver constituency was placed into Zavolzhsky constituency.

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.

Tambov constituency

The Tambov constituency (No.177) is a Russian legislative constituency in Tambov Oblast. Until 2007 the constituency covered the entirety of Tambov and eastern Tambov Oblast, including the cities of Kirsanov, Kotovsk and Rasskazovo. Since 2016 the constituency covered half of Tambov and northwestern part of the region, shedding most of its territory in the east to the new Rasskazovo constituency, while taking a large portion of former Michurinsk constituency.

Shilovo constituency Russian legislative constituency

The Shilovo constituency (No.150) was a Russian legislative constituency in Ryazan Oblast in 1993–2007. The constituency covered rural Ryazan Oblast to the south of Ryazan. Currently territory of the former Shilovo constituency is split between Ryazan and Skopin constituencies.

Obninsk constituency

The Obninsk constituency (No.99) is a Russian legislative constituency in Kaluga Oblast. Until 2007 the constituency covered western Kaluga Oblast. However, in 2016 the constituency changed significantly as it switched near all of its territory with Kaluga constituency, so currently Obninsk constituency is based in eastern Kaluga Oblast.

Kirov constituency

The Kirov constituency (No.105) is a Russian legislative constituency in Kirov Oblast. The constituency covers parts of Kirov and northern Kirov Oblast.

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.

Ulyanovsk constituency

The Ulyanovsk constituency (No.187) is a Russian legislative constituency in Ulyanovsk Oblast. In 1995-2007 the constituency covered the entirety of Ulyanovsk and its suburbs, however, in 2016 the constituency shedded some district of Ulyanovsk to rural Radishchevo constituency in exchange for eastern Ulyanovsk Oblast, including Dimitrovgrad.

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.

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.

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.

References