Syktyvkar constituency

Last updated
Syktyvkar single-member constituency
Flag of Russia.svg
State Duma
constituency
Gosduma OIK 018.png
Deputy
Federal Subject Komi Republic
Districts Inta, Izhemsky, Knyazhpogostsky, Kortkerossky, Koygorodsky, Pechora, Priluzsky, Sosnogorsk, Syktyvdinsky, Syktyvkar, Sysolsky, Troitsko-Pechorsky, Udorsky, Ukhta, Usinsk, Ust-Kulomsky, Ust-Tsilemsky, Ust-Vymsky, Vorkuta, Vuktyl [1]
Voters642,561 (2021) [2]

The Syktyvkar Constituency (No.18 [lower-alpha 1] ) is a Russian legislative constituency in the Komi Republic. The constituency is the only one in Komi Republic, and occupies the whole of its territory. However, in 1993-1995 Komi had two constituencies but lost one of them due to population decline.

Contents

Members elected

ElectionMemberParty
1993 Valery Maksimov [lower-alpha 2] Independent
Nikolay Gen [lower-alpha 3] Independent
1995 Rita Chistokhodova Independent
1999 Valery Markov Independent
2003 Yury Spiridonov Independent
2007 Proportional representation - no election by constituency
2011
2016 Ivan Medvedev United Russia
2021 Oleg Mikhailov Communist Party

Election results

1993

Summary of the 12 December 1993 Russian legislative election in the Pechora constituency
CandidatePartyVotes%
Valery Maksimov Independent 54,70132.01%
Valery Nesterov Independent -31.22%
Total170,865100%
Source: [3]
Summary of the 12 December 1993 Russian legislative election in the Syktyvkar constituency
CandidatePartyVotes%
Nikolay Gen Independent 45,12421.22%
Yekaterina Popova Women of Russia -20.79%
Total212,653100%
Source: [4]

1995

Summary of the 17 December 1995 Russian legislative election in the Syktyvkar constituency
CandidatePartyVotes%
Rita Chistokhodova Independent 109,40824.57%
Gennady Rassokhin Our Home – Russia 97,48721.89%
Mikhail Gluzman Forward, Russia! 53,84612.09%
Vera Skorobogatova Ivan Rybkin Bloc 40,7189.14%
Sergey Borisov Independent 38,5958.67%
Yevgeny Babusenko Independent 37,1028.33%
Andrey Titarenko Beer Lovers Party 8,4111.89%
Vitaly Mikulinsky Party of Economic Freedom 4,1510.93%
against all47,51110.67%
Total445,307100%
Source: [5]

1999

Summary of the 19 December 1999 Russian legislative election in the Syktyvkar constituency
CandidatePartyVotes%
Valery Markov Independent 116,24325.38%
Ivan Mokhnachuk Independent 57,95312.66%
Valentina Kotelnikova Women of Russia 55,85912.20%
Nikolay Moiseev Yabloko 54,19111.83%
Aleksandr Amonariev Communist Party 51,49411.24%
Vladimir Lushnikov Independent 28,9206.32%
Mikhail Zhilin Independent 15,3933.36%
Valery Prokhorov Independent 9,5442.08%
against all59,86613.07%
Total457,929100%
Source: [6]

2003

Summary of the 7 December 2003 Russian legislative election in the Syktyvkar constituency
CandidatePartyVotes%
Yury Spiridonov Independent 108,83226.86%
Vikenty Kozlov Independent 108,42126.76%
Leonid Musinov Communist Party 30,4197.51%
Aleksandra Bushueva Union of Right Forces 28,1126.94%
Mikhail Avdeev Independent 27,2626.73%
Yevgeny Neznanov Liberal Democratic Party 11,5702.86%
Pavel SobotyukCreation4,2441.05%
against all77,75619.19%
Total405,527100%
Source: [7]

2016

Summary of the 18 September 2016 Russian legislative election in the Syktyvkar constituency
CandidatePartyVotes%
Ivan Medvedev United Russia 103,29636.91%
Tatyana Saladina A Just Russia 49,49617.69%
Ivan Filipchenko Liberal Democratic Party 43,91415.69%
Oleg Mikhailov Communist Party 36,46313.03%
Leonid Litvak Communists of Russia 26,8209.58%
Total279,834100%
Source: [8]

2021

Summary of the 17-19 September 2021 Russian legislative election in the Syktyvkar constituency
CandidatePartyVotes%
Oleg Mikhailov Communist Party 81,40732.36%
Olga Savastyanova United Russia 67,53126.84%
Tatyana Saladina A Just Russia — For Truth 23,2579.24%
Andrey Nikitin Liberal Democratic Party 21,1868.42%
Viktor Filipchuk New People 19,0607.58%
Ivan Ruban Communists of Russia 16,9266.73%
Viktor Betekhtin Green Alternative 9,1053.62%
Total251,579100%
Source: [9]

Notes

  1. No.17 in 1995-2003
  2. Pechora constituency
  3. Syktyvkar constituency

Sources

Related Research Articles

Adygea constituency Russian legislative constituency

The Adygea Constituency is a Russian legislative constituency in the Adygea Republic. The constituency is the only one in Adygea, and occupies the whole of its territory.

Chukotka constituency Russian legislative constituency

The Chukotka constituency is a Russian legislative constituency in the Chukotka Autonomous Okrug. The constituency is the only one in Chukotka, and occupies the whole of its territory. It is also the smallest single-member constituency of the State Duma by population.

Yakutsk constituency Russian legislative constituency

The Yakutsk Constituency (No.24) is a Russian legislative constituency in the Sakha Republic (Yakutia). The constituency is the only one in Sakha Republic, and occupies the whole of its territory. Yakutsk Constituency is also the largest single-mandate territorial constituency in the world.

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.

Komsomolsk-na-Amure constituency Russian legislative constituency

The Komsomolsk-na-Amure Constituency (No.70) is a Russian legislative constituency in the Khabarovsk Krai. In 1993-2007 the constituency was included most of upstate Khabarovsk Krai and the city of Komsomolsk-on-Amur. However, the Komsomolsk-na-Amure constituency was gerrymandered in 2016, and now consists of not just northern Khabarovsk Krai and Komsomolsk-na-Amure, but also of eastern Khabarovsk and its suburbs.

Karelia constituency Russian legislative constituency

The Karelia Constituency (No.17) is a Russian legislative constituency in the Republic of Karelia. The constituency is the only one in Karelia, and occupies the whole of its territory.

Preobrazhensky constituency Russian legislative constituency

The Preobrazhensky Constituency (No.205) is a Russian legislative constituency in Moscow. It is based in Eastern Moscow.

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.

Mari El constituency Russian legislative constituency

The Mari El constituency (No.22) is a Russian legislative constituency covering the entirety of Mari El.

Kurgan constituency

The Kurgan constituency (No.108) is a Russian legislative constituency covering the entirety of Kurgan Oblast. In 1993-1995 Kurgan Oblast had two constituencies but lost one of them due to declining population.

Komi-Permyak constituency Russian legislative constituency

The Komi-Permyak constituency (No.216) was a Russian legislative constituency in the Komi-Permyak Autonomous Okrug in 1993–2007. In 2005 Komi-Permyak AO was merged with Perm Oblast, so currently the territory of former Komi-Permyak constituency is now a part of Kudymkar constituency of Perm Krai.

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.

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.

Perm constituency

The Perm constituency (No.58) is a Russian legislative constituency in Perm Krai. Until 2007 the constituency covered parts of Perm, its suburbs and rural parts up to the border with the Komi-Permyak Autonomous Okrug. After 2015 redistricting the constituency gained all of southwestern Perm Krai.

Kudymkar constituency

The Kudymkar constituency (No.61) is a Russian legislative constituency in Perm Krai. Previously the constituency covered northern Perm Oblast, however, in 2015 the constituency absorbed the territory of former Komi-Permyak constituency of the Komi-Permyak Autonomous Okrug, which was merged with Perm Oblast in 2005 to create Perm Krai.

Mineralnye Vody constituency

The Mineralnye Vody constituency (No.67) is a Russian legislative constituency in Stavropol Krai. The constituency covers the entirety of Caucasian Mineral Waters resort in southern Stavropol Krai.

Dmitrov constituency

The Dmitrov constituency (No.118) is a Russian legislative constituency in Moscow Oblast. The constituency previously covered most of northern Moscow Oblast. However, after 2015 redistricting it lost Klin to Krasnogorsk constituency and Sergiyev Posad to Sergiyev Posad constituency, in return Dmitrov constituency was stretched southwards to Khimki and Lobnya.

Orekhovo-Zuyevo constituency

The Orekhovo-Zuyevo constituency (No.123) is a Russian legislative constituency in Moscow Oblast. The constituency covers northeastern Moscow Oblast.

Lyubertsy constituency

The Lyubertsy constituency (No.121) is a Russian legislative constituency in Moscow Oblast. The constituency covers southwestern suburbs of Moscow.

References