Zavodsky constituency

Last updated
Zavodsky single-member constituency
Flag of Russia.svg
State Duma
constituency
Gosduma OIK 103.png
Deputy
Federal Subject Kemerovo Oblast
Districts Belovo, Belovsky, Guryevsky, Kemerovo (Zavodsky), Kemerovsky (Beregovoye, Berezovskoye, Yagunovskoye, Yasnogorskoye, Zvezdnoye), Krasnobrodsky, Leninsk-Kuznetsky, Leninsk-Kuznetsky District, Polysayevo, Promyshlennovsky, Topkinsky, Yurginsky [1]
Voters474,963 (2021) [2]

The Zavodsky constituency (No.103 [lower-alpha 1] ) is a Russian legislative constituency in Kemerovo Oblast. Until 2007 the constituency covered most of upstate northern Kemerovo Oblast, however, in 2015 it was reconfigured to northeastern part of the region, including parts of Kemerovo.

Contents

Members elected

ElectionMemberParty
1993 Galina Parshentseva Independent
1995 Teymuraz Avaliani Communist Party
1999 Ivan Ivlev Unity
2003 Andrey Makarov United Russia
2007 Proportional representation - no election by constituency
2011
2016 Pavel Fedyayev United Russia
2021

Election results

1993

Summary of the 12 December 1993 Russian legislative election in the Anzhero-Sudzhensk constituency
CandidatePartyVotes%
Galina Parshentseva Independent 145,23951.09%
Total284,263100%
Source: [3]

1995

Summary of the 17 December 1995 Russian legislative election in the Leninsk-Kuznetsky constituency
CandidatePartyVotes%
Teymuraz Avaliani Communist Party 74,90220.48%
Igor Kovtun Independent 58,01615.86%
Vladimir Kudeshkin Independent 41,99811.48%
Gennady Dyudyayev Agrarian Party 41,31511.30%
Nina Barabash Our Home – Russia 32,4028.86%
Aleksey Dorovenko Liberal Democratic Party 24,0666.58%
Galina Parshentseva (incumbent) Women of Russia 18,5245.07%
Aleksandr Sergeyev Ivan Rybkin Bloc 16,1874.43%
Aleksandr Tsigelnikov Independent 11,8973.25%
Andrey Sidnev Independent 6,3541.74%
Vera Podbereznaya Forward, Russia! 3,8151.04%
Igor Goncharov Independent 2,7810.76%
against all27,5757.54%
Total365,707100%
Source: [4]

1999

Summary of the 19 December 1999 Russian legislative election in the Leninsk-Kuznetsky constituency
CandidatePartyVotes%
Ivan Ivlev Unity 197,38061.53%
Igor Kovtun Independent 33,38810.41%
Valentina Proskuryakova Fatherland – All Russia 22,7297.08%
Yury Babansky Movement in Support of the Army 13,3794.17%
Gennady Karmanov Independent 10,5083.28%
Yevgeny Artemov Liberal Democratic Party 10,1383.16%
Vladimir Arkhipov Our Home – Russia 2,8830.90%
against all26,3018.20%
Total320,811100%
Source: [5]

2003

Summary of the 7 December 2003 Russian legislative election in the Leninsk-Kuznetsky constituency
CandidatePartyVotes%
Andrey Makarov United Russia 239,46672.19%
Valentina Proskuryakova Agrarian Party 27,4658.28%
Artur Pykin Liberal Democratic Party 15,3584.63%
Vladimir KahstanovUnited Russian Party Rus'4,6211.39%
Ernest Pislyakov Independent 2,7500.83%
against all37,68711.36%
Total331,794100%
Source: [6]

2016

Summary of the 18 September 2016 Russian legislative election in the Zavodsky constituency
CandidatePartyVotes%
Pavel Fedyayev United Russia 342,16177.50%
Igor Ukraintsev Liberal Democratic Party 36,3788.24%
Yury Vitkovsky Communist Party 28,6256.48%
Yevgeny Mishenin A Just Russia 15,8203.58%
Irina Usoltseva Communists of Russia 9,6522.19%
Gleb Alshevich Yabloko 7,1331.62%
Total441,477100%
Source: [7]

2021

Summary of the 17-19 September 2021 Russian legislative election in the Zavodsky constituency
CandidatePartyVotes%
Pavel Fedyayev (incumbent) United Russia 264,35771.51%
Olesya Terzitskaya Communist Party 19,8115.36%
Nikolay Teltsov Liberal Democratic Party 15,9144.30%
Yevgeny Kostrov A Just Russia — For Truth 14,2473.85%
Galina Stratiyenko Communists of Russia 11,4833.11%
Eduard Kukushkin New People 9,7982.65%
Aleksandr Kalashnik Yabloko 8,1262.20%
Yevgeny Tsvetkov Party of Pensioners 7,9342.15%
Roman Shvets Rodina 5,7791.56%
Total369,702100%
Source: [8]

Notes

  1. Anzhero-Sudzhensk constituency No.89 in 1993-1995, Leninsk-Kuznetsky constituency No.89 in 1995-2003, Leninsk-Kuznetsky constituency No.90 in 2003-2007

Related Research Articles

Anna constituency

The Anna Constituency is a Russian legislative constituency in Voronezh Oblast. It covers North-Western Voronezh Oblast and the city of Anna.

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.

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.

Murmansk constituency

The Murmansk constituency (No.128) is a Russian legislative constituency covering the entirety of Murmansk Oblast. In 1993-2003 the constituency covered Murmansk, Severomorsk and their surroundings, while the rest of Murmansk Oblast were placed into Monchegorsk constituency. In 2003 Murmansk Oblast lost its second constituency which made Murmansk constituency the only one in the region.

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.

Tyumen constituency

The Tyumen constituency (No.185) is a Russian legislative constituency in Tyumen Oblast. The constituency covers parts of Tyumen as well as northern Tyumen Oblast. Until 2007 the constituency was more compact, covering the entirety of Tyumen and small portion of western Tyumen Oblast, however, in 2016 the constituency was pushed to the north, grabbing sparsely populated areas of former Ishim constituency; half of Tyumen was placed into new Zavodoukovsk constituency.

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.

Radishchevo constituency

The Radishchevo constituency (No.188) is a Russian legislative constituency in Ulyanovsk Oblast. In 1995-2007 the constituency covered upstate Ulyanovsk Oblast, however, in 2016 the constituency took parts of Ulyanovsk from Ulyanovsk constituency.

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.

Novomoskovsk constituency

The Novomoskovsk constituency (No.184) is a Russian legislative constituency in Tula Oblast. Until 2007 the constituency covered northern Tula Oblast, however, in 2016 it grabbed half of Tula from the Tula constituency.

Orsk constituency

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

Omsk constituency

The Omsk constituency (No.139) is a Russian legislative constituency in Omsk Oblast. Until 2007 the constituency covered parts of urban Omsk, its suburbs and rural southeastern Omsk Oblast. The configuration of the constituency stayed largely intact after 2015 redistricting but Omsk constituency switched Kuybyshevsky and Leninsky City Districts of Omsk for Tsentralny City District from now-eliminated Central constituency.

Lyubinsky constituency

The Lyubinsky constituency (No.141) is a Russian legislative constituency in Omsk Oblast. The constituency covers upstate northern Omsk Oblast, in 2015 redistricting the constituency took Sovetsky District of Omsk from Central constituency but gave southwestern Omsk Oblast to Moskalenki constituency.

Kemerovo constituency

The Kemerovo constituency (No.101) is a Russian legislative constituency in Kemerovo Oblast. Until 2007 the constituency covered the entirety of Kemerovo as well it stretched north towards Anzhero-Sudzhensk. However, after 2015 redistricting the constituency lost nearly half of Kemerovo but gained all of northern Kemerovo Oblast.

Prokopyevsk constituency Russian legislative constituency in Kemerovo Oblast

The Prokopyevsk constituency (No.102) is a Russian legislative constituency in Kemerovo Oblast. The oddly-shaped constituency until 2007 covered upstate southern Kemerovo Oblast, however, in 2015 redistricting it shedded southern Kemerovo Oblast to Novokuznetsk constituency and was stretched to Kemerovo.

References