Mytishchi constituency

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Federal subjectMoscow Oblast
Voters464,620 (2025, est.)[1]
Mytishchi single-member constituency
Constituency of the
Russian State Duma
Constituency boundaries since 2026
Federal subjectMoscow Oblast
DistrictsDolgoprudny, Korolyov, Mytishchi
Voters464,620 (2025, est.)[1]

The Mytishchi constituency (No.123[a]) is a proposed Russian legislative constituency in Moscow Oblast. The constituency covers inner northern suburbs of Moscow, including the cities Dolgoprudny, Korolyov and Mytishchi.

The constituency existed in 1993–2007 and was last represented by United Russia faction member Arkady Baskayev (elected as People's Party of the Russian Federation candidate), a retired Russian Army Colonel General, who won the seat in the 2000 by-election. Mytishchi constituency was not re-established for the 2016 election and its territory divided between Balashikha, Dmitrov, Krasnogorsk and Sergiyev Posad constituencies. After the 2025 redistricting Moscow Oblast gained 12th district, which would be the reinstated Mytishchi constituency.

1993–1995: Dolgoprudny, Khimki, Khimkinsky District, Lobnya, Mytishchi, Mytishchinsky District, Solnechnogorsk, Solnechnogorsky District[2]
The constituency covered northern suburbs of Moscow, including the cities Dolgoprudny, Khimki, Lobnya, Mytishchi and Solnechnogorsk.

1995–2007: Dolgoprudny, Korolyov, Lobnya, Mytishchinsky District, Solnechnogorsky District, Yubileyny[3][4]
The constituency was significantly altered following the 1995 redistricting, losing Khimki and Khimkinsky District to Istra constituency. This seat instead gained Korolyov (Kaliningrad) and Yubileyny from the dissolved Shchyolkovo constituency.

Since 2026: Dolgoprudny, Korolyov, Mytishchi[1]
After the 2025 redistricting Moscow Oblast gained 12th district, which prompted the reinstating of Mytishchi constituency. The constituency was created in northern Moscow suburbs from parts of Balashikha (Mytishchi), Dmitrov (Dolgoprudny) and Sergiyev Posad (Korolyov) constituencies.

Members elected

Election Member Party
1993 Andrey Aizderdzis[b] Independent
1994 Sergey Mavrodi[c] Independent
1995 Sergey Yushenkov Democratic Choice of Russia – United Democrats
1999 A by-election was scheduled after Against all line received the most votes
2000 Arkady Baskayev Independent
2003 People's Party
2007 Proportional representation - no election by constituency
2011
2016 Constituency eliminated
2021

Election results

Notes

References

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