Central constituency (Omsk Oblast)

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DeputyNone
Federal subjectOmsk Oblast
DistrictsOmsk (Oktyabrsky, Sovetsky, Tsentralny)
Voters562,085 (2003)[1]
Central single-member constituency
Constituency of the
Russian State Duma
DeputyNone
Federal subjectOmsk Oblast
DistrictsOmsk (Oktyabrsky, Sovetsky, Tsentralny)
Voters562,085 (2003)[1]

The Central constituency (No.130) was a Russian legislative constituency in Omsk Oblast in 1993–2007. It covered most of Omsk. The seat was last occupied by United Russia faction member Aleksandr Kharitonov, a former Chief of the Omsk Academy of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, who won an open-seat race in the 2003 election.

The constituency was dissolved in 2007 when State Duma adopted full proportional representation for the next two electoral cycles. Central constituency was not re-established for the 2016 election, currently its territory is split between all three Omsk Oblast constituencies: Omsk, Moskalenki and Lyubinsky.

1993–1995: Omsk (Kuybyshevsky, Oktyabrsky, Pervomaysky, Sovetsky, Tsentralny)[2]
The constituency covered was fully contained within Omsk and covered most of the city (five out of then-seven districts). It was fully surrounded by Omsk constituency

1995–2003: Omsk (Kirovsky, Pervomaysky, Sovetsky, Tsentralny)[3]
After 1995 redistricting the constituency swapped Kuybyshevsky and Oktyabrsky city districts with Kirovsky city district from the Omsk constituency. It remained fully surrounded by Omsk constituency.

2003–2007: Omsk (Oktyabrsky, Sovetsky, Tsentralny)[4]
Following the redistricting the constituency again returned Kirovsky city district to Omsk constituency, gained Oktyabrsky city district back as well as the territory of former Kuybyshevsky city district, which was merged with Tsentralny district in 1997. The seat remained fully surrounded by Omsk constituency.

Members elected

Election results

Notes

References

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