Dmitrov constituency
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Dmitrov single-member constituency | |
|---|---|
Russian State Duma | |
Constituency boundaries from 2016 to 2026 | |
| Deputy | |
| Federal subject | Moscow Oblast |
| Districts | Dmitrov, Dolgoprudny, Dubna, Khimki, Lobnya, Solnechnogorsky (Lunyovskoye), Taldom |
| Voters | 564,581 (2021)[1] |
The Dmitrov constituency (No.118[a]) is a Russian legislative constituency in Moscow Oblast. The constituency stretches from inner northern Moscow suburbs of Dolgoprudny, Khimki and Lobnya to northern Moscow Oblast.
The constituency has been represented since 2016 by United Russia deputy Irina Rodnina, four-term State Duma member, 1972, 1976 and 1980 Olympic champion figure skater.
1993–2007: Dmitrovsky District, Dubna, Klinsky District, Sergiyevo-Posadsky District, Taldomsky District[2][3][4]
The constituency covered outer Moscow suburbs and exurbs in northern Moscow Oblast, including the cities Dmitrov, Klin, Sergiyev Posad and naukograd Dubna.
2016–2026: Dmitrov, Dolgoprudny, Dubna, Khimki, Lobnya, Solnechnogorsky District (Lunyovskoye), Taldom[5]
The constituency was re-created for the 2016 election and retained only Dmitrov, Dubna and Taldom, losing Klin to Krasnogorsk constituency and Sergiyev Posad to Sergiyev Posad constituency. This seat instead was pushed southwards to inner Moscow suburbs of Dolgoprudny, Khimki and Lobnya, gained from the former Istra and Mytishchi constituencies.
Since 2026: Dmitrov, Khimki, Lobnya, Solnechnogorsk[6]
After the 2025 redistricting the constituency was significantly changed, losing Dolgoprudny to reinstated Mytishchi constituency as well as Dubna and Taldom in its north to Sergiyev Posad constituency. This seat instead gained all of Solnechnogorsk to its west from Krasnogorsk constituency.
Members elected
| Election | Member | Party | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1993 | Artur Muravyov | Independent | |
| 1995 | Mikhail Men | Yabloko | |
| 1999 | Valery Galchenko | Fatherland – All Russia | |
| 2003 | People's Party | ||
| 2007 | Proportional representation - no election by constituency | ||
| 2011 | |||
| 2016 | Irina Rodnina | United Russia | |
| 2021 | |||
