Izhevsk constituency
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Izhevsk single-member constituency | |
|---|---|
Russian State Duma | |
Constituency boundaries since 2016 | |
| Deputy | |
| Federal subject | Udmurt Republic |
| Districts | Alnashsky, Grakhovsky, Izhevsk (Oktyabrsky, Pervomaysky), Kambarsky, Karakulinsky, Kiyasovsky, Kiznersky, Malopurginsky, Mozhga, Mozhginsky, Sarapul, Sarapulsky, Syumsinsky, Uvinsky, Vavozhsky, Zavyalovsky (Babinskoye, Kamenskoye, Kiyakinskoye, Lyukskoye, Pirogovskoye, Podshivalovskoye, Shaberdinskoye, Sovkhoznoye, Srednepostolskoye, Varaksinskoye) |
| Voters | 606,098 (2021)[1] |
The Izhevsk constituency (No.34[a]) is a Russian legislative constituency in Udmurtia. The constituency covers most of Izhevsk and southern Udmurtia.
The constituency has been represented since 2021 by United Russia deputy Oleg Garin, former Izhevsk City Duma chairman, who won the open seat, succeeding one-term United Russia incumbent Valery Buzilov.
1993–2007: Izhevsk, Votkinsk, Votkinsky District, Zavyalovsky District[2][3][4]
The constituency was primarily urban, covering the republican capital of Izhevsk, industrial town of Votkinsk and surrounding area.
2016–present: Alnashsky District, Grakhovsky District, Izhevsk (Oktyabrsky, Pervomaysky), Kambarsky District, Karakulinsky District, Kiyasovsky District, Kiznersky District, Malopurginsky District, Mozhga, Mozhginsky District, Sarapul, Sarapulsky District, Syumsinsky District, Uvinsky District, Vavozhsky District, Zavyalovsky District (Babinskoye, Kamenskoye, Kiyakinskoye, Lyukskoye, Pirogovskoye, Podshivalovskoye, Shaberdinskoye, Sovkhoznoye, Srednepostolskoye, Varaksinskoye)[5][6]
The constituency was re-created for the 2016 election. This seat retained only most of Izhevsk and southern and western Zavyalovsky District, shedding the rest to Udmurtia constituency. The constituency gained southern Udmurtia, including the towns of Mozhga and Sarapul from Udmurtia constituency.
Members elected
| Election | Member | Party | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1993 | Aleksey Krasnykh | Party of Russian Unity and Accord | |
| 1995 | Andrey Soluyanov | Independent | |
| 1999 | Yury Maslyukov | Independent | |
| 2003 | Yevgeny Bogomolny | United Russia | |
| 2007 | Proportional representation - no election by constituency | ||
| 2011 | |||
| 2016 | Valery Buzilov | United Russia | |
| 2021 | Oleg Garin | United Russia | |
