Kaliningrad constituency
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Kaliningrad single-member constituency | |
|---|---|
Russian State Duma | |
Constituency boundaries from 2016 to 2026 | |
| Deputy | |
| Federal subject | Kaliningrad Oblast |
| Districts | Baltiysk, Guryevsky, Kaliningrad (Leningradsky), Krasnoznamensky, Nemansky, Pionersky, Polessky, Slavsky, Sovetsk, Svetlogorsk, Svetly, Yantarny, Zelenogradsky |
| Other territory | Greece, Tajikistan |
| Voters | 421,259 (2021)[1] |
The Kaliningrad constituency (No.97[a]) is a Russian legislative constituency in Kaliningrad Oblast. The constituency covers part of Kaliningrad and northern half of Kaliningrad Oblast.
The constituency has been represented since 2021 by United Russia deputy Andrey Kolesnik, businessman and former Port of Kaliningrad owner, who won the open seat, succeeding one-term United Russia incumbent Aleksandr Pyatikop.
1993–2007: Bagrationovsky District, Baltiysk, Chernyakhovsky District, Guryevsky District, Gusevsky District, Gvardeysky District, Kaliningrad, Krasnoznamensky District, Nemansky District, Nesterovsky District, Ozyorsky District, Pionersky, Polessky District, Pravdinsky District, Slavsky District, Sovetsk, Svetlogorsk, Svetly, Yantarny, Zelenogradsky District[2][3][4]
The constituency covered the entire territory of Kaliningrad Oblast.
2016–2026: Baltiysk, Guryevsky District (except Lesnoye, Shosseynoye, Ushakovo, Yablonevka), Kaliningrad (Leningradsky), Krasnoznamensky District, Nemansky District, Pionersky, Polessky District, Slavsky, Sovetsk, Svetlogorsk, Svetly, Yantarny, Zelenogradsky District[5]
The constituency was re-created for the 2016 election and retained only its northern half, including part of Kaliningrad, losing the rest to new Central constituency.
Since 2026: Baltiysk, Guryevsky District (except Bugrino, Dorozhnoye, Golubevo, Laskino, Lesnoye, Luzhki, Maloye Lesnoye, Novo-Dorozhny, Novoye Lesnoye, Poddubnoye, Polevoye, Shosseynoye, Svetloye, Tsvetkovo, Ushakovo, Voronovo, Yablonevka), Kaliningrad (Leningradsky), Krasnoznamensky District, Nemansky District, Pionersky, Polessky District, Slavsky, Sovetsk, Svetlogorsk, Svetly, Yantarny, Zelenogradsky District[6]
After 2025 redistricting the constituency was slightly altered, losing some rural settlements in Guryevsky District to Central constituency.
Members elected
| Election | Member | Party | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1993 | Yury Voyevoda | Russian Democratic Reform Movement | |
| 1995 | Vladimir Nikitin | Independent | |
| 1999 | |||
| 2003 | |||
| 2007 | Proportional representation - no election by constituency | ||
| 2011 | |||
| 2016 | Aleksandr Pyatikop | United Russia | |
| 2021 | Andrey Kolesnik | United Russia | |

