Kanevskaya constituency
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Kanevskaya single-member constituency | |
|---|---|
Russian State Duma | |
Constituency boundaries from 2016 to 2026 | |
| Deputy | |
| Federal subject | Krasnodar Krai |
| Districts | Bryukhovetsky, Kanevskoy, Krylovsky, Kushchyovsky, Leningradsky, Pavlovsky, Primorsko-Akhtarsky, Shcherbinovsky, Starominsky, Yeysky |
| Voters | 491,732 (2021)[1] |
The Kanevskaya constituency (No.53[a]) is a Russian legislative constituency in Krasnodar Krai. The constituency covers predominantly rural northern Krasnodar Krai.
The constituency has been represented since 2021 by United Russia deputy Dmitry Lotsmanov, an agricultural businessman, who won the open seat, succeeding one-term United Russia incumbent Natalya Boyeva.
1993–2003: Bryukhovetsky District, Kanevskoy District, Krylovsky District, Kushchyovsky District, Leningradsky District, Primorsko-Akhtarsky District, Shcherbinovsky District, Starominsky District, Timashevsky District, Yeysk, Yeysky District[2][3]
The constituency covered heavy agricultural rural northern Krasnodar Krai, including the town of Yeysk on the Azov Sea coast.
2003–2007: Kanevskoy District, Krylovsky District, Kushchyovsky District, Leningradsky District, Pavlovsky District, Primorsko-Akhtarsky District, Shcherbinovsky District, Starominsky District, Yeysk, Yeysky District[4]
After 2003 redistricting the constituency was slightly changed, losing Bryukhovetsky and Timashevsky districts to Dinskaya constituency. This seat instead gained Pavlovsky District from Tikhoretsk constituency.
2016–2026: Bryukhovetsky District, Kanevskoy District, Krylovsky District, Kushchyovsky District, Leningradsky District, Pavlovsky District, Primorsko-Akhtarsky District, Shcherbinovsky District, Starominsky District, Yeysky District[5]
The constituency was re-created for the 2016 election. This seat regained Bryukhovetsky District from the former Dinskaya constituency.
Since 2026 Northern constituency: Bryukhovetsky District, Kanevskoy District, Krylovsky District, Kushchyovsky District, Leningradsky District, Novopokrovsky District (Gorkaya Balka, Kalnibolotskaya, Nezamayevsky, Novoivanovskaya), Pavlovsky District, Shcherbinovsky District, Starominsky District, Yeysky District[6]
The constituency was slightly altered after the 2025 redistricting, once again losing Primorsko-Akhtarsky District to North-Western constituency. This seat gained northern half of Novopokrovsky District from the former Tikhoretsk constituency and was renamed "Northern constituency".
Members elected
| Election | Member | Party | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1993 | Anatoly Kochegura | Independent | |
| 1995 | Aleksandr Petrik[b] | Communist Party | |
| 1998 | Aleksandr Burulko | Communist Party | |
| 1999 | |||
| 2003 | Galina Doroshenko | Independent | |
| 2007 | Proportional representation - no election by constituency | ||
| 2011 | |||
| 2016 | Natalya Boyeva | United Russia | |
| 2021 | Dmitry Lotsmanov | United Russia | |
