Lyubertsy constituency
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Lyubertsy single-member constituency | |
|---|---|
Russian State Duma | |
Constituency boundaries from 2016 to 2026 | |
| Deputy | |
| Federal subject | Moscow Oblast |
| Districts | Bronnitsy, Dzerzhinsky, Kotelniki, Lyuberetsky, Ramensky, Zhukovsky |
| Voters | 597,033 (2021)[1] |
The Lyubertsy constituency (No.121[a]) is a Russian legislative constituency in Moscow Oblast. The constituency covers south-eastern suburbs of Moscow, including Bronnitsy, Dzerzhinsky, Kotelniki, Lyubertsy and Zhukovsky.
The constituency has been represented since 2021 by United Russia deputy Roman Teryushkov, former Minister of Physical Culture and Sport of Moscow Oblast, who won the open seat, succeeding one-term United Russia incumbent Lidia Antonova.
1993–1995: Bronnitsy, Lytkarino, Lyuberetsky District, Lyubertsy, Ramenskoye, Ramensky District, Zhukovsky[2]
The constituency covered south-eastern suburbs of Moscow, including Bronnitsy, Lytkarino, Lyubertsy, Ramenskoye and Zhukovsky.
1995–2007: Bronnitsy, Dzerzhinsky, Kotelniki, Lyuberetsky District, Ramensky District, Zhukovsky[3][4]
The constituency was slightly altered following the 1995 redistricting, only losing Lytkarino to Odintsovo constituency.
2016–2026: Bronnitsy, Dzerzhinsky, Kotelniki, Lyuberetsky District, Ramensky District, Zhukovsky[5]
The constituency was re-created for the 2016 election and retained all of its former territory.
Since 2026: Kotelniki, Leninsky District, Lyubertsy[6]
After the 2025 redistricting the constituency was significantly changed, losing its outer territories Zhukovsky to Podolsk constituency, Bronnitsy – to Serpukhov constituency, while Ramensky District was divided between Podolsk, Serpukhov, Kolomna and Shchyolkovo constituencies. This seat was reconfigured to inner southern and south-western suburbs of Moscow, as the constituency gained Leninsky District from Podolsk constituency.
Members elected
| Election | Member | Party | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1993 | Anatoly Guskov | Future of Russia–New Names | |
| 1995 | Sergey Popov | Independent | |
| 1999 | Yury Lipatov | Fatherland – All Russia | |
| 2003 | Viktor Semyonov | United Russia | |
| 2007 | Proportional representation - no election by constituency | ||
| 2011 | |||
| 2016 | Lidia Antonova | United Russia | |
| 2021 | Roman Teryushkov | United Russia | |
