Moscow City Duma District 5
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
United Russia
constituency | |
| Deputy | Milena Avimskaya United Russia |
|---|---|
| Administrative Okrug | Northern |
| Districts | Golovinsky, Khovrino, Levoberezhny, part of Zapadnoye Degunino |
| Voters | 187,054 (2024)[1] |
Moscow City Duma District 5 is one of 45 constituencies in Moscow City Duma. Currently the district covers outer parts of Northern Moscow.
The district has been represented since 2024 by United Russia deputy Milena Avimskaya, a Russian Army Theatre director, who succeeded retiring four-term Yabloko incumbent Yevgeny Bunimovich, redistricted there from District 6.

1993–2005: Beskudnikovsky, Dmitrovsky, Vostochnoye Degunino, Zapadnoye Degunino
The district covered outer parts of Northern Moscow.
2005–2009: Alekseyevsky, Babushkinsky, Butyrsky, Losinoostrovsky, Marfino, Maryina Roshcha, Ostankinsky, Rostokino, part of Sokolniki, Sviblovo, Yaroslavsky[2]
The district was completely reconfigured as it was placed into Eastern and North-Eastern Moscow, overlapping the then-eliminated State Duma Babushkinsky constituency.
2009–2014: Alekseyevsky, Babushkinsky, Butyrsky, Losinoostrovsky, Marfino, Maryina Roshcha, Ostankinsky, Rostokino, Sokolniki, Sviblovo, Yaroslavsky[3]
The district was lightly rearranged prior to the 2009 election, gaining the rest of Sokolniki from District 6.
2014–2024: Filyovsky Park, Khoroshyovo-Mnyovniki, part of Shchukino[4]
The district was completely rearranged in the 2014 redistricting as it was moved to cover inner parts of North-Western and Western Moscow.
2024–present: Golovinsky, Khovrino, Levoberezhny, part of Zapadnoye Degunino[5]
During the 2023–24 Moscow redistricting the old constituency was virtually eliminated as its parts were divided between new districts 4 (Shchukino), 42 (Filyovsky Park) and 43 (Khoroshyovo-Mnyovniki). In its new configuration the district took all of former District 6.
Members elected
| Election | Member | Party | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1993 | Sergey Osadchy[a] | Independent | |
| 1997 | For Justice | ||
| 2001 | Independent | ||
| 2004 | Viktor Ivanov | United Russia | |
| 2005 | Tatyana Portnova | United Russia | |
| 2009 | |||
| 2014 | Oleg Soroka | United Russia | |
| 2019 | Roman Babayan | Independent | |
| 2024 | Milena Avimskaya | United Russia | |
