Omsk constituency
Constituency of the State Duma of the Russian Federation
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Omsk constituency (No.139[a]) is a Russian legislative constituency in Omsk Oblast. The constituency covers central and western Omsk as well as south-eastern Omsk Oblast.
| Omsk single-member constituency | |
|---|---|
Russian State Duma | |
Constituency boundaries since 2016 | |
| Deputy | |
| Federal subject | Omsk Oblast |
| Districts | Cherlaksky, Kalachinsky, Kormilovsky, Novovarshavsky, Okoneshnikovsky, Omsk (Oktyabrsky, Tsentralny), Omsky (Andreyevskoye, Bogoslovskoye, Krasnoyarskoye, Petrovskoye, Pokrovskoye, Rostovkinskoye), Pavlogradsky, Russko-Polyansky |
| Voters | 495,024 (2021)[1] |
The constituency has been represented since 2021 by Communist deputy Andrey Alekhin, longtime Member of Legislative Assembly of Omsk Oblast and 2016 runner-up for this seat, who won the open seat, succeeding two-term United Russia incumbent Viktor Schreider.
Boundaries
1993–1995: Cherlaksky District, Kalachinsk, Kalachinsky District, Kormilovsky District, Okoneshnikovsky District, Omsk (Kirovsky, Leninsky), Omsky District, Tavrichesky District[2]
The constituency covered southern Omsk, all of the city suburbs in Omsky District, completely surrounding Central constituency, as well as rural areas in south-eastern corner of Omsk Oblast.
1995–2003: Cherlaksky District, Kalachinsk, Kalachinsky District, Okoneshnikovsky District, Omsk (Kuybyshevsky, Leninsky, Oktyabrsky), Omsky District, Tavrichesky District[3]
After the 1995 redistricting the constituency was significantly altered, losing Kormilovsky District to Bolsherechye constituency as well as swapping Kirovsky for Kuybyshevsky and Oktyabrsky city districts of Omsk with Central constituency.
2003–2007: Cherlaksky District, Kalachinsky District, Okoneshnikovsky District, Omsk (Kirovsky, Leninsky), Omsky District, Tavrichesky District[4]
The constituency was again changed following the 2003 redistricting, regaining Kirovsky City District of Omsk from Central constituency in exchange for Oktyabrsky City District and the territory of former Kuybyshevsky City District (which was merged with Tsentralny district in 1997).
2016–present: Cherlaksky District, Kalachinsky District, Kormilovsky District, Novovarshavsky District, Okoneshnikovsky District, Omsk (Oktyabrsky, Tsentralny), Omsky District (Andreyevskoye, Bogoslovskoye, Krasnoyarskoye, Petrovskoye, Pokrovskoye, Rostovkinskoye), Pavlogradsky District, Russko-Polyansky District[5][6]
The constituency was re-created for the 2016 election and retained south-eastern corner of Omsk Oblast and only northern and north-eastern suburbs of Omsk, losing its former portion of Omsk, southern suburbs and Tavrichesky District to new Moskalenki constituency, north-western Omsk suburbs – to Lyubinsky constituency. This seat instead took most of the former Central constituency (Oktyabrsky and Tsentralny city districts), rural Kormilovsky, Novovarshavsky, Pavlogradsky and Russko-Polyansky districts from the former Bolsherechye constituency.
Members elected
| Election | Member | Party | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1993 | Viktor Lotkov | Independent | |
| 1995 | Oleg Smolin | Independent | |
| 1999 | Communist Party | ||
| 2003 | |||
| 2007 | Proportional representation - no election by constituency | ||
| 2011 | |||
| 2016 | Viktor Schreider | United Russia | |
| 2021 | Andrey Alekhin | Communist Party | |
Election results
1993
| Candidate | Party | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Viktor Lotkov | Independent | 109,935 | 41.22% | |
| Yury Vinokurov | Independent | 55,032 | 20.63% | |
| Nikolay Kutorgin | Independent | 42,170 | 15.81% | |
| against all | 41,572 | 15.59% | ||
| Total | 266,700 | 100% | ||
| Source: | [7][8] | |||
1995
| Candidate | Party | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oleg Smolin | Independent | 100,729 | 28.49% | |
| Mikhail Poltoranin | Independent | 51,796 | 14.65% | |
| Vyacheslav Nikolyuk | Independent | 45,749 | 12.94% | |
| Mikhail Penkin | Communist Party | 28,211 | 7.98% | |
| Sergey Arbuzov | Pamfilova–Gurov–Lysenko | 23,550 | 6.66% | |
| Vladimir Ispravnikov | Independent | 21,896 | 6.19% | |
| Gennady Sidorov | Liberal Democratic Party | 17,473 | 4.94% | |
| Valentina Sokolova | Our Home – Russia | 8,806 | 2.49% | |
| Vladimir Vshivtsev | For the Motherland! | 5,747 | 1.63% | |
| Larisa Savelyeva | Independent | 5,566 | 1.57% | |
| Rafael Sharafutdinov | Nur | 3,500 | 0.99% | |
| Nikolay Afanasyev | Independent | 2,680 | 0.76% | |
| Konstantin Kharlamov | Russian All-People's Movement | 1,310 | 0.37% | |
| Aleksandr Tsalko | Transformation of the Fatherland | 924 | 0.26% | |
| against all | 24,792 | 7.01% | ||
| Total | 353,527 | 100% | ||
| Source: | [9] | |||
1999

- Oleg Smolin: 30–40%40–50%
| Candidate | Party | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oleg Smolin (incumbent) | Communist Party | 136,962 | 41.82% | |
| Vladimir Lapin | Independent | 67,607 | 20.64% | |
| Vladimir Sedelnikov | Party of Pensioners | 28,029 | 8.56% | |
| Vladimir Dobrovolsky | Independent | 23,763 | 7.26% | |
| Andrey Avdeychikov | Independent | 6,063 | 1.85% | |
| Vyacheslav Rosinsky | Liberal Democratic Party | 5,659 | 1.73% | |
| Lyubov Neklyudova | Independent | 5,468 | 1.67% | |
| Eduard Smolyagin | Spiritual Heritage | 5,186 | 1.58% | |
| Sergey Mizya | Russian All-People's Union | 4,401 | 1.34% | |
| German Kozlovsky | Andrey Nikolayev and Svyatoslav Fyodorov Bloc | 3,131 | 0.96% | |
| Olga Maksakova | Independent | 2,269 | 0.69% | |
| against all | 32,955 | 10.06% | ||
| Total | 327,516 | 100% | ||
| Source: | [10] | |||
2003

- Oleg Smolin: 40–50%50–60%
- Khabulda Shushubayev: 40–50%
| Candidate | Party | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oleg Smolin (incumbent) | Communist Party | 127,202 | 47.83% | |
| Khabulda Shushubayev | Independent | 54,866 | 20.63% | |
| Vladimir Bolshakov | Liberal Democratic Party | 18,450 | 6.94% | |
| Dmitry Sheyko | Union of Right Forces | 11,534 | 4.34% | |
| Nikolay Salokhin | United Russian Party Rus' | 8,325 | 3.13% | |
| Sergey Tolmachev | Agrarian Party | 8,008 | 3.01% | |
| against all | 33,683 | 12.67% | ||
| Total | 266,048 | 100% | ||
| Source: | [11] | |||
2016

- Viktor Schreider: 30–40%40–50%
- Andrey Alekhin: 30–40%
| Candidate | Party | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Viktor Schreider | United Russia | 57,552 | 31.00% | |
| Andrey Alekhin | Communist Party | 56,021 | 30.17% | |
| Aleksey Klepikov | Liberal Democratic Party | 22,335 | 12.03% | |
| Dmitry Gorovtsov | A Just Russia | 15,516 | 8.36% | |
| Tatyana Yeremenko | Party of Growth | 6,699 | 3.61% | |
| Aleksandr Barkov | Communists of Russia | 6,422 | 3.46% | |
| Sergey Kostarev | Yabloko | 5,717 | 3.08% | |
| Igor Basov | People's Freedom Party | 3,347 | 1.80% | |
| Nikolay Artemyev | Civic Platform | 3,045 | 1.64% | |
| Total | 185,661 | 100% | ||
| Source: | [12] | |||
2021

- Andrey Alekhin: 20–30%30–40%
- Stepan Bonkovsky: 30–40%40–50%
| Candidate | Party | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Andrey Alekhin | Communist Party | 61,631 | 31.68% | |
| Stepan Bonkovsky | United Russia | 53,087 | 27.29% | |
| Natalya Tuzova | New People | 15,439 | 7.94% | |
| Viktor Zharkov | A Just Russia — For Truth | 15,073 | 7.75% | |
| Aleksey Baykov | Communists of Russia | 13,797 | 7.09% | |
| Gennady Pavlov | Party of Pensioners | 10,069 | 5.18% | |
| Anton Berendeyev | Liberal Democratic Party | 9,723 | 5.00% | |
| Tatyana Schneider | Yabloko | 4,797 | 2.47% | |
| Total | 194,541 | 100% | ||
| Source: | [13] | |||
Notes
- No.129 in 1993-2007
