Prokopyevsk constituency
Russian legislative constituency in Kemerovo Oblast
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The Prokopyevsk constituency (No.102[a]) is a Russian legislative constituency in Kemerovo Oblast. The constituency covers south-central parts of Kemerovo Oblast to the north and east of Novokuznetsk, including coal-mining centers of Prokopyevsk, Mezhdurechensk, Kiselyovsk and Myski, and stretches north up to Kemerovo, taking the city's Leninsky District residential area.
| Prokopyevsk single-member constituency | |
|---|---|
Russian State Duma | |
Constituency boundaries since 2016 | |
| Deputy | vacant |
| Federal subject | Kemerovo Oblast |
| Districts | Kemerovo (Leninsky), Kemerovsky (Sukhovskoye, Yelykayevskoye), Kiselyovsk, Krapivinsky, Mezhdurechensk, Myski, Novokuznetsky (Krasulinskoye, Tersinskoye, Tsentralnoye), Prokopyevsk, Prokopyevsky[1] |
| Voters | 476,236 (2021)[2] |
The constituency has been vacant since March 10, 2025, following the resignation of two-term United Russia deputy Dmitry Islamov, who was appointed State Secretary – Deputy Minister of Energy of Russia.
Boundaries
1993–1995: Belovo, Belovsky District, Guryevsky District, Kiselyovsk, Osinniki, Prokopyevsk, Prokopyevsky District, Tashtagol[3]
The constituency was based in southern Kemerovo Oblast and covered southern half of the Kuznetsk Basin, including the coal-mining towns of Belovo, Kiselyovsk and Prokopyevsk, towns of Osinniki and Kaltan to the south of Novokuznetsk as well as Gornaya Shoriya region. Notably the constituency was noncontiguous, as Novokuznetsk constituency split it between Prokopyevsk and Osinniki.
1995–2007: Guryevsk, Guryevsky District, Kiselyovsk, Mezhdurechensk, Myski, most of Novokuznetsky District, Prokopyevsk, Prokopyevsky District, Promyshlennovsky District, Salair, Tashtagol[4][5]
After 1995 redistricting the constituency lost Belovo to Leninsk-Kuznetsky constituency and Osinniki and Kaltan to Novokuznetsk constituency. In return, the constituency was stretched north to Guryevsk and Promyshlennaya along the oblast's western border, gained most of Novokuznetsky District (making the constituency contiguous) and Mezhdurechensk in the south-east.
2016–present: Kemerovo (Leninsky), Kemerovsky District (Sukhovskoye, Yelykayevskoye), Kiselyovsk, Krapivinsky District, Mezhdurechensk, Myski, Novokuznetsky District (Krasulinskoye, Tersinskoye, Tsentralnoye), Prokopyevsk, Prokopyevsky District[6][7]
The constituency was re-created for the 2016 election and in its new configuration it retained only coal-mining towns of Kiselyovsk, Mezhdurechensk, Myski and Prokopyevsk, losing Gornaya Shoriya region around Tashtagol to Novokuznetsk constituency, while Guryevsk and Promyshlennaya were placed into new Zavodsky constituency. Prokopyevsk constituency was also stretched north across taiga in central Kuzbass to oblast capital Kemerovo, taking residential Leninsky District in the city's south-east.
Members elected
| Election | Member | Party | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1993 | Nina Volkova | Independent | |
| 1995 | Nina Ostanina | Independent | |
| 1999 | Communist Party | ||
| 2003 | |||
| 2007 | Proportional representation - no election by constituency | ||
| 2011 | |||
| 2016 | Dmitry Islamov[b] | United Russia | |
| 2021 | |||
Election results
1993
| Candidate | Party | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nina Volkova | Independent | 100,442 | 35.52% | |
| Valery Biryukov | Choice of Russia | – | – | |
| Aleksandr Sergeyev | Russian Democratic Reform Movement | – | – | |
| Total | 282,737 | 100% | ||
| Source: | [8] | |||
1995
| Candidate | Party | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nina Ostanina | Independent | 148,863 | 45.24% | |
| Vladimir Melnichenko | Independent | 31,756 | 9.65% | |
| Yevgeny Tuinov | Liberal Democratic Party | 25,164 | 7.65% | |
| Tatyana Ananyina | Our Home – Russia | 21,765 | 6.61% | |
| Sayetgali Sharipov | Party of Workers' Self-Government | 20,842 | 6.33% | |
| Igor Litvenenko | Independent | 12,885 | 3.92% | |
| Mikhail Todyshev | Revival | 12,501 | 3.80% | |
| Nina Volkova (incumbent) | Ivan Rybkin Bloc | 12,392 | 3.77% | |
| Ivan Shashviashvili | Our Future | 4,400 | 1.34% | |
| against all | 32,644 | 9.92% | ||
| Total | 329,074 | 100% | ||
| Source: | [9] | |||
1999
| Candidate | Party | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nina Ostanina (incumbent) | Communist Party | 224,960 | 77.00% | |
| Tatyana Zemlyanskikh (Khudobina) | Union of Right Forces | 34,994 | 11.98% | |
| Mikhail Shchadov | Andrey Nikolayev and Svyatoslav Fyodorov Bloc | 5,316 | 1.82% | |
| Gary Nemchenko | Our Home – Russia | 4,898 | 1.68% | |
| against all | 18,134 | 6.21% | ||
| Total | 292,169 | 100% | ||
| Source: | [10] | |||
2003
| Candidate | Party | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nina Ostanina (incumbent) | Communist Party | 215,958 | 72.98% | |
| Vladislav Balovnev | Independent | 22,820 | 7.71% | |
| Vladimir Ovsyannikov | Liberal Democratic Party | 20,005 | 6.76% | |
| Vladimir Surodin | United Russian Party Rus' | 5,558 | 1.88% | |
| against all | 27,398 | 9.26% | ||
| Total | 296,188 | 100% | ||
| Source: | [11] | |||
2016
| Candidate | Party | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dmitry Islamov | United Russia | 350,790 | 77.28% | |
| Maksim Parshukov | Liberal Democratic Party | 32,786 | 7.22% | |
| Vladimir Karpov | Communist Party | 27,416 | 6.04% | |
| Nikolay Ryzhak | A Just Russia | 22,506 | 4.96% | |
| Olga Bondareva | Communists of Russia | 9,527 | 2.10% | |
| Vitaly Ilyin | Yabloko | 7,051 | 1.55% | |
| Total | 453,948 | 100% | ||
| Source: | [12] | |||
2021
| Candidate | Party | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dmitry Islamov (incumbent) | United Russia | 262,941 | 71.11% | |
| Ivan Utrobin | Communist Party | 20,864 | 5.64% | |
| Vladimir Pronin | A Just Russia — For Truth | 19,586 | 5.30% | |
| Kirill Pravdin | Liberal Democratic Party | 17,995 | 4.87% | |
| Afanasy Yeremkin | Communists of Russia | 13,560 | 3.67% | |
| Maksim Smirnov | New People | 8,139 | 2.20% | |
| Yelena Matveyeva | The Greens | 7,276 | 1.97% | |
| Yevgeny Zheltkevich | Party of Pensioners | 5,932 | 1.60% | |
| Artyom Matveyev | Rodina | 4,437 | 1.20% | |
| Total | 369,748 | 100% | ||
| Source: | [13] | |||
Notes
- No.92 in 1993-1995 and 2003-2007, No.91 in 1995-2003
- appointed Deputy Minister of Energy of Russia in March 2025
