Seimsky constituency

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Federal subjectKursk Oblast
DistrictsBelovsky, Bolshesoldatsky, Cheremisinovsky, Glushkovsky, Gorshechensky, Kastorensky, Korenevsky, Kursk (Zheleznodorozhny, Seimsky), Kursky (Besedinsky, Klyukvinsky, Lebyazhensky, Novoposelenovsky, Poleskoy, Ryshkovsky, Shumakovsky, Voroshnevsky), Manturovsky, Medvensky, Oboyansky, Pristensky, Rylsky, Shchigrovsky, Shchigry, Solntsevsky, Sovetsky, Sudzhansky, Timsky
Voters442,028 (2021)[1]
Seimsky single-member constituency
Constituency of the
Russian State Duma
Constituency boundaries from 2016 to 2026
Deputy
Federal subjectKursk Oblast
DistrictsBelovsky, Bolshesoldatsky, Cheremisinovsky, Glushkovsky, Gorshechensky, Kastorensky, Korenevsky, Kursk (Zheleznodorozhny, Seimsky), Kursky (Besedinsky, Klyukvinsky, Lebyazhensky, Novoposelenovsky, Poleskoy, Ryshkovsky, Shumakovsky, Voroshnevsky), Manturovsky, Medvensky, Oboyansky, Pristensky, Rylsky, Shchigrovsky, Shchigry, Solntsevsky, Sovetsky, Sudzhansky, Timsky
Voters442,028 (2021)[1]

The Seimsky constituency (No. 110) is a Russian legislative constituency in Kursk Oblast. The constituency covers part of Kursk, southern and eastern Kursk Oblast.

The constituency has been represented since 2021 by United Russia deputy Olga Germanova, two-term State Duma member and former Head of Kursk, who won the open seat, succeeding one-term United Russia incumbent Aleksey Zolotarev.

2016–2026: Belovsky District, Bolshesoldatsky District, Cheremisinovsky District, Glushkovsky District, Gorshechensky District, Kastorensky District, Korenevsky District, Kursk (Zheleznodorozhny, Seimsky), Kursky District (Besedinsky, Klyukvinsky, Lebyazhensky, Novoposelenovsky, Poleskoy, Ryshkovsky, Shumakovsky, Voroshnevsky), Manturovsky District, Medvensky District, Oboyansky District, Pristensky District, Rylsky District, Shchigrovsky District, Shchigry, Solntsevsky District, Sovetsky District, Sudzhansky District, Timsky District[2]
The constituency was created for the 2016 election, taking most of former Kursk constituency, including part of Kursk, as well as southern part of Lgov constituency.

Since 2026: Belovsky District, Bolshesoldatsky District, Cheremisinovsky District, Glushkovsky District, Gorshechensky District, Kastorensky District, Korenevsky District, Kursk (Zheleznodorozhny, Seimsky), Kursky District (Klyukvinsky, Lebyazhensky, Novoposelenovsky, Poleskoy, Ryshkovsky, Shumakovsky, Voroshnevsky), Manturovsky District, Medvensky District, Oboyansky District, Oktyabrsky District, Pristensky District, Rylsky District, Shchigrovsky District, Shchigry, Solntsevsky District, Sovetsky District, Sudzhansky District, Timsky District[3]
After 2025 redistricting the constituency saw minor changes, swapping Kursk eastern suburbs for Oktyabrsky District with Kursk constituency.

Members elected

Election results

Notes

References

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