Constituency of the State Duma of the Russian Federation
Amur single-member constituency |
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Deputy | |
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Federal subject | Amur Oblast |
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Districts | Arkharinsky, Belogorsk, Belogorsky, Blagoveshchensk, Blagoveshchensky, Bureysky, Ivanovsky, Konstantinovsky, Magdagachinsky, Mazanovsky, Mikhaylovsky, Oktyabrsky, Progress, Raychikhinsk, Shimanovsky, Romnensky, Selemdzhinsky, Seryshevsky, Skovorodinsky, Shimanovsk, Svobodnensky, Svobodny, Tambovsky, Tsiolkovsky, Tynda, Tyndinsky, Zavitinsky, Zeya, Zeysky[1] |
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Voters | 609,209 (2021)[2] |
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The Amur Constituency (No. 71[a]) is a Russian legislative constituency covering the entirety of Amur Oblast.
Members elected
Election results
1993
1995
Summary of the 17 December 1995 Russian legislative election in the Blagoveshchensk constituency
Candidate
|
Party
|
Votes
|
%
|
|
Leonid Korotkov
|
Independent
|
181,444
|
39.21%
|
|
Valery Voshchevoz
|
For the Motherland!
|
69,424
|
15.00%
|
|
Andrey Zakharov (incumbent)
|
Independent
|
42,885
|
9.27%
|
|
Svetlana Ponosova
|
Our Home – Russia
|
31,218
|
6.75%
|
|
Yury Semenov
|
Liberal Democratic Party
|
25,985
|
5.62%
|
|
Oleg Morar
|
Independent
|
24,701
|
5.34%
|
|
Nikolay Sheludko
|
Independent
|
14,902
|
3.22%
|
|
Leonid Dudchenko
|
Independent
|
11,193
|
2.42%
|
|
Viktor Peskovets
|
Independent
|
10,927
|
2.36%
|
|
against all
|
45,321
|
9.79%
|
|
Total
|
462,709
|
100%
|
|
Source:
|
[4]
|
1999
Summary of the 19 December 1999 Russian legislative election in the Blagoveshchensk constituency
Candidate
|
Party
|
Votes
|
%
|
|
Leonid Korotkov (incumbent)
|
Independent
|
71,065
|
16.76%
|
|
Gennady Gamza
|
Communist Party
|
63,373
|
14.95%
|
|
Galina Buslova
|
Independent
|
42,467
|
10.02%
|
|
Vladimir Dorovskikh
|
Independent
|
35,702
|
8.42%
|
|
Konstantin Gunbin
|
Independent
|
30,726
|
7.25%
|
|
Aleksandr Vinidiktov
|
Independent
|
26,844
|
6.33%
|
|
Lyubov Khashcheva
|
Yabloko
|
25,492
|
6.01%
|
|
Andrey Lushchey
|
Independent
|
23,324
|
5.50%
|
|
Aleksandr Bondar
|
Independent
|
20,994
|
4.95%
|
|
Sergey Lopatkin
|
Independent
|
12,162
|
2.87%
|
|
Andrey Guk
|
Independent
|
5,277
|
1.24%
|
|
against all
|
59,678
|
14.08%
|
|
Total
|
423,940
|
100%
|
|
Source:
|
[5]
|
2001
2003
Summary of the 7 December 2003 Russian legislative election in the Blagoveshchensk constituency
Candidate
|
Party
|
Votes
|
%
|
|
Boris Vinogradov
|
Independent
|
76,153
|
22.16%
|
|
Vladimir Lysenko
|
Independent
|
46,722
|
13.60%
|
|
Aleksandr Vinidiktov (incumbent)
|
Independent
|
45,228
|
13.16%
|
|
Anatoly Belonogov
|
Agrarian Party
|
42,749
|
12.44%
|
|
Gennady Gamza
|
Communist Party
|
37,667
|
10.96%
|
|
Oksana Bulat
|
Great Russia–Eurasian Union
|
9,953
|
2.90%
|
|
Irina Zubova
|
People's Party
|
9,691
|
2.82%
|
|
Gennady Petrov
|
Russian Pensioners' Party-Party of Social Justice
|
7,735
|
2.25%
|
|
Ivan Ryazhskikh
|
Party of Russia's Rebirth-Russian Party of Life
|
7,581
|
2.21%
|
|
Aleksandr Naydenov
|
Yabloko
|
6,845
|
1.99%
|
|
Sergey Derkach
|
Union of Right Forces
|
4,808
|
1.40%
|
|
Aleksandr Kuzmin
|
Independent
|
2,444
|
0.71%
|
|
against all
|
17,461
|
9.10%
|
|
Total
|
191,990
|
100%
|
|
Source:
|
[7]
|
2016
2018
2021
Notes
- ^ Blagoveshchensk constituency No. 59 in 1993-1995, Blagoveshchensk constituency No. 58 in 1995-2003, Blagoveshchensk constituency No.60 in 2003-2007
- ^ elected as Governor of Amur Oblast in April 2001
- ^ resigned in June 2018
References