| Ishim single-member constituency |
|---|
|
Constituency boundaries from 1993 to 2007 |
| Deputy | None |
|---|
| Federal subject | Tyumen Oblast |
|---|
| Districts | Abatsky, Armizonsky, Aromashevsky, Berdyuzhsky, Golyshmanovsky, Ishim, Ishimsky, Kazansky, Omutinsky, Sladkovsky, Sorokinsky, Tobolsk, Tobolsky, Uporovsky, Uvatsky, Vagaysky, Vikulovsky, Yalutorovsk, Yalutorovsky, Yarkovsky, Yurginsky, Zavodoukovsky |
|---|
| Voters | 448,701 (2003)[1] |
|---|
The Ishim constituency (No.178) was a Russian legislative constituency in Tyumen Oblast in 1993–2007. It covered most of Tyumen Oblast encompassing vast territories east of Tyumen. The seat was last occupied by United Russia faction member Yury Konev (elected as People's Party candidate), a former Deputy Governor of Tyumen Oblast, who won the open-seat race in the 1999 election. In March 2007 Konev resigned from the State Duma after winning an election to the Tyumen Oblast Duma.
The constituency was dissolved in 2007 when State Duma adopted full proportional representation for the next two electoral cycles. Ishim constituency was not re-established for the 2016 election, currently territory of the former Ishim constituency is split between Tyumen constituency (northern part) and Zavodoukovsk constituency (southern part).
Boundaries
1993–2007: Abatsky District, Armizonsky District, Aromashevsky District, Berdyuzhsky District, Golyshmanovsky District, Ishimsky District, Ishim, Kazansky District, Omutinsky District, Sladkovsky District, Sorokinsky District, Tobolsk, Tobolsky District, Uporovsky District, Uvatsky District, Vagaysky District, Vikulovsky District, Yalutorovsk, Yalutorovsky District, Yarkovsky District, Yurginsky District, Zavodoukovsk, Zavodoukovsky District[2][3][4]
The constituency covered almost all of Tyumen Oblast, except the western part of the region where administrative centre Tyumen was located. It included the towns of Ishim, Tobolsk, Yalutorovsk and Zavodoukovsk.
Members elected
Election results
1993
Declared candidates
Results
1995
Declared candidates
- Tamara Aksenova (Forward, Russia!), aide to State Duma member
- Safiulla Ilyasov (SMR), Siberian Tatar culture centre director
- Valery Kretov (VOPDT), transportation executive
- Vladilen Nikitin (Independent), former People's Deputy of the Soviet Union (1989–1991), former First Deputy Premier of the Soviet Union (1989–1990)
- Viktor Rozhkov (Independent), First Deputy Head of the MVD Ural Economic Region Division for Organized Crime (1993–present)
- Nikolay Tropin (Stable Russia), Member of State Duma (1994–present)
- Mirabo Uteshev (K–TR–zSS), Tyumen Industrial Institute professor of machinery
- Aleksey Vasilishin (LDPR), Member of State Duma (1994–present)
- Sergey Vasilyev (Independent)
- Gennady Yartsev (PRES)
- Lyudmila Zhelnina (Power to the People), Member of Tobolsk City Duma (1994–present)
Declined
- Stanislav Shkuro (BIR), incumbent Member of State Duma (1994–present)
Results
Summary of the 17 December 1995 Russian legislative election in the Ishim constituency
| Candidate
|
Party
|
Votes
|
%
|
|
|
Viktor Rozhkov
|
Independent
|
63,809
|
21.61%
|
|
|
Mirabo Uteshev
|
Communists and Working Russia - for the Soviet Union
|
49,362
|
16.71%
|
|
|
Lyudmila Zhelnina
|
Power to the People
|
40,478
|
13.71%
|
|
|
Valery Kretov
|
Political Movement of Transport Workers
|
35,583
|
12.05%
|
|
|
Sergey Vasilyev
|
Independent
|
16,179
|
5.48%
|
|
|
Tamara Aksenova
|
Forward, Russia!
|
15,620
|
5.29%
|
|
|
Vladilen Nikitin
|
Independent
|
14,466
|
4.90%
|
|
|
Aleksey Vasilishin
|
Liberal Democratic Party
|
14,408
|
4.88%
|
|
|
Safiulla Ilyasov
|
Union of Muslims of Russia
|
7,870
|
2.66%
|
|
|
Gennady Yartsev
|
Party of Russian Unity and Accord
|
3,199
|
1.08%
|
|
|
Nikolay Tropin
|
Stable Russia
|
3,022
|
1.02%
|
|
|
against all
|
23,897
|
8.09%
|
|
|
| Total
|
295,340
|
100%
|
|
|
| Source:
|
[6]
|
1999
Declared candidates
Failed to qualify
Results
2003
Declared candidates
- Eduard Altvater (ROPP), transportation businessman
- Vladimir Chertishchev (CPRF), Member of State Duma (2000–present), 1996 and 2001 gubernatorial candidate
- Andrey Koldobanov (LDPR), unemployed
- Yury Konev (NPRF), incumbent Member of State Duma (2000–present)
Withdrawn candidates
- Sergey Cherepkov (Independent), oil service businessman
Failed to qualify
Results
Notes
References