Nagatinsky constituency

Nagatinsky single-member constituency
Constituency of the
Russian State Duma
Constituency boundaries since 2016
Deputy
Federal subjectMoscow
DistrictsSouth-Eastern AO (Pechatniki, Yuzhnoportovy), South-Western AO (Kotlovka), Southern AO (Chertanovo Severnoye, Danilovsky, Donskoy, Moskvorechye-Saburovo, Nagatino-Sadovniki, Nagatinsky Zaton, Nagorny)
Voters476,543 (2021)[1]

The Nagatinsky constituency (No.201[a]) is a Russian legislative constituency in Moscow. The constituency covers inner parts of Southern, South-Western and South-Eastern Moscow.

The constituency has been represented since 2021 by United Russia deputy Svetlana Razvorotneva, Member of Civic Chamber of the Russian Federation and housing advocate, who won the open seat, succeeding five-term United Russia incumbent Yelena Panina.

Boundaries

1993–1995: Central Administrative Okrug (Yakimanka District, Zamoskvorechye District), Southern Administrative Okrug (Biryulyovo Vostochnoye District, Biryulyovo Zapadnoye District, Danilovsky District, Donskoy District, Moskvorechye-Saburovo District, Nagatino-Sadovniki District, Nagatinsky Zaton District, Tsaritsyno District, Zagorodny District[b])[2]
The constituency stretched from southern parts of Central Moscow through half of the city to Biryulyovo Vostochnoye and Biryulyovo Zapadnoye in Southern Moscow.

1995–2003 Avtozavodsky constituency: Central Administrative Okrug (Tagansky District), South-Eastern Administrative Okrug (Lefortovo District, Nizhegorodsky District, Pechatniki District, Yuzhnoportovy District), Southern Administrative Okrug (Danilovsky District, Donskoy District, Nagatino-Sadovniki District, Nagatinsky Zaton District)[3]
After the 1995 redistricting the constituency was significantly altered and renamed "Avtozavodsky constituency", losing Yakimanka and Zamoskvorechye to Central constituency, Biryulyovo Vostochnoye, Moskvorechye-Saburovo and Tsaritsyno – to Orekhovo–Borisovo constituency, and Biryulyovo Zapadnoye – to Chertanovo constituency. This seat was pushed to the east, gaining South-Eastern Moscow districts Lefortovo, Nizhegorodsky District and Yuzhnoportovy District from the former South-Eastern constituency, as well as Pechatniki from the former Kashirsky constituency.

2003–2007 Avtozavodsky constituency: South-Eastern Administrative Okrug (Lefortovo District, Nizhegorodsky District, Pechatniki District, Ryazansky District, Tekstilshchiki District, Yuzhnoportovy District), Southern Administrative Okrug (Danilovsky District, Donskoy District, Nagatino-Sadovniki District, Nagatinsky Zaton District)[4]
The constituency was changed following the 2003 redistricting, losing Tagansky District to Central constituency. This seat was pushed further to the east, gaining Ryazansky District and Tekstilshchiki from Lyublino constituency.

2016–present: South-Eastern Administrative Okrug (Pechatniki District, Yuzhnoportovy District), South-Western Administrative Okrug (Kotlovka District), Southern Administrative Okrug (Chertanovo Severnoye District, Danilovsky District, Donskoy District, Moskvorechye-Saburovo District, Nagatino-Sadovniki District, Nagatinsky Zaton District, Nagorny District)[5][6]
The constituency was re-created for the 2016 election under the name "Nagatinsky constituency" and retained most of its former territory, losing Lefortovo to Central constituency as well as Nizhegorodsky District, Ryazansky District and Tekstilshchiki – to Perovo constituency. This seat was instead stretched to the west, gaining Kotlovka, Nagorny District and Chertanovo Severnoye from Chertanovo constituency.

Members elected

Election Member Party
1993 Andrey Volkov Independent
1995 Eduard Vorobyov Democratic Choice of Russia – United Democrats
1999 Valery Draganov[c] Fatherland – All Russia
2003 United Russia
2007 Proportional representation - no election by constituency
2011
2016 Yelena Panina United Russia
2021 Svetlana Razvorotneva United Russia

Election results

1993

Summary of the 12 December 1993 Russian legislative election in the Nagatinsky constituency
Candidate Party Votes %
Andrey Volkov Independent 44,861 17.68%
Lev Ponomaryov Choice of Russia 37,818 14.90%
Vasily Shishkarev Communist Party 22,821 8.99%
Vladimir Belyayev Yavlinky–Boldyrev–Lukin 17,208 6.78%
Andrey Golovin Independent 15,631 6.16%
Yury Solomatin Party of Russian Unity and Accord 13,865 5.46%
Igor Pisarev Kedr 13,049 5.14%
Vitaly Zhuravlev Liberal Democratic Party 7,495 2.95%
Sergey Borodychev Future of Russia–New Names 6,180 2.44%
Vladimir Sotnichenko Independent 4,930 1.94%
Yevgeny Butov Independent 3,896 1.54%
against all 50,042 19.72%
Total 253,742 100%
Source: [7][8]

1995

Summary of the 17 December 1995 Russian legislative election in the Avtozavodsky constituency
Candidate Party Votes %
Eduard Vorobyov Democratic Choice of Russia – United Democrats 67,435 22.43%
Vadim Artemyev Independent 50,374 16.76%
Yevgenia Dudko Communist Party 35,399 11.77%
Andrey Golovin Stanislav Govorukhin Bloc 21,860 7.27%
Vyacheslav Zubenko Congress of Russian Communities 12,093 4.02%
Aleksandr Koryev Forward, Russia! 11,346 3.77%
Vladimir Kiselev Agrarian Party 6,970 2.32%
Aleksey Groza Liberal Democratic Party 6,518 2.17%
Yury Palchikov Ivan Rybkin Bloc 6,496 2.16%
Nikolay Nadysev Independent 6,392 2.12%
Yelena Mavrodi Independent 4,970 1.65%
Viktor Nesterov Russian All-People's Movement 4,734 1.57%
Sergey Kondratenko Independent 3,371 1.12%
Vyacheslav Poplavsky Front of National Salvation 2,246 0.75%
Oleg Sokolov Social Democrats 1,881 0.63%
against all 51,190 17.03%
Total 300,637 100%
Source: [9]

1999

Summary of the 19 December 1999 Russian legislative election in the Avtozavodsky constituency
Candidate Party Votes %
Valery Draganov Fatherland – All Russia 88,181 29.80%
Eduard Vorobyov (incumbent) Union of Right Forces 42,307 14.30%
Valery Saykin Communist Party 30,648 10.36%
Yury Bryntsalov Russian Socialist Party 25,587 8.65%
Gennady Anichkin Independent 19,260 6.51%
Olga Serebryannikova Congress of Russian Communities-Yury Boldyrev Movement 10,929 3.69%
Yelena Veduta Independent 9,819 3.32%
Oleg Kasko Liberal Democratic Party 5,654 1.91%
Vadim Burkovsky Independent 4,618 1.56%
against all 49,874 16.85%
Total 295,917 100%
Source: [10]

2003

Summary of the 7 December 2003 Russian legislative election in the Avtozavodsky constituency
Candidate Party Votes %
Valery Draganov (incumbent) United Russia 104,467 37.55%
Nikolay Moskovchenko Rodina 35,568 12.78%
Sergey Gorodilin Union of Right Forces 26,290 9.45%
Aleksandr Kozlov Communist Party 21,324 7.66%
Nadezhda Novichikhina Party of Russia's Rebirth-Russian Party of Life 13,429 4.83%
Yury Kaminsky Liberal Democratic Party 12,204 4.39%
against all 58,143 20.90%
Total 280,374 100%
Source: [11]

2016

Summary of the 18 September 2016 Russian legislative election in the Nagatinsky constituency
Candidate Party Votes %
Yelena Panina United Russia 70,518 40.23%
Kirill Goncharov Yabloko 19,390 11.06%
Vladimir Svyatoshenko Communist Party 18,226 10.40%
Dmitry Nikolayev Liberal Democratic Party 14,262 8.14%
Andrey Nagibin A Just Russia 10,058 5.74%
Natalya Mikhalchenko People's Freedom Party 7,812 4.46%
Yulia Zhandarova The Greens 7,534 4.30%
Georgy Fedorov Rodina 6,866 3.92%
Valery Smirnov Patriots of Russia 6,804 3.88%
Vladimir Strukov Communists of Russia 4,393 2.51%
Iosif Dzhagayev Party of Growth 3,887 2.22%
Total 175,290 100%
Source: [12]

2021

Summary of the 17-19 September 2021 Russian legislative election in the Nagatinsky constituency
Candidate Party Votes %
Svetlana Razvorotneva United Russia 81,664 35.72%
Anastasia Udaltsova Communist Party 57,840 25.30%
Aleksey Demin New People 21,758 9.52%
Armen Gasparyan A Just Russia — For Truth 16,785 7.34%
Vladimir Bernev Liberal Democratic Party 13,802 6.04%
Gleb Tumanov Yabloko 8,736 3.82%
Anna Udalova Communists of Russia 8,844 3.87%
Denis Kulikov Russian Party of Freedom and Justice 6,867 3.00%
Stanislav Chernikov Party of Growth 3,586 1.57%
Nazirzhon Abduganiyev Green Alternative 3,215 1.41%
Total 228,597 100%
Source: [13]

Notes

  1. ^ No.196 in 1993-1995, Avtozavodsky constituency No.191 in 1995-2007
  2. ^ merged with Donskoy District in 1995
  3. ^ in 2006 appointed deputy general director of Rusal

References

  1. ^ Результаты выборов по одномандатному избирательному округу, 2021
  2. ^ "Бюллетень Центральной избирательной комиссии Российской Федерации, 1993, № 2, октябрь". bcik.rf.org.ru. Retrieved 2025-10-09.
  3. ^ "ФЕДЕРАЛЬНЫЙ ЗАКОН Об утверждении схемы одномандатных избирательных округов для проведения выборов депутатов Государственной Думы Федерального Собрания Российской Федерации второго созыва". duma.consultant.ru. Retrieved 2025-10-09.
  4. ^ "ФЕДЕРАЛЬНЫЙ ЗАКОН Об утверждении схемы одномандатных избирательных округов для проведения выборов депутатов Государственной Думы Федерального Собрания Российской Федерации четвертого созыва". duma.consultant.ru. Retrieved 2025-10-09.
  5. ^ "ФЕДЕРАЛЬНЫЙ ЗАКОН Об утверждении схемы одномандатных избирательных округов для проведения выборов депутатов Государственной Думы Федерального Собрания Российской Федерации (2015)". docs.cntd.ru. Retrieved 2025-10-09.
  6. ^ "ФЕДЕРАЛЬНЫЙ ЗАКОН Об утверждении схемы одномандатных избирательных округов для проведения выборов депутатов Государственной Думы Федерального Собрания Российской Федерации (2025)". kremlin.ru. Retrieved 2025-10-09.
  7. ^ Результаты выборов по одномандатному избирательному округу, 1993
  8. ^ "Итоги выборов в Государственную Думу по одномандатным округам 1993". Archived from the original on 2009-12-05. Retrieved 2025-10-20.
  9. ^ Результаты выборов по одномандатному избирательному округу, 1995
  10. ^ "Результаты выборов по одномандатному избирательному округу, 1999". Archived from the original on 2021-09-21. Retrieved 2021-09-10.
  11. ^ "Результаты выборов по одномандатному избирательному округу, 2003". Archived from the original on 2021-04-22. Retrieved 2021-09-10.
  12. ^ Результаты выборов по одномандатному избирательному округу, 2016
  13. ^ Результаты выборов по одномандатному избирательному округу, 2021