Russian legislative constituency
Pavlovsk single-member constituency |
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 Constituency boundaries from 2016 to 2026 |
Deputy | |
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Federal subject | Voronezh Oblast |
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Districts | Bobrovsky, Bogucharsky, Buturlinovsky, Kalacheyevsky, Kamensky, Kantemirovsky, Novokhopyorsky, Olkhovatsky, Pavlovsky, Petropavlovsky, Podgorensky, Rossoshansky, Talovsky, Verkhnemamonsky, Vorobyovsky |
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Other territory | Abkhazia (Sukhum-2), Bulgaria (Sofia-3) |
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The Pavlovsk constituency (No.90[a]) is a Russian legislative constituency in Voronezh Oblast. The constituency covers rural central and southern Voronezh Oblast.
The constituency has been represented since 2021 by United Russia deputy Aleksey Gordeyev, Deputy Chairman of the State Duma, former Deputy Prime Minister of Russia and Governor of Voronezh Oblast, who won the open seam, succeeding one-term United Russia incumbent Andrey Markov after the latter decided to successfully seek re-election in the neighbouring Anna constituency.
1993–2007: Bogucharsky District, Kalacheyevsky District, Kamensky District, Kantemirovsky District, Liski, Liskinsky District, Olkhovatsky District, Ostrogozhsk, Ostrogozhsky District, Pavlovsky District, Petropavlovsky District, Podgorensky District, Rossosh, Rossoshansky District, Verkhnemamonsky District, Vorobyovsky District[1][2][3]
The constituency covered rural southern Voronezh Oblast, including the cities of Liski, Ostrogozhsk and Rossosh.
2016–2026: Bobrovsky District, Bogucharsky District, Buturlinovsky District, Kalacheyevsky District, Kamensky District, Kantemirovsky District, Novokhopyorsky District, Olkhovatsky District, Pavlovsky District, Petropavlovsky District, Podgorensky District, Rossoshansky District, Talovsky District, Verkhnemamonsky District, Vorobyovsky District[4]
The constituency was re-created for the 2016 election and retained most of its territory, losing Liskinsky District to Voronezh constituency and Ostrogozhsky District to Pravoberezhny constituency. This seat gained southern half of the former Anna constituency: Bobrovsky, Buturlinovsky, Novokhopersky and Talovsky districts.
Since 2026: Bobrovsky District, Bogucharsky District, Buturlinovsky District, Kalacheyevsky District, Kantemirovsky District, Kashirsky District, Liskinsky District, Novokhopyorsky District, Pavlovsky District, Petropavlovsky District, Rossoshansky District, Talovsky District, Verkhnemamonsky District, Vorobyovsky District, Voronezh (Levoberezhny)[5]
After the 2025 redistricting Voronezh Oblast lost one of its four constituencies, so all remaining seats saw major changes. The constituency retained almost all of its territory and gained southern half of former Voronezh constituency (Levoberezhny city district of Voronezh, Kashirsky District and Liskinsky District). This seat ceded Kamensky, Olkhovatsky and Podgorensky districts to new Voronezh constituency.
Summary of the 17 December 1995 Russian legislative election in the Pavlovsk constituency
Candidate
|
Party
|
Votes
|
%
|
|
Aleksandr Merkulov
|
Communist Party
|
125,841
|
35.29%
|
|
Pyotr Matyashov (incumbent)
|
Independent
|
38,781
|
10.88%
|
|
Aleksey Verbitsky
|
Independent
|
34,709
|
9.73%
|
|
Yevgeny Mezentsev
|
Party of Workers' Self-Government
|
29,844
|
8.37%
|
|
Viktor Glebov
|
Liberal Democratic Party
|
28,765
|
8.07%
|
|
Valery Yegorychev
|
Political Movement of Transport Workers
|
17,549
|
4.92%
|
|
Nikolay Kuralesin
|
Ivan Rybkin Bloc
|
15,037
|
4.22%
|
|
Valery Yakshin
|
Independent
|
14,469
|
4.06%
|
|
Vladimir Mandrygin
|
Power to the People
|
8,330
|
2.34%
|
|
Anatoly Osadchuk
|
Independent
|
4,246
|
1.19%
|
|
against all
|
31,514
|
8.84%
|
|
Total
|
356,554
|
100%
|
|
Source:
|
[7]
|
Summary of the 19 December 1999 Russian legislative election in the Pavlovsk constituency
Candidate
|
Party
|
Votes
|
%
|
|
Nikolay Olshansky
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Independent
|
87,738
|
26.66%
|
|
Anatoly Bakulin
|
Communist Party
|
74,811
|
22.73%
|
|
Ivan Lachugin
|
Independent
|
37,745
|
11.47%
|
|
Aleksandr Lysenko
|
Independent
|
35,459
|
10.77%
|
|
Vladimir Frolov
|
Fatherland – All Russia
|
17,967
|
5.46%
|
|
Yury Goncharov
|
Independent
|
16,287
|
4.95%
|
|
Nikolay Berlev
|
Independent
|
9,850
|
2.99%
|
|
Nikolay Bykov
|
Independent
|
8,763
|
2.66%
|
|
Yuly Zolotovsky
|
Independent
|
6,735
|
2.05%
|
|
Tatyana Vulich
|
Spiritual Heritage
|
2,511
|
0.76%
|
|
Vladimir Yefimov
|
Our Home – Russia
|
2,265
|
0.69%
|
|
against all
|
23,226
|
7.06%
|
|
Total
|
329,103
|
100%
|
|
Source:
|
[9]
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Summary of the 18 September 2016 Russian legislative election in the Pavlovsk constituency
Candidate
|
Party
|
Votes
|
%
|
|
Andrey Markov
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United Russia
|
198,149
|
62.69%
|
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Ruslan Gostev
|
Communist Party
|
39,142
|
12.38%
|
|
Marina Spitsyna
|
Liberal Democratic Party
|
19,148
|
6.06%
|
|
Vitaly Klimov
|
A Just Russia
|
17,479
|
5.53%
|
|
Sergey Poymanov
|
Patriots of Russia
|
16,153
|
5.11%
|
|
Yury Shcherbakov
|
Communists of Russia
|
11,162
|
3.53%
|
|
Marina Lyutikova
|
Party of Growth
|
5,283
|
1.67%
|
|
Sergey Mushtenko
|
Yabloko
|
2,484
|
0.79%
|
|
Mikhail Ochkin
|
The Greens
|
2,187
|
0.69%
|
|
Total
|
316,073
|
100%
|
|
Source:
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[11]
|