| Zavolzhsky single-member constituency |
|---|
|
 |
| Deputy | |
|---|
| Federal subject | Tver Oblast |
|---|
| Districts | Tver City (Zavolzhsky district), ZATO Ozyorny, ZATO Solnechny, Torzhok City, Rzhev City, Andreapolsky, Belsky, Bologovsky, Vyshnevolotsky, Zharkovsky, Zapadnodvinsky, Zubtsovsky, Kalininsky (north and north-west), Kuvshinovsky, Likhoslavlsky, Nelidovsky, Oleninsky, Ostashkovsky, Penovsky, Rzhevsky, Selizharovsky, Spirovsky, Staritsky, Torzhoksky, Toropetsky, Firovsky[1] |
|---|
| Voters | 517,017 (2021)[2] |
|---|
The Zavolzhsky Constituency (No. 180) is a Russian legislative constituency in the Tver Oblast. In 1993-2007 most of the constituency was included into the old Tver constituency, but in 2016 Bezhetsk constituency was extended to Tver and gained the name "Tver constituency", while mostly rural parts of former Tver constituency were placed into new Zavolzhsky constituency.
Members elected
Election results
2016
Summary of the 18 September 2016 Russian legislative election in the Zavolzhsky constituency
| Candidate
|
Party
|
Votes
|
%
|
|
|
Vladimir Vasilyev
|
United Russia
|
125,812
|
53.03%
|
|
|
Artyom Goncharov
|
Communist Party
|
34,052
|
14.35%
|
|
|
Vladimir Barastov
|
Liberal Democratic Party
|
25,594
|
10.79%
|
|
|
Timur Kanokov
|
A Just Russia
|
15,254
|
6.43%
|
|
|
Marina Belova
|
People's Freedom Party
|
10,650
|
4.49%
|
|
|
Aleksandr Sorokin
|
Yabloko
|
7,314
|
3.08%
|
|
|
Dmitry Slitinsky
|
Communists of Russia
|
12,938
|
2.87%
|
|
|
Vadim Shklyar
|
Civilian Power
|
2,068
|
0.87%
|
|
|
Roman Komarnitsky
|
Civic Platform
|
1,755
|
0.74%
|
|
|
| Total
|
237,250
|
100%
|
|
|
| Source:
|
[3]
|
2018
2021
Sources
Notes
References