The Barnaul Constituency (No.39[a]) is a Russian legislative constituency in the Altai Krai. Until 2007, the constituency covered the entirety of Barnaul, however, since 2016, the constituency covers only part of Barnaul, combined with large rural southern Altai Krai, which dilutes potential protest vote in the administrative centre.
Barnaul single-member constituency |
---|
|
|
Deputy | |
---|
Federal subject | Altai Krai |
---|
Districts | Altaysky, Barnaul (Tsentralny, Zheleznodorozhny), Belokurikha, Biysky, Bystroistoksky, Charyshsky, Kalmansky, Krasnogorsky, Krasnoshchyokovsky, Kuryinsky, Loktevsky, Petropavlovsky, Smolensky, Sovetsky, Soloneshensky, Soltonsky, Topchikhinsky, Tretyakovsky, Ust-Kalmansky, Ust-Pristansky, Zmeinogorsky |
---|
Other territory | Australia, Azerbaijan, China (including Taiwan), Portugal, United Arab Emirates[1] |
---|
Voters | 430,140 (2021)[2] |
---|
Summary of the 17 December 1995 Russian legislative election in the Barnaul constituency
Candidate
|
Party
|
Votes
|
%
|
|
Nina Danilova
|
Communist Party
|
61,813
|
31.33%
|
|
Aleksandr Lazarev
|
Our Home – Russia
|
45,067
|
18.55%
|
|
Aleksey Sarychev (incumbent)
|
Independent
|
33,593
|
9.79%
|
|
Pytr Akelkin
|
Independent
|
27,929
|
7.64%
|
|
Yury Shmakov
|
Liberal Democratic Party
|
19,832
|
6.84%
|
|
Mikhail Yevdokimov
|
Stable Russia
|
18,456
|
3.37%
|
|
Igor Rodionov
|
Independent
|
16,075
|
2.55%
|
|
Galina Timoshenko
|
Yabloko
|
11,849
|
2.09%
|
|
Lyudmila Strigina
|
Pamfilova–Gurov–Lysenko
|
7,952
|
1.74%
|
|
Vasily Tolstykh
|
Independent
|
6,008
|
1.07%
|
|
Sergey Potapov
|
Independent
|
4,299
|
0.48%
|
|
Nikolay Makeyev
|
Independent
|
4,243
|
0.46%
|
|
Viktor Stepanov
|
Education — Future of Russia
|
4,066
|
1.40%
|
|
Yury Bogdanov
|
Independent
|
3,690
|
1.27%
|
|
Igor Marchenko
|
Independent
|
2,448
|
0.84%
|
|
against all
|
17,242
|
5.95%
|
|
Total
|
289,849
|
100%
|
|
Source:
|
[4]
|
Summary of the 19 December 1999 Russian legislative election in the Barnaul constituency
Candidate
|
Party
|
Votes
|
%
|
|
Vladimir Ryzhkov
|
Our Home – Russia
|
102,879
|
53.58%
|
|
Nina Danilova (incumbent)
|
Communist Party
|
74,224
|
26.79%
|
|
Lev Korshunov
|
Independent
|
24,100
|
7.57%
|
|
Aleksey Sarychev
|
Union of Right Forces
|
14,290
|
4.66%
|
|
Gennady Stroitelev
|
Independent
|
11,766
|
3.84%
|
|
Konstantin Veprov
|
Independent
|
5,996
|
1.96%
|
|
Valery Zyryanov
|
Independent
|
4,189
|
1.37%
|
|
Vladimir Barsukov
|
Liberal Democratic Party
|
4,076
|
1.33%
|
|
Anatoly Korchagin
|
Independent
|
3,229
|
1.05%
|
|
Igor Zimin
|
Independent
|
3,003
|
0.98%
|
|
against all
|
16,950
|
5.53%
|
|
Total
|
306,390
|
100%
|
|
Source:
|
[5]
|
Summary of the 7 December 2003 Russian legislative election in the Barnaul constituency
Candidate
|
Party
|
Votes
|
%
|
|
Vladimir Ryzhkov (incumbent)
|
Independent
|
98,606
|
35.10%
|
|
Aleksandr Ovsiyevsky
|
Communist Party
|
42,326
|
15.07%
|
|
Irina Solntseva
|
United Russia
|
38,087
|
13.56%
|
|
Yekaterina Abramova
|
Party of Russia's Rebirth-Russian Party of Life
|
35,425
|
12.61%
|
|
Dmitry Chikalov
|
Independent
|
8,353
|
2.97%
|
|
Aleksandr Goncharenko
|
Yabloko
|
7,874
|
2.80%
|
|
Vladimir Barsukov
|
Liberal Democratic Party
|
6,967
|
2.48%
|
|
Viktor Torshin
|
Independent
|
5,113
|
1.82%
|
|
Vladimir Kirillov
|
The Greens
|
3,575
|
1.27%
|
|
Sergey Kovalev
|
Industrial Party (Prompartiya)
|
1,325
|
0.47%
|
|
Sergey Mamayev
|
Social Democratic Party
|
1,261
|
0.45%
|
|
Yevgeny Semenikhin
|
United Russian Party Rus'
|
1,204
|
0.43%
|
|
Valery Andryushchenko
|
Independent
|
768
|
0.27%
|
|
against all
|
25,899
|
9.22%
|
|
Total
|
281,593
|
100%
|
|
Source:
|
[6]
|
- ^ No.35 in 1993-1995 and 2003-2007, No.34 in 1995-2003