Moscow_City_Duma_District_30

Moscow City Duma District 30

Moscow City Duma District 30

Moscow City Duma electoral constituency


Moscow City Duma District 30 is one of 45 constituencies in Moscow City Duma. Currently the district covers parts of Southern Moscow.

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The district has been represented since 2019 by United Russia member Margarita Rusetskaya, rector of Pushkin Institute in 2013–2022, who won by a margin of just 84 votes in a contentious three-way election against Independent activist Roman Yuneman and Communist blogger Vladislav Zhukovsky, which was mired by an electronic voting controversy.

Boundaries

1993–1997: Dorogomilovsky[lower-alpha 1], Matveyevskoye[lower-alpha 2], Mosfilmovsky[lower-alpha 3], Ochakovo[lower-alpha 2], Prospekt Vernadskogo, Ramenki
The district covered parts of Western Moscow.

1997–2001: Ochakovo-Matveyevskoye, Prospekt Vernadskogo, Ramenki, TEOS MGU
The district continued to cover parts of Western Moscow, but ceded its part of Dorogomilovo to District 31.

2001–2005: Mozhaysky, Ochakovo-Matveyevskoye, Prospekt Vernadskogo
The district changed significantly as it swapped Ramenki for Mozhaysky District with the neighbouring District 31.

2005–2014: constituency abolished
Prior to the 2005 election the number of constituencies was reduced to 15, so the district was eliminated.

2014–2024: Chertanovo Tsentralnoye, Chertanovo Yuzhnoye[2]
The district was created prior to the 2014 election, after Moscow City Duma had been expanded from 35 to 45 seats. It covers parts of Chertanovo in Southern Moscow.

2024–present: Danilovsky, Donskoy, Nagatino-Sadovniki, Nagorny[3]
During the 2023–24 Moscow redistricting the territory of the district became the base for new District 29, except for a northeastern corner of Chertanovo Yuzhnoye, which was ceded to District 28. In its new configuration the district covers most of former District 32 (Danilovsky, Donskoy, Nagatino-Sadovniki) as well as Nagorny District from the eliminated District 31.

Members elected

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Election results

2001

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2014

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2019

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Notes

  1. merged with Kutuzovsky District to form Dorogomilovo District in 1994
  2. merged to form Ochakovo-Matveyevskoye District in 1997
  3. merged with Ramenki District in 1997

References

  1. "Результаты выборов по одномандатному избирательному округу, 2019". moscow-city.vybory.izbirkom.ru. Retrieved 2024-01-14.

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