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Dzerzhinsk constituency

The Dzerzhinsk constituency (No.119) was a Russian legislative constituency in Nizhny Novgorod Oblast in 1993–2007. It covered western Nizhny Novgorod Oblast, including industrial towns of Dzerzhinsk and Pavlovo. The seat was last occupied by United Russia faction member Vladimir Stalmakhov, a businessman and FSB veteran, who defeated incumbent first-term Communist State Duma member Vladimir Basov in the 2003 election.

Boundaries
1993–1995: Bogorodsk, Bogorodsky District, Dalnekonstantinovsky District, Dzerzhinsk, Navashinsky District, Pavlovo, Pavlovsky District, Sosnovsky District, Vachsky District The constituency covered west-central part of Nizhny Novgorod Oblast, including western suburbs of Nizhny Novgorod and the industrial towns of Bogorodsk, Dzerzhinsk and Pavlovo. 1995–2007: Ardatovsky District, Bogorodsk, Bogorodsky District, Dalnekonstantinovsky District, Dzerzhinsk, Navashinsky District, Pavlovo, Pavlovsky District, Sosnovsky District, Vachsky District The constituency barely changed after the 1995 redistricting, only gaining Ardatovsky District. ==Members elected==
Election results
1993 Declared candidates • Aleksandr Fyodorov (Independent), Member of Nizhny Novgorod Oblast Council of People's Deputies (1990–present) • Nikolay Katkov (YaBL), Member of Nizhny Novgorod Oblast Council of People's Deputies (1990–present) • Sergey Maslagin (Independent), Pavlovo Tool Plant general director • Mikhail Seslavinsky (Independent), former People's Deputy of Russia (1990–1993) • Mikhail Stepanov (Independent), businessman • Anatoly Tarasov (Independent), chemical executive • Sergey Tsvetov (DPR), chairman of the party office in Pavlovo • Vladimir Yershov (RDDR), Nizhny Novgorod State University associate professor Results 1995 Declared candidatesIgor Artyomov (Independent), chairman of the board of Russian All-National Union (1990–present) • Igor Dyukov (PPR–ST), union leader • Luiza Gagut (LDPR), Member of State Duma (1994–present) • Aleksey Guskov (Independent), chemical executive • Vladimir Koterev (Independent), businessman • Sergey Leskov (Independent), military unit commander • Mikhail Nefedov (Independent), construction executive • Aleksey Purusov (Forward, Russia!), entrepreneur • Yelena Sannikova (Social Democrats), State Duma staffer • Mikhail Seslavinsky (NDR), incumbent Member of State Duma (1994–present) • Anatoly Tarasov (CPRF), chemical executive, 1993 candidate for this seat • Sergey Tsvetov (KRO), aide to State Duma member, 1993 DPR candidate for this seat • Boris Usov (Independent), Pavlovo Bus Factory deputy general director Results 1998 Declared candidates • Tamara Aksenova (Independent), aide to State Duma member • Gennady Blinov (Independent) • Andrey Gerasimov (Independent), transportation businessman • Valery Kravchenko (Independent), lawyer • Sergey Lisovsky (Independent), television executive • Roman Murashov (Independent), journalist • Ardalyon Panteleyev (Independent), attorney • Ilya Polyashov (Independent), Member of Dzerzhinsk City Duma (1996–present) • Lidia Ugolnikova (Independent), chemical technical school history teacher Results 1999 Declared candidates • Ivan Altyshev (KTR–zSS), concrete worker • Aleksandr Gorin (Independent), branch manager • Oleg Karpov (Independent), chemical executive • Gennady Khodyrev (Independent), former Minister of Russia for Antimonopoly Policy and Entrepreneurship Support (1998–1999), former Member of State Duma (1996–1998), 1997 gubernatorial candidate • Aleksandr Korimenko (Independent), entrepreneur • Sergey Leskov (Independent), Chairman of the Dzerzhinsk City Duma (1996–present), 1995 candidate for this seat • Aleksey Marchenko (LDPR), businessman • Ardalyon Panteleyev (Independent), incumbent Member of State Duma (1998–present) • Irina Parfenova (Independent), nonprofit executive • Alina Radchenko (NDR), Severstal executive • Svetlana Shalnova (DN), trade executive • Andrey Tsvetkov (NikolayevFyodorov Bloc), businessman Withdrawn candidates • Yury Gerletsky (Independent), Member of Legislative Assembly of Nizhny Novgorod Oblast (1994–present) Did not file • Andrey Lukyanov (Independent) • Irina Lukyanova (Independent), militsiya officer • Vladimir Malichenko (Independent), community activist • Grigory Medvedev (Independent) • Yury Novozhilov (Independent) • Georgy Tikhonov (Independent) • Aleksandr Vdovkin (Independent), militsiya officer Results 2002 Declared candidatesVladimir Basov (Independent), former Member of City Duma of Nizhny Novgorod (1996–2000), GAZ deputy director • Yury Demin (Independent), union leader • Viktor Kazimirov (Independent), metal worker • Aleksandr Kirin (Independent), Member of Dzerzhinsk City Duma (2000–present) • Alina Radchenko (Independent), Severstal executive, 1999 candidate for this seat • Eduard Savenko (Limonov) (Independent), chairman of the National Bolshevik Party (1993–present), writer Results 2003 Declared candidatesVladimir Basov (CPRF), incumbent Member of State Duma (2002–present) • Yury Bratukhin (Independent), pensioner • Aleksandr Fyodorov (Independent), Member of Pavlovsky District Municipal Assembly (1996–present), businessman, 1993 candidate for this seat • Gulya Khodyreva (Rodina), Head of the Nizhny Novgorod Oblast Administration Department of Public Affairs, wife of Governor of Nizhny Novgorod Oblast Gennady Khodyrev • Aleksey Kostin (LDPR), Nizhny Novgorod Academy of Architecture and Civil Engineering lecturer • Aleksandr Linev (), paramedic • Artyom Nasledskov (Independent), transportation executive • Ardalyon Panteleyev (RPP-PSS), former Member of State Duma (1998–1999) • Alina Radchenko (Independent), nonprofit chairwoman, 1999 and 2002 candidate for this seat • Aleksandr Romanov (Independent), insolvency liquidator • Dmitry Shurov (Independent), Mayor of Vorsma (2000–present) • Vladimir Stalmakhov (Independent), businessman, banker Failed to qualify • Aleksandr Tarlakovsky (Independent), lawyer Did not file • Nikolay Nikolayev (KP Unity), engineer Results ==Notes==
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