- Source: 2024 Tula Oblast Duma election
The 2024 Tula Oblast Duma election took place on 6–8 September 2024, on common election day, coinciding with 2024 Tula Oblast gubernatorial election. All 36 seats in the Oblast Duma were up for reelection.
United Russia retained its overwhelming majority in the Oblast Duma, winning 59% of the vote. Russian Party of Pensioners for Social Justice failed to cross the threshold and lost its sole deputy in the Duma.
Electoral system
Under current election laws, the Oblast Duma is elected for a term of five years, with parallel voting. 12 seats are elected by party-list proportional representation with a 5% electoral threshold, with the other half elected in 24 single-member constituencies by first-past-the-post voting. Seats in the proportional part are allocated using the Imperiali quota, modified to ensure that every party list, which passes the threshold, receives at least one mandate.
Candidates
= Party lists
=To register regional lists of candidates, parties need to collect 0.5% of signatures of all registered voters in Tula Oblast.
The following parties were relieved from the necessity to collect signatures:
United Russia
Communist Party of the Russian Federation
A Just Russia — Patriots — For Truth
Liberal Democratic Party of Russia
New People
Russian Party of Pensioners for Social Justice
Communists of Russia
New People took part in Tula Oblast legislative election for the first time, while Communists of Russia, which entered the parliament in the last election with 5.67% of the vote, chose not to file a party list and nominated only one candidate (incumbent deputy Yury Moiseyev) in the single-mandate constituency.
= Single-mandate constituencies
=24 single-mandate constituencies were formed in Tula Oblast. To register candidates in single-mandate constituencies need to collect 3% of signatures of registered voters in the constituency.
Polls
Results
= Results by party lists
=Businessman and second-term Oblast Duma member Andrey Dubrovsky (United Russia) was elected Chairman of the Oblast Duma, replacing Nikolay Vorobyov (United Russia), who was appointed to the Federation Council by Governor Dmitry Milyayev. Billionaire businessman Mikhail Borshchev (United Russia) was appointed as Oblast Duma representative to the Federation Council, replacing incumbent Senator Marina Levina (United Russia). Levina, in turn, was elected First Deputy Chairwoman of the Oblast Duma.
= Results in single-member constituencies
=District 1
District 2
District 3
District 4
District 5
District 6
District 7
District 8
District 9
District 10
District 11
District 12
District 13
District 14
District 15
District 16
District 17
District 18
District 19
District 20
District 21
District 22
District 23
District 24
= Members
=Incumbent deputies are highlighted with bold, elected members who declined to take a seat are marked with strikethrough.
See also
2024 Russian elections
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Invasi Ukraina oleh Rusia
- 2024 Tula Oblast Duma election
- 2024 Tula Oblast gubernatorial election
- Tula Oblast Duma
- Governor of Tula Oblast
- 2021 Tula Oblast gubernatorial election
- Vladimir Putin 2024 presidential campaign
- 2024 Russian presidential election
- 2024 Russian elections
- 2024 Samara Oblast gubernatorial election
- Nikolay Kharitonov