CPRF faction in the State Duma

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Communist Party of the Russian Federation
Коммунистическая партия Российской Федерации
Communist Party of the Russian Federation logo
ChamberState Duma
Legislature(s)1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th
Foundation13 January 1994
Member partiesCPRF
Left Front
DPA
DZNS
PresidentGennady Zyuganov (since 1994)
Vice presidentsNikolay Kolomeitsev (since 2016)
Representation
57 / 450
IdeologyCommunism
Social conservatism
WebsitePage on the State Duma website

The Communist Party of the Russian Federation faction in the State Duma is the deputy association of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation in the State Duma of the VIII convocation (2021–2026).

In the 2021 elections to the State Duma, the CPRF, according to official data, received 18.94% of the vote, which gave it the right to 48 deputy mandates. 9 people nominated by the party won the elections in single-mandate constituencies. Thus, according to the results of the elections to the State Duma, the Communist Party faction received 57 seats in the State Duma of the VIII convocation.[1]

The voting took place in a tense atmosphere and was accompanied by massive violations of electoral legislation, especially in Moscow, where opposition candidates supported by Smart Voting (Valery Rashkin, Denis Parfenov, Mikhail Lobanov, Anastasia Udaltsova, Sergei Obukhov, Mikhail Tarantsov, as well as representatives of other political forces Anastasia Bryukhanova and Sergey Mitrokhin) were in the lead all three days of voting, but after adding the results of remote electronic voting (DEG) they were defeated in all districts,[2] which significantly reduced the possible representation of the party in the new convocation of the Duma. The Communist Party of the Russian Federation did not recognize the results of the elections in Moscow, demanded that the results of the DEG be canceled as falsified[3] and organized mass protests in the format of meetings with deputies.[4]

On October 7, an organizational meeting of the faction was held, at which Gennady Zyuganov was elected its chairman, and Nikolay Kolomeitsev was elected first deputy chairman.[5]

Activities

In the election of the Chairman of the State Duma, the faction nominated Dmitry Novikov,[6] who received 61 votes against 360 from the current head of parliament Vyacheslav Volodin.[7] At the same time, in addition to the deputies of the faction, Oksana Dmitriyeva from the Party of Growth and part of the LDPR faction also voted for Novikov: Sergey Karginov, Sergey Leonov, Evgeny Markov, Dmitry Svishchev, Vladimir Sipyagin, Ivan Sukharev and Boris Chernyshov.[8]

On October 14, 2021, the United Russia faction blocked the proposal of the Communist Party faction to conduct a parliamentary investigation into the revealed facts of torture of prisoners.

On November 25, 2021, the deputy from the Communist Party of the Russian Federation Valery Rashkin was deprived of parliamentary immunity.[11]

  • 341 deputies voted for depriving him of his parliamentary immunity and agreeing to initiate a criminal case against him (including 287 deputies of the United Russia faction, 20 deputies of the A Just Russia faction, 21 deputies of the LDPR faction, 12 deputies of the New People faction and 1 Deputy, not a member of the faction - Yevgeny Marchenko);
  • 55 deputies voted against (including 54 deputies of the Communist Party faction and 1 deputy of the Just Russia faction - Dmitry Kuznetsov);
  • 2 deputies abstained (both from the A Just Russia faction - Vadim Belousov and Nikolai Burlyayev).[12]

Composition

8th State Duma

The composition of the faction is indicated in accordance with the official publication of Rossiyskaya Gazeta[13] and the list of deputies on the official website of the State Duma.[14]

Constituency Name Date of birth Place of birth Party Comment
Party list
Gennady Zyuganov
(Party and faction leader)
26 June 1944  Russian SFSR
(Mymrino, Oryol Oblast)
CPRF
Party list
Svetlana Savitskaya 8 August 1948  Russian SFSR
(Moscow)
CPRF
Party list
Yury Afonin 22 March 1977  Russian SFSR
(Tula)
CPRF
Party list
Andrey Klychkov 2 September 1979  Russian SFSR
(Kaliningrad)
CPRF Renounced the mandate,
which was then transferred to Robert Kochiev
Party list
Robert Kochiev 16 March 1966  Georgian SSR
(Tskhinvali, South Ossetian AO)
CPRF
Party list
Ivan Melnikov
(1st Vice Speaker)
7 August 1950  Russian SFSR
(Bogoroditsk, Tula Oblast)
CPRF
Party list
Vladimir Kashin 10 August 1948  Russian SFSR
(Nazaryevo, Ryazan Oblast)
CPRF
Party list
Dmitry Novikov 12 September 1969  Russian SFSR
(Khabarovsk)
CPRF
Party list
Nikolay Kharitonov 30 October 1948  Russian SFSR
(Rezino, Novosibirsk Oblast)
CPRF
Party list
Nikolay Kolomeitsev 1 September 1956  Russian SFSR
(Protsikov, Rostov Oblast)
CPRF
Party list
Sergey Shargunov 12 May 1980  Russian SFSR
(Moscow)
CPRF
Party list
Vadim Kumin 1 January 1973  Russian SFSR
(Chelyabinsk)
CPRF
Party list
Yury Sinelshchikov 26 September 1947  Russian SFSR
(Bogucharovo, Tula Oblast)
CPRF
Party list
Kazbek Taysaev 12 February 1967  Russian SFSR
(Chikola, North Ossetia)
CPRF
Party list
Alexey Kurinny 18 January 1974  Georgian SSR
(Tskhinvali, South Ossetian AO)
CPRF
Rubtsovsk Maria Prusakova 14 September 1983  Russian SFSR
(Barnaul)
CPRF Supported by Smart Voting in their constituency.
Party list
Anzhelika Glazkova 28 December 1968  Russian SFSR
(Kostroma)
DZNS
CPRF
Party list
Alexander Yushchenko 19 November 1969  Byelorussian SSR
(Mazyr)
CPRF Supported by Smart Voting in their constituency.
Party list
Vyacheslav Markhayev 1 June 1955  Russian SFSR
(Sharaldai, Irkutsk Oblast)
CPRF
Party list
Anatoly Bifov 7 January 1963  Russian SFSR
(Baksan, Kabardino-Balkaria)
CPRF
Party list
Nikolay Arefiev 11 March 1949  Russian SFSR
(Chagan, Astrakhan Obl.)
CPRF
Party list
Boris Komotsky 31 January 1956  East Germany
(Potsdam)
CPRF
Syktyvkar Oleg Mikhailov 6 January 1987  Russian SFSR
(Pechora, Komi ASSR)
CPRF Supported by Smart Voting in their constituency.
Mari El Sergey Kazankov 9 October 1972  Russian SFSR
(Maryino, Mari ASSR)
CPRF Supported by Smart Voting in their constituency.
Party list
Irina Filatova 8 August 1978  Russian SFSR
(Novosibirsk)
CPRF
Party list
Sergey Levchenko 2 November 1953  Russian SFSR
(Novosibirsk)
CPRF
Irkutsk Mikhail Shchapov 20 September 1975  Russian SFSR
(Kirensk, Irkutsk Obl.)
CPRF Supported by Smart Voting in their constituency.
Party list
Artem Prokofiev 31 December 1983  Russian SFSR
(Kazan, Tatar ASSR)
CPRF Supported by Smart Voting in their constituency.
Party list
Maria Drobot 21 March 1982  Russian SFSR
(Rostov-on-Don)
CPRF
Party list
Ivan Babich 2 September 1982  Russian SFSR
(Nazarovo, Krasnoyarsk Krai)
CPRF
Party list
Nikolay Osadchy 8 December 1957  Russian SFSR
(Tuapse, Krasnodar Krai)
CPRF
Party list
Alexey Kornienko 22 July 1976  Uzbek SSR
(Namangan)
CPRF Supported by Smart Voting in their constituency.
Party list
Sergei Gavrilov 27 January 1966  Russian SFSR
(Tula)
CPRF
Party list
Nikolay Ivanov 17 January 1957  Russian SFSR
(Kursk)
CPRF
Party list
Roman Lyabikhov 7 May 1973  Russian SFSR
(Severodvinsk, Arkhangelsk Obl.)
CPRF
Party list
Oleg Lebedev 12 October 1976  Russian SFSR
(Tula)
CPRF
Party list
Olga Alimova 10 April 1953  Russian SFSR
(Saratov)
CPRF Supported by Smart Voting in their constituency.
Party list
Vladimir Isakov 25 February 1987  Russian SFSR
(Tula)
CPRF
LKSM RF
Supported by Smart Voting in their constituency.
Party list
Anatoly Lokot 18 January 1959  Russian SFSR
(Novosibirsk)
CPRF Renounced the mandate,
which was then transferred to Renat Suleymanov
Party list
Renat Suleymanov 24 December 1965  Russian SFSR
(Novosibirsk)
CPRF Supported by Smart Voting in their constituency.
Party list
Vladimir Blotsky 10 November 1977  Russian SFSR
(Klin, Moscow Oblast)
CPRF
Party list
Mikhail Berulava 3 August 1950  Georgian SSR
(Sukhumi, Abkhaz ASSR)
CPRF
Party list
Sergey Panteleev 4 July 1951  ) CPRF
Party list
Georgy Kamnev 5 October 1983  Russian SFSR
(Serdobsk, Penza Oblast)
CPRF
Party list
Nikolay Vasiliev 28 March 1958  Russian SFSR
(Grachyovsky Dist., Orenburg Obl.)
CPRF
Party list
Konstantin Cheremisov 7 May 1960 CPRF Renounced the mandate,
which was then transferred to Boris Ivanyuzhenkov
Party list
Boris Ivanyuzhenkov 25 February 1966  Russian SFSR
(Reutov, Moscow Oblast)
CPRF Supported by Smart Voting in their constituency.
Party list
Viktor Sobolev 23 February 1950  Russian SFSR
(Kalinino, Krasnodar Krai)
DPA
CPRF
Omsk Andrey Alekhin 9 February 1959  Russian SFSR
(Novosibirsk)
CPRF Supported by Smart Voting in their constituency.
Moskalenki Oleg Smolin 10 February 1952  Kazakh SSR
(Poludino, North Kazakhstan)
CPRF Supported by Smart Voting in their constituency.
Tolyatti Leonid Kalashnikov 6 August 1960  Russian SFSR
(Stepnoy Dvorets, Buryat ASSR)
CPRF Supported by Smart Voting in their constituency.
Party list
Mikhail Avdeev 6 March 1977  Russian SFSR
(Moscow)
CPRF
Party list
Nina Ostanina 26 December 1955  Russian SFSR
(Kolpakovo, Altai Krai)
CPRF
Promyshlenny Mikhail Matveyev 13 May 1968  
Dnipropetrovsk
)
CPRF Supported by Smart Voting in their constituency.
Party list
Evgeny Bessonov 26 November 1968  Russian SFSR
(Rostov-on-Don)
CPRF Supported by Smart Voting in their constituency.
Party list
Nikolay Ezersky 8 May 1956  Russian SFSR
(Palmino, Sverdlovsk Oblast)
CPRF
Party list
Valery Rashkin 14 March 1955  Russian SFSR
(Zhilino, Kaliningrad Oblast)
CPRF Supported by Smart Voting in their constituency.
Deprived of mandate 25 May 2022,
mandate transferred to Anastasia Udaltsova
Nagatinsky (defeated) Anastasia Udaltsova 2 September 1978  Ukrainian SSR
(Cherkasy)
Left Front
CPRF
Supported by Smart Voting in their constituency.
On 29 June 2022 Valery Rashkin's
mandate was transferred to her.
Party list
Sergei Obukhov 5 October 1958  Ukrainian SSR
(Lviv)
CPRF Supported by Smart Voting in their constituency.
Party list
Denis Parfenov 11 September 1987  Russian SFSR
(Moscow)
CPRF Supported by Smart Voting in their constituency.
Yakutsk Petr Ammosov 22 September 1966  Russian SFSR
(Yakutsk)
CPRF

References

  1. Коммерсантъ
    (in Russian). 2021-09-20. Retrieved 2021-09-21.
  2. РБК
    (in Russian). 2021-09-20. Retrieved 2021-09-21.
  3. tvrain.ru
    (in Russian). 2021-09-20. Retrieved 2021-09-21.
  4. ^ "В Москве прошла встреча депутатов-коммунистов с избирателями". kprf.ru. 2021-09-25.
  5. ^ "Г.А. Зюганов возглавил фракцию КПРФ в VIII созыве Госдумы". kprf.ru. 2021-10-07.
  6. ^ "Выступление Д.Г. Новикова на первом заседании Госдумы восьмого созыва". kprf.ru. 2021-10-12.
  7. РБК
    . 2021-10-12.
  8. ^ "Сергей Обухов про "дуэль" Володин - Новиков". kprf.ru. 2021-10-12.
  9. ^ ""Единая Россия" заблокировала предложение КПРФ провести парламентское расследование пыток в тюрьмах". www.currenttime.tv/. 2021-10-15. Retrieved 2021-10-22.
  10. ^ "Справка о результатах голосования по вопросу: Протокольное поручение депутата Куринный А. В." Archived from the original on 14 October 2021. Retrieved 2021-10-22.
  11. ^ "Коммуниста Рашкина лишили неприкосновенности. Как это было и что такое депутатский иммунитет". www.bbc.com/. 2021-11-25. Retrieved 2021-11-25.
  12. ^ "Справка о результатах голосования по вопросу: О проекте постановления Государственной Думы № 22355-8 «О даче согласия на лишение неприкосновенности депутата Государственной Думы Федерального Собрания Российской Федерации Рашкина Валерия Федоровича и возбуждение в отношении его уголовного дела»". 2021-11-25. Archived from the original on 25 November 2021. Retrieved 2021-11-25.
  13. Российская газета
    , Федеральный выпуск № 219(8570). 2021-09-25.
  14. ^ Состав фракции