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Legislative Assembly of Krasnodar Krai Законодательное собрание Краснодарского края | |
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7th legislature | |
Type | |
Type | |
Leadership | |
Chairman | Yury Burlachko, United Russia since 28 September 2017 |
Structure | |
Seats | 70 |
Political groups | United Russia (62) Party of Growth (1) |
Elections | |
Mixed | |
Last election | 11 September 2022 |
Next election | 2027 |
Meeting place | |
3 Red Street, Krasnodar | |
Website | |
http://www.kubzsk.ru |
The Legislative Assembly of Krasnodar Krai (Russian: Законодательное собрание Краснодарского края, ЗСК, romanized: Zakonodatel'noye sobraniye Krasnodarskogo kraya, ZSK) is the regional parliament of Krasnodar Krai, a federal subject of Russia. The assembly exercises its authority by passing laws, resolutions, and other legal acts and by supervising the implementation and observance of the laws and other legal acts passed by it.[1]
The assembly consists of 70 deputies elected for a term of five years; 35 members are elected by single-member constituencies and another 35 deputies are elected in party lists.[2]
Election of deputies of the Legislative Assembly of the first convocation was held on 20 November 1994. The Legislative Assembly began on 14 December 1994, composing of 50 deputies. The first Chairman of the Legislative Assembly elected was Alexey Bagmut. From December 1995 to September 2017, the Parliament of the Kuban was headed by Vladimir Beketov. The same composition - 50 members - worked the Legislative Assembly of the second convocation.
On 24 November 2002, elections of deputies to the Legislative Assembly of the third convocation were held for 70 constituencies.
On 2 December 2007, elections of deputies of the Legislative Assembly of the fourth convocation were held. 70 deputies were elected under a mixed system: 35 deputies in single-mandate districts (in all districts won by representatives of United Russia) and 35 deputies - on party lists. United Russia won 26 seats out of 35. The Communist party won six seats and A Just Russia won 3 seats.
Elections of deputies of the Legislative Assembly of the fifth convocation were held on 14 October 2012. The number of deputies was increased to 100: 50 deputies in single-mandate constituencies and 50 in a party list. The Parliament passed the representatives of two political parties: United Russia with 95 seats and the Communist party with 5 seats.[3]
Elections of the Legislative Assembly of the sixth convocation were held on 10 September 2017. The number of deputies was again reduced to 70. United Russia won the election with 60 seats, the Communist party and the Liberal Democratic party won 3 seats, A Just Russia and the Party of Growth won 1 seat, as well as 2 independent members. Yury Burlachenko was elected as Chairman of the Legislative Assembly.
Party[4][5] | % | Seats | |
---|---|---|---|
United Russia | 70.78 | 60 | |
Communist Party of the Russian Federation | 11.53 | 3 | |
Liberal Democratic Party of Russia | 11.15 | 3 | |
Self-nominated | — | 2 | |
A Just Russia | 3.46 | 1 | |
Party of Growth | — | 1 | |
Communists of Russia | 1.54 | 0 | |
Registered voters/turnout | 42.03 |
Party[6][7] | % | Seats | |
---|---|---|---|
United Russia | 70.80 | 62 | |
Communist Party of the Russian Federation | 10.76 | 2 | |
Liberal Democratic Party of Russia | 6.63 | 3 | |
A Just Russia — For Truth | 5.78 | 2 | |
Party of Growth | — | 1 | |
New People | 4.86 | 0 | |
Registered voters/turnout | 53.31 |
№ | Portrait | Name | Period | Party | Legislature | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Alexey Bagmut[8] | 14 December 1994 | December 1995 | Independent | I (1994) | |
2 | Vladimir Beketov | December 1995 | 10 September 2017 | United Russia | ||
II (1998) | ||||||
III (2002) | ||||||
IV (2007) | ||||||
V (2012) | ||||||
3 | Yury Burlachko | 28 September 2017 | Incumbent | United Russia | VI (2017) | |
VII (2022) |