Legnica (parliamentary constituency)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Legnica is a Polish parliamentary constituency in the Lower Silesian Voivodeship.[1] It elects twelve members of the Sejm and three members of the Senate.
The district has the number '1' and is named after the city of Legnica. It includes the counties of Bolesławiec, Głogów County, Jawor, Jelenia Góra, Kamienna Góra, Legnica, Lubań, Lubin, Lwówek Śląski, Polkowice, Zgorzelec, and Złotoryja, and the city counties of Jelenia Góra and Legnica.
In its current form was created in 2001.[2]
Election results
Year | Party |
---|---|
2001 | Democratic Left Alliance |
2005 | Law and Justice |
2007 | Civic Platform |
2011 | Civic Platform |
List of members
Senate
Member | Party | Term | |
---|---|---|---|
Witold Idczak | Law and Justice | ||
Tomasz Misiak | Civic Platform | ||
Jacek Swakoń | Poland Comes First[A] | ||
^A Elected for Law and Justice. |
Sejm
Member | Party | Term | |
---|---|---|---|
Roman Brodniak | Civic Platform | ||
Piotr Cybulski | Law and Justice | ||
Ewa Drozd | Civic Platform | ||
Adam Lipiński | Law and Justice | ||
Robert Kropiwnicki | Civic Platform | 2010–[A] | |
Marzena Machałek | Law and Justice | ||
Grzegorz Schetyna | Poland Comes First | ||
Wojciech Sokołowski | Civic Platform | ||
Elżbieta Witek | Law and Justice | ||
Norbert Wojnarowski | Civic Platform | ||
Elżbieta Zakrzewska | Democratic Left Alliance | 2010–[B] | |
Ryszard Zbrzyzny | Democratic Left Alliance | ||
^A Kropiwnicki replaced Janusz Mikulicz on 16 December 2010. ^B Zakrzewska replaced Jerzy Szmajdziński on 7 May 2010. |
Footnotes
- ↑ The Act of 5 January 2011 - Election Code (Coll. Laws of 2011 No. 21, item. 113, as amended.)
- ↑ Act of 12 April 2001 - Elections to the Polish Sejm and the Polish Senate (Coll. Laws of 2001 No 46, item. 499, as amended.)
|
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.