Gennady Burbulis Explained

Office:Member of the Federation Council
Term Start:2 November 2001
Term End:16 November 2007
Predecessor:Mikhail Prusak
Successor:Aleksandr Korovnikov
Office1:Member of the State Duma for
Sverdlovsk Oblast
Term Start1:11 January 1994
Term End1:18 January 2000
Predecessor1:Leonid Nekrasov
Successor1:Zelimkhan Mutsoev
Constituency1:Pervouralsk (No. 166)
Office2:Secretary of State under the President of the Russian Federation
President2:Boris Yeltsin
Term Start2:8 May 1992
Term End2:26 November 1992
Predecessor2:Position established
Successor2:Position abolished
Office3:First Deputy Prime Minister of Russian SFSR/Russian Federation
President3:Boris Yeltsin
Primeminister3:Boris Yeltsin
(de facto)
Term Start3:6 November 1991
Term End3:15 June 1992
Predecessor3:Oleg Lobov
Successor3:Yegor Gaidar
Office4:Secretary of State of the Russian SFSR
President4:Boris Yeltsin
Term Start4:19 July 1991
Term End4:14 April 1992
Predecessor4:Position established
Successor4:Position abolished
Birth Date:4 August 1945
Birth Place:Pervouralsk, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
Death Place:Baku, Azerbaijan
Resting Place:Troyekurovskoye Cemetery, Moscow
Party:CPSU (1971–1990)
Alma Mater:Ural State University

Gennady Eduardovich Burbulis (Russian: Генна́дий Эдуа́рдович Бу́рбулис; 4 August 1945 – 19 June 2022) was a Russian politician. A close associate of Boris Yeltsin, he held several high positions in the first Russian government, including Secretary of State, and was one of the drafters and signers of the Belavezha Accords on behalf of Russia. He was one of the most influential Russian political figures in the late 1980s and early 1990s and one of the main architects of Russian political and economic reform.[1]

Early life and education

Burbulis was born in the Urals city of Pervouralsk on 4 August 1945, the grandson of Kazimir Antonovich Burbulis, a Lithuanian deportee during that country’s occupation and Russification by the Russian Empire (1915). He described how his decision to keep a Lithuanian surname against the urging of his Russian mother cost him the position of the first and only Vice President of Russia in 1991, a position that went to Alexander Rutskoy; according to Burbulis Yeltsin told him that his surname was "questionable for the Russian electorate".[2]

His father Eduard Kazimirovich was a military pilot, and his mother Valentina Vasilievna Belonogova was an ethnic Russian. In 1962, he graduated from high school and went to work as an instrumentation fitter at the Chrompikovy Plant, and then at the Pervouralsky Novotrubny Plant.

In 1964, he began active military service in the Strategic Rocket Forces in the Kirov Oblast.[3]

He graduated from the philosophy department of Ural State University and later was awarded a Candidate of Science (Philosophy) degree. He taught in several institutions of higher education in and around Sverdlovsk (now Yekaterinburg).[1]

Career

In 1987, during the perestroika period, Burbulis organized the Sverdlovsk Podium, an open forum for discussing local and later national social, political, and economic problems. In 1989 he was elected to the Congress of People's Deputies of the Soviet Union. He was one of the initiators of the Inter-regional Deputies’ Group, the first legally organized opposition in the Soviet Union, which was later credited by some with being one of the prime catalysts for democratic reform.[4] In 1989, Burbulis became acquainted with Boris Yeltsin, who had been elected to the Congress of People’s Deputies with 90 percent of the vote. Burbulis nominated him to the post of Chairman of the Supreme Soviet (the Congress’s standing body), which he was elected to on 29 May 1990. Yeltsin appointed Burbulis his authorized representative and deputy chairman of his Higher Consultation and Coordination Council.[1] On 12 June 1990, the Congress of People’s Deputies of the RSFSR passed a law on the sovereignty of Russia within the framework of the Soviet Union. Yeltsin declared his candidacy for the newly established post of president and Burbulis organized his election campaign. On 12 June 1991, Yeltsin won the presidency with 57 percent of the popular vote. On 19 July 1991, Yeltsin appointed Burbulis Secretary of State, a position he held until 8 May 1992, when the post was renamed State Secretary to the President of the Russian Federation (which Burbulis held until 26 November 1992). From 6 November 1991, until 14 April 1992, Burbulis was also First Deputy to the Chairman of the Government (Cabinet).[5] Effectively the second leader in the Russian government after Yeltsin, Burbulis was responsible for developing the strategy and overseeing the implementation of political and economic reforms. He also made significant contributions to the shaping of foreign policy and domestic security issues.[1]

Burbulis was one of the drafters and signers of the Belavezha Accords that effectively ended the Soviet Union and founded the Commonwealth of Independent States.[6]

By the end of 1992, Burbulis had become a lightning rod for criticism directed against the government’s reform policies. He served briefly (26 November 1992–14 December 1992) as the head of a group of advisors to the president and then left the federal administration.[5]

Later work

In 1993, Burbulis founded the Strategy Center for Humanitarian and Political Science.[7] He was elected to the State Duma (the lower house of the Russian parliament) twice and served as a deputy from 14 January 1994, to 18 January 2000. He served as deputy to the governor of Novgorod Oblast from 5 June 2000 to 14 November 2001, after which he represented Novgorod in the Federal Assembly (upper house of the Russian parliament) from 14 November 2001, to 5 September 2007. As Advisor to the Chairman of the Federation Council he was the initiator and first deputy to the Chairman of the Center for Legislation Monitoring and headed the group producing the annual Review of Legislation in the Russian Federation.

In August 2009, he founded the School of Politosophy and was president of the Youth Forum of Modernizers, “My Russia.” He was also the president of the Short Track Speed Skating organizational body of the Russian Federation.[8]

Death

Gennady Burbulis died on 19 June 2022 in Baku, Azerbaijan, where he took part in the Global Baku Forum at the age of 76.[9] [10]

Personal life

He was married, Natalya Kirsanova, who studied with him at university, and taught philosophy at the Ural Forest Engineering Institute. They had a son, Anton, who lives in Moscow.

Honours and awards

See also

Notes and References

  1. Rossiya 2000: Sovremennaya politicheskaya istoriya 1985-2000, Tom 2, Litsa Rossii, Moskva 2000, VOLD Dukhovnoe nasledie, ZAO NIR, RAU Universitet, p. 139
  2. Web site: 24 March 2017. Геннадий Бурбулис. "В гостях у Дмитрия Гордона". 1/3 (2016). В гостях у Гордона.
  3. https://ria.ru/20100804/261298903.html Геннадий Эдуардович Бурбулис. Биографическая справка
  4. Web site: Answers - The Most Trusted Place for Answering Life's Questions. Answers.
  5. Web site: "Мы творили новые ценности, новое мировосприятие, новый образ жизни". polit.ru.
  6. News: Ramani . Samuel . Interview with Russia's First Deputy Prime Minister Gennady Burbulis on the USSR's Collapse and Russia's Transition from Communism . 21 July 2022 . HuffPost . 1 July 2017.
  7. News: Minaev . Boris . Gennady Burbulis: Conducting the Orchestra of Revolution . 21 July 2022 . The Moscow Times . 23 June 2022.
  8. http://www.gzt.ru/topnews/sport/-federatsiya-short-treka-rossii-objedinilasj-s-/297972.html Sports news
  9. Web site: Cкончался экс-госсекретарь РСФСР Геннадий Бурбулис . 2022-06-19 . Interfax.ru . 19 June 2022 . ru.
  10. Web site: В Баку скончался Геннадий Бурбулис . 2022-06-19 . turan.az . en.