Meppo
Anticommunist Mole
- Location
- Default City, Russia
- Pronouns
- he/him
Setting up a thread dump of infoboxes, various tidbits and other stuff from AH.com.
1921-1927: Leonard Wood (Republican)
1920 (w. Carmi Thompson) def. James M. Cox / Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democratic)
1924 (w. Carmi Thompson) def. Samuel W. Ralston / James W. Gerard (Democratic), Robert M. La Follette Sr. / Burton K. Wheeler (Progressive), Oscar Underwood / James W. Gerard ('Anti-Klan' Democratic)
• 1927: Pres. Wood dies during surgery on brain tumor
1927-1933: Carmi Thompson (Republican)
1928 (w. William S. Kenyon) def. Thomas J. Walsh / James S. Reed (Democratic)
1933-1941: Al Smith (Democratic)
1932 (w. John N. Garner) def. Carmi Thompson / William S. Kenyon (Republican)
1936 (w. John N. Garner) def. Herbert Hoover / Frank Knox (Republican), Robert M. La Follette Jr. / Elizabeth Gurney Flynn (Progressive)
1941-1946: Floyd B. Olson (Farmer-Labor)
1940 (w. Bronson Cutting) def. Charles Lindbergh / Hamilton Fish III (Republican), Lewis W. Douglas / Paul V. McNutt (Democratic), Huey P. Long / William Lemke (Reform), Alvin Owsley / Raymond W. Moley ('Texas Regular' Democrat)
1944 (w. Bronson Cutting) def.
• 1946: Pres. Olson resigns on account of "health problems" amidst impeachment proceedings over alleged "collusion" with gangster Kid Cann
1946-1949: Bronson Cutting (Farmer-Labor)
1949-1953: Richard E. Byrd (All-American)
1948 (w. John W. Bricker) def. Bronson Cutting
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Премьер-министры Российской республики
1998–1999: Sergei Kiriyenko (nonpartisan / Right Cause)
1999–2007: Yury Luzhkov (Fatherland – All Russia)
1999 def. Gennady Zyuganov (CPRF), Sergei Kiriyenko (Right Cause), Grigory Yavlinsky (Yabloko), Vladimir Zhirinovsky (LDPR)
2003 def. Aleksandr Lebed (Right Cause), Yury Lodkin (CPRF), Grigory Yavlinsky (Yabloko)
2007–2011: Boris Gromov (Fatherland – All Russia)
2007 def. Boris Nemtsov (Right Cause), Gennady Zyuganov (CPRF), Vladimir Zhirinovsky (LDPR)
2011–2019: Sergei Zhilkin (Right Cause)
2011 def. Boris Gromov (Fatherland – All Russia), Mikhail Yevdokimov (Agrarian), Sergei Glazyev (CPRF), Olga Beklemishcheva (People's Republican)
2015 def. Vladimir Gruzdev (Fatherland – All Russia), Roman Grebennik (CPRF), Tatyana Astrakhankina (Communists of the Future)
2019–2022: Sergei Sobyanin (Fatherland – All Russia)
2019 def. Sergei Levchenko (CPRF), Vyacheslav Lysakov (Third Force), Mikhail Kasyanov (Right Cause), Nikolai Rybakov (Yabloko)
2022–2023: Vyacheslav Volodin (Fatherland – All Russia)
2023–present: Artyom Samsonov (Union of Left Forces)
2023 def. Yegor Beroyev (nonpartisan), Mark Feygin (Right Cause), Anastasia Rakova (Fatherland – All Russia)
"For two decades or so it seemed that the alleged Seven Bankers plan had, in fact, worked out: Russia had settled into a two-party system, 'two feet' for the Russian populace to shift between from time to time, and a bunch of small fries getting in the way. It really broke the Russian left for a while - the cooperation of the CPRF with Fatherland, Zyuganov's passivity, the splits over direction. Even with 2019 in mind
"[Vyacheslav Volodin] has always harbored presidential ambitions, at least since 2011... A major party leader at only 47, a canny political operator who knows the Duma inside and out, a far more publicly aggressive and proactive politician than most, almost comparable to an American congressman. A lot of people argued that it helped him shore up Sobyanin in the Duma, shore up his conservative credentials – especially once the backlash to his COVID restrictions was whipped up. A lot of people saw him as the 'grey cardinal' of Fatherland by that point, or the future of Russian conservatism, a kind of Orthodox Russophilia reborn, draped in the rags of the United States' Republican Party...
Frankly speaking, this was also his greatest weakness. This aggression, this arrogance made him intolerant of compromises. He was incapable of responding to the attacks lobbed on his character on the Internet. For Volodin, 2022 really was the worst possible moment— all of the Sobyanin administration's scandals were now his problem, and, well, you already know what the surrogate mothers scandal did. And thank God it did."
(c) Protoiereus Vsevolod Chaplin in interview to Dozhd, c. 10.02.2023
---
The Compromise
1991–1993: Boris Yeltsin (nonpartisan)
1991 (w. Aleksandr Rutskoi): Nikolai Ryzhkov (CPSU), Vladimir Zhirinovsky (LDPR)
1993 Russian constitutional referendum: 52.7% YES | 47.0% NO | 53.2% YES | 61.2% YES
1993–1994: Yegor Gaidar (Choice of Russia)
1994–2004: Aleksandr Rutskoi (Civic Union)
1994 (w. Nikolai Travkin): Anatoly Sobchak (RDDR), Vladimir Zhirinovsky (LDPR), Grigory Yavlinsky (Yabloko), Gennady Zyuganov (Communist)
1995 Russian constitutional referendum: 62% YES, 36% NO
1999: Boris Nemtsov (New Force), Aman Tuleyev (Communist), Grigory Yavlinsky (Yabloko), Viktor Kress (Choice of Regions '99)
2004–2009: Ilya Zaslavsky (Democratic Choice)
2004: Sergei Burkov (Civic Union), Sergei Shoigu (The Bear), Vladimir Bayunov (Communist), Sergei Baburin (Russian All-National Union)
2009–2014: Boris Gromov (Fatherland)
2009: Ilya Zaslavsky (Democratic Choice), Tatyana Yumasheva (Right Cause), Tatyana Astrakhankina (Communist)
2014–2019: Sergei Zhilkin (Democratic Choice)
2014: Vladimir Gruzdev (Fatherland), Tatyana Yumasheva (Right Cause), Vladimir Tkachev (Bloc for Life), Vladimir Ryzhkov (People's Republican)
2019–2023: Vyacheslav Volodin (Fatherland)
2019: Sergei Zhilkin (Democratic Choice), Vyacheslav Lysakov (Third Force)
2023: Sergei Sokol (Fatherland)
2023–2024: Anastasia Rakova (Fatherland)
2024–present: Rustem Bulatov (Left Front)
2024: Yegor Beroyev (nonpartisan), Sergei Andreyev (Democratic Choice), Anastasia Rakova (Fatherland)
"...And when Yeltsin had to make a decision, when the ranking vote had already taken place, there was a moment when Yeltsin asked us how many people we had, how many people we could gather in Gaidar's support. We told him, of course, we knew everyone, we had a list of everyone, I think it was about five or four hundred people, I don't remember exactly now. But, we told him how many people we could gather, because we talked to everyone beforehand, everything was known, the vote was by name, like that. He read out the paper that we had written to him, 'and I ask all those who support Gaidar to gather in Georgievsky Hall at lunchtime'. He really enunciated the last words, I don't remember exactly who underlined the 'lunchtime' part either, I think it may have been Chubais or someone - anyway, we were able to make sure everyone that we gathered was present when Yeltsin arrived. It really emboldened him to really pressure the Congress to accept Gaidar as Prime Minister, a full-fledged Prime Minister. There are, uh, plenty of ill-wishers who think he should have been more compromising, that he - that the stress wouldn't have gotten him killed - but I do not think choosing Gaidar was a mistake."
(c) former Minister of Internal Affairs Arkady Murashov in interview to Radio Svoboda, c. 11.12.2011
"The only thing Gaidar's nomination amounted to was a victory for Rutskoi and his cohort. His name, and the aura of populism it carried, was already pejorative among most people - especially among the people who stormed Ostankino on October. It was not surprising that certain oligarchs started looking for alternatives, for better-looking candidates, while Rutskoi's intermediaries approached regional elites. The latter didn't help much
---
2024 - 2024: PM Marat Khusnullin (nonpartisan | TAT)
- shot by "delirious" ex-Wagner militant
2024 - 2025: PM Dmitry Patrushev (nonpartisan | SPB)
- resigned following father's death and re-emergence of Rosselkhozbank scandals
2025: Deputy PM Anastasia Rakova (nonpartisan | MOW)
- resigned over constitutional dispute
2025 - 2026: Chair of State Duma Vyacheslav Volodin (United Russia | SAR)
- arrested on charges of terrorism
2026: Head of FSB Alexei Dyumin (nonpartisan | TUL)
- killed in shootout with Moscow police on Black Thursday
2026 - 2034: Gov. Dmitry Ionin (nonpartisan | SVE)
2034 - 2037: Gov. Viktor Vorobyov (Union of Left Forces | KO)
- assassinated by ex-Rusich Group militant
2037 - 2042: PM Oleg Mikhailov (Union of Left Forces | KO)
2042 - 2046: Gov. Rina Matsapulina (Liberal Coalition | SPB)
2046 - 2050: MinIA Nikolai Chernikov (ConDem | LIP)
2050 - 2058: Gov. Ruslan Radul (Union of Left Forces | YAR)
2058 - 2066: fmr. Gov. Nikita Kologrivy (ConDem | NVS)
2066 - 2070: MinFA Georgy Kustov
2070 - 2078:
1920 (w. Carmi Thompson) def. James M. Cox / Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democratic)
1924 (w. Carmi Thompson) def. Samuel W. Ralston / James W. Gerard (Democratic), Robert M. La Follette Sr. / Burton K. Wheeler (Progressive), Oscar Underwood / James W. Gerard ('Anti-Klan' Democratic)
• 1927: Pres. Wood dies during surgery on brain tumor
1927-1933: Carmi Thompson (Republican)
1928 (w. William S. Kenyon) def. Thomas J. Walsh / James S. Reed (Democratic)
1933-1941: Al Smith (Democratic)
1932 (w. John N. Garner) def. Carmi Thompson / William S. Kenyon (Republican)
1936 (w. John N. Garner) def. Herbert Hoover / Frank Knox (Republican), Robert M. La Follette Jr. / Elizabeth Gurney Flynn (Progressive)
1941-1946: Floyd B. Olson (Farmer-Labor)
1940 (w. Bronson Cutting) def. Charles Lindbergh / Hamilton Fish III (Republican), Lewis W. Douglas / Paul V. McNutt (Democratic), Huey P. Long / William Lemke (Reform), Alvin Owsley / Raymond W. Moley ('Texas Regular' Democrat)
1944 (w. Bronson Cutting) def.
• 1946: Pres. Olson resigns on account of "health problems" amidst impeachment proceedings over alleged "collusion" with gangster Kid Cann
1946-1949: Bronson Cutting (Farmer-Labor)
1949-1953: Richard E. Byrd (All-American)
1948 (w. John W. Bricker) def. Bronson Cutting
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Премьер-министры Российской республики
- 1944-1949: Прокопий Климушкин (СР | Самарская губ.)
- 1949-1952: Георгий Маленков (РСДРП | Оренбургская губ.)
- 1952-1957: Илья Челышов (БП | Самарская губ.)
- 1957-1958: Роман Гуль (БП | Пензенская губ.)
- 1958-1960: Сергей Сабашников (БП | Московская губ.)
- 1960-1963: Никита Хрущёв (РСДРП | Курская губ.)
- 1963-1968: Лев Цвиллинг (РСДРП | Челябинская губ.)
- 1968-1975: Георгий Игнатьев (БП | Санкт-Петербургская губ.)
- 1975-1978: Сергей Павлов (БП | Тверская губ.)
- 1978-1988: Виталий Бьянки (ТА | Мурманская губ.)
- 1988-1993: Анатолий Черняев (ТА | Московская губ.)
- 1993-2000: Анатолий Собчак (БП | Санкт-Петербургская губ.)
- 2000-2003: Олег Очин (БП | Новгородская губ.)
- 2003-2013: Сергей Афанасьев (ТА | Саратовская губ.)
- 2013-2017: Дмитрий Медведев (БП | Санкт-Петербургская губ.)
- 2017-2018: Маргарита Баржанова (БП | Симбирская губ.)
- 2018-2022: Леонид Слуцкий (БП | Московская губ.)
- 2022: Мария Захарова (БП | Самарская губ.)
- 2022-н.в.: Давид Арахамия (БП | Кубанская губ.)
1998–1999: Sergei Kiriyenko (nonpartisan / Right Cause)
1999–2007: Yury Luzhkov (Fatherland – All Russia)
1999 def. Gennady Zyuganov (CPRF), Sergei Kiriyenko (Right Cause), Grigory Yavlinsky (Yabloko), Vladimir Zhirinovsky (LDPR)
2003 def. Aleksandr Lebed (Right Cause), Yury Lodkin (CPRF), Grigory Yavlinsky (Yabloko)
2007–2011: Boris Gromov (Fatherland – All Russia)
2007 def. Boris Nemtsov (Right Cause), Gennady Zyuganov (CPRF), Vladimir Zhirinovsky (LDPR)
2011–2019: Sergei Zhilkin (Right Cause)
2011 def. Boris Gromov (Fatherland – All Russia), Mikhail Yevdokimov (Agrarian), Sergei Glazyev (CPRF), Olga Beklemishcheva (People's Republican)
2015 def. Vladimir Gruzdev (Fatherland – All Russia), Roman Grebennik (CPRF), Tatyana Astrakhankina (Communists of the Future)
2019–2022: Sergei Sobyanin (Fatherland – All Russia)
2019 def. Sergei Levchenko (CPRF), Vyacheslav Lysakov (Third Force), Mikhail Kasyanov (Right Cause), Nikolai Rybakov (Yabloko)
2022–2023: Vyacheslav Volodin (Fatherland – All Russia)
2023–present: Artyom Samsonov (Union of Left Forces)
2023 def. Yegor Beroyev (nonpartisan), Mark Feygin (Right Cause), Anastasia Rakova (Fatherland – All Russia)
"For two decades or so it seemed that the alleged Seven Bankers plan had, in fact, worked out: Russia had settled into a two-party system, 'two feet' for the Russian populace to shift between from time to time, and a bunch of small fries getting in the way. It really broke the Russian left for a while - the cooperation of the CPRF with Fatherland, Zyuganov's passivity, the splits over direction. Even with 2019 in mind
"[Vyacheslav Volodin] has always harbored presidential ambitions, at least since 2011... A major party leader at only 47, a canny political operator who knows the Duma inside and out, a far more publicly aggressive and proactive politician than most, almost comparable to an American congressman. A lot of people argued that it helped him shore up Sobyanin in the Duma, shore up his conservative credentials – especially once the backlash to his COVID restrictions was whipped up. A lot of people saw him as the 'grey cardinal' of Fatherland by that point, or the future of Russian conservatism, a kind of Orthodox Russophilia reborn, draped in the rags of the United States' Republican Party...
Frankly speaking, this was also his greatest weakness. This aggression, this arrogance made him intolerant of compromises. He was incapable of responding to the attacks lobbed on his character on the Internet. For Volodin, 2022 really was the worst possible moment— all of the Sobyanin administration's scandals were now his problem, and, well, you already know what the surrogate mothers scandal did. And thank God it did."
(c) Protoiereus Vsevolod Chaplin in interview to Dozhd, c. 10.02.2023
---
The Compromise
1991–1993: Boris Yeltsin (nonpartisan)
1991 (w. Aleksandr Rutskoi): Nikolai Ryzhkov (CPSU), Vladimir Zhirinovsky (LDPR)
1993 Russian constitutional referendum: 52.7% YES | 47.0% NO | 53.2% YES | 61.2% YES
1993–1994: Yegor Gaidar (Choice of Russia)
1994–2004: Aleksandr Rutskoi (Civic Union)
1994 (w. Nikolai Travkin): Anatoly Sobchak (RDDR), Vladimir Zhirinovsky (LDPR), Grigory Yavlinsky (Yabloko), Gennady Zyuganov (Communist)
1995 Russian constitutional referendum: 62% YES, 36% NO
1999: Boris Nemtsov (New Force), Aman Tuleyev (Communist), Grigory Yavlinsky (Yabloko), Viktor Kress (Choice of Regions '99)
2004–2009: Ilya Zaslavsky (Democratic Choice)
2004: Sergei Burkov (Civic Union), Sergei Shoigu (The Bear), Vladimir Bayunov (Communist), Sergei Baburin (Russian All-National Union)
2009–2014: Boris Gromov (Fatherland)
2009: Ilya Zaslavsky (Democratic Choice), Tatyana Yumasheva (Right Cause), Tatyana Astrakhankina (Communist)
2014–2019: Sergei Zhilkin (Democratic Choice)
2014: Vladimir Gruzdev (Fatherland), Tatyana Yumasheva (Right Cause), Vladimir Tkachev (Bloc for Life), Vladimir Ryzhkov (People's Republican)
2019–2023: Vyacheslav Volodin (Fatherland)
2019: Sergei Zhilkin (Democratic Choice), Vyacheslav Lysakov (Third Force)
2023: Sergei Sokol (Fatherland)
2023–2024: Anastasia Rakova (Fatherland)
2024–present: Rustem Bulatov (Left Front)
2024: Yegor Beroyev (nonpartisan), Sergei Andreyev (Democratic Choice), Anastasia Rakova (Fatherland)
"...And when Yeltsin had to make a decision, when the ranking vote had already taken place, there was a moment when Yeltsin asked us how many people we had, how many people we could gather in Gaidar's support. We told him, of course, we knew everyone, we had a list of everyone, I think it was about five or four hundred people, I don't remember exactly now. But, we told him how many people we could gather, because we talked to everyone beforehand, everything was known, the vote was by name, like that. He read out the paper that we had written to him, 'and I ask all those who support Gaidar to gather in Georgievsky Hall at lunchtime'. He really enunciated the last words, I don't remember exactly who underlined the 'lunchtime' part either, I think it may have been Chubais or someone - anyway, we were able to make sure everyone that we gathered was present when Yeltsin arrived. It really emboldened him to really pressure the Congress to accept Gaidar as Prime Minister, a full-fledged Prime Minister. There are, uh, plenty of ill-wishers who think he should have been more compromising, that he - that the stress wouldn't have gotten him killed - but I do not think choosing Gaidar was a mistake."
(c) former Minister of Internal Affairs Arkady Murashov in interview to Radio Svoboda, c. 11.12.2011
"The only thing Gaidar's nomination amounted to was a victory for Rutskoi and his cohort. His name, and the aura of populism it carried, was already pejorative among most people - especially among the people who stormed Ostankino on October. It was not surprising that certain oligarchs started looking for alternatives, for better-looking candidates, while Rutskoi's intermediaries approached regional elites. The latter didn't help much
---
2024 - 2024: PM Marat Khusnullin (nonpartisan | TAT)
- shot by "delirious" ex-Wagner militant
2024 - 2025: PM Dmitry Patrushev (nonpartisan | SPB)
- resigned following father's death and re-emergence of Rosselkhozbank scandals
2025: Deputy PM Anastasia Rakova (nonpartisan | MOW)
- resigned over constitutional dispute
2025 - 2026: Chair of State Duma Vyacheslav Volodin (United Russia | SAR)
- arrested on charges of terrorism
2026: Head of FSB Alexei Dyumin (nonpartisan | TUL)
- killed in shootout with Moscow police on Black Thursday
2026 - 2034: Gov. Dmitry Ionin (nonpartisan | SVE)
2034 - 2037: Gov. Viktor Vorobyov (Union of Left Forces | KO)
- assassinated by ex-Rusich Group militant
2037 - 2042: PM Oleg Mikhailov (Union of Left Forces | KO)
2042 - 2046: Gov. Rina Matsapulina (Liberal Coalition | SPB)
2046 - 2050: MinIA Nikolai Chernikov (ConDem | LIP)
2050 - 2058: Gov. Ruslan Radul (Union of Left Forces | YAR)
2058 - 2066: fmr. Gov. Nikita Kologrivy (ConDem | NVS)
2066 - 2070: MinFA Georgy Kustov
2070 - 2078:
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