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Political Biography:

Anatoly Aleksandrovich Sobchak

(b. Chit, 1937; d. 20 Feb. 2000) Russian; mayor of St Petersburg 1991 – 6 Sobchak graduated from the law faculty of Leningrad State University in 1957. From 1959 to 1962 he worked as a lawyer in the Stavropol region. From 1959 to 1962 he was a secretary of the Communist Youth League (Comsomol). In 1973 he was lecturer and in 1982 a professor of economic law at Leningrad State University. In 1989 he became a member of the Congress of People's Deputies representing Leningrad, and was also a member of its inner body, the Supreme Soviet. He was a member of the Co-ordinating Council of the Interregional Group of Deputies, a pressure group for greater democratization, and headed the official inquiry into the violent repression of the demonstration in Tblisi in April 1989. In May 1990 he became chairman of Leningrad city soviet — the mayor of Leningrad. Soon afterwards he quarrelled with the Leningrad democrats who had come to power along with him on the radical reform platform. He began to rely on the old Communist economic bosses. In July 1990 he followed Yeltsin in leaving the Communist Party. In June 1991 Sobchak was elected mayor of St Petersburg. In August 1991 he rallied the people of Leningrad against the conservative coup, which was a major factor behind its failure. In December 1991 he became co-chairman of the Movement for Democratic Reform jointly with Popov, the mayor of Moscow. He became head of the Movement's Political Council. Sobchak was regarded as one of the leaders of the democratic movement in Russia. But among St Peterburg's radical reformers he acquired a reputation for incompetence, conservatism, and intellectual arrogance. He was believed to have aspirations to become President of Russia in succession to Boris Yeltsin. Sobchak published his version of events in his book For a New Russia.

 
 
Biography: Anatoly Alexandrovich Sobchak

Anatoly Alexandrovich Sobchak (born 1937), a popular democratic leader of Russia, was elected mayor of St. Petersburg (formerly Leningrad) in 1990.

Anatoly A. Sobchak, the urbane mayor of St. Petersburg (named Leningrad in the Soviet era) often mentioned as a future president of Russia, began his life far from the city in which he became famous. Sobchak was born in Chita, east of Lake Baikal in the Soviet far east, an area with a long revolutionary history. Both his grandfather and his father worked for the railroad and participated in the revolution and consolidation of Soviet power in Siberia. Although his family was a humble one, Sobchak revealed that his Czech grandmother tutored the family in the manners of the intelligentsia, which perhaps contributed to his demeanor and image. Like other families, the Sobchaks experienced the cruel hand of Stalinism when his grandfather was arrested in the late 1930s. His father fought in World War II, while his mother earned a meager salary to support the family.

Young Sobchak was selected to go to Leningrad University, a rare honor for someone from the remote provinces. After the university, he worked at first in the Stavropol region and later attended graduate school in Leningrad. He became a resident of Leningrad, building his career as an attorney and as a professor in the Law Department of Leningrad University. Unlike most prominent figures of the Soviet era, Sobchak was not a long-time member of the Communist party of the Soviet Union (CPSU). He joined the party in 1988 during the opening of the ranks (called perestroika) because he believed reforms would have to begin within the CPSU, the most entrenched structure in that society. His public life began as a response to Gorbachev's initiatives in perestroika in the late 1980s and was fueled by a desire to advance the reform movement.

In 1989 Sobchak was nominated and elected to the new parliament, the Congress of People's Deputies. His "I, Too, Have a Dream" speech to secure the nomination was inspired by Martin Luther King Jr.'s famous speech. Sobchak was subsequently elected by the People's Deputies to the smaller, more powerful standing parliament, the Supreme Soviet. In his early political career in the Congress, Sobchak moved slowly and carefully, observing his colleagues, aware of the entrenched power and the fragility of the new democratic movement. He approached the national political arena not as a long-time bureaucrat (apparatchik) but as a critic of the Soviet state structure, theoretically based on the local Soviets or councils that for many years had been rubber stamps for the party. Boris Yeltsin, elected to the new Congress and the Supreme Soviet, also criticized the status quo but had been part of the system for many years before he was removed from the Politburo in 1987.

Sobchak worked with Andrei Sakharov to abolish Article VI, which gave special status to the CPSU, from the Soviet Constitution, continuing the struggle after Sakharov's death. In March 1990 the article was removed despite Gorbachev's continuing opposition. A confrontation between the leaders of reform and the party old guard at the 28th Party Congress in July 1990 resulted in the resignation of numerous reform leaders, including Sobchak.

In 1990 when Sobchak was elected chairman of the Leningrad city council, and shortly afterward mayor of Leningrad, he was already a politician with a national following. After 1992 Sobchak was viewed as an important leader of independent Russia, a significant voice in Russia's democratic movement, and an articulate spokesperson for the new Russia. He was criticized, however, as were other Russian leaders, for sometimes wanting to govern without accountability to anyone. In addition, his reputation as a democrat was clouded by a minor furor over an elaborate tsarist-style ball he and his wife sponsored during a time of general economic hardship. Sobchak, however, remained widely respected by Russia's intelligentsia and was one of numerous academics who made a successful transition into politics during the Gorbachev era.

Sobchak was successful in changing the name of the former Leningrad to St. Petersburg. He achieved significant progress in St. Petersburg despite its serious economic problems. The city's economy was built on the defense industry, which faced cutbacks and conversion. It is in a region with few natural resources and is dependent on other areas for raw materials and food. His goal was to develop the city as a center for free enterprise, emphasizing finance, tourism, and trade. He was able to designate it a free economic zone and to create a municipal bank to handle foreign exchange and regulate other banking activity. He encountered considerable frustration in his efforts to transform the city into a financial center, primarily because of its financial and economic backwardness in respect to Moscow, which widely outdistanced Leningrad in employment, income, banking activity, access to currency, and infrastructural soundness.

By 1991 many people began to perceive the mayor of Leningrad as the most articulate and progressive alternative to Gorbachev. In August 1991 Sobchak was involved in the anti-coup movement against the conservative party and government officials, who had tried to remove Gorbachev and reverse the reforms. He led demonstrations in Leningrad and was in frequent contact with Yeltsin, who led the resistance at the parliament building in Moscow. After the coup had failed, Sobchak tried to prevent the dissolution of the parliament and the union, realizing that rapid disruption of existing structures and the end of the Soviet Union could be more problematic than working within a less than perfect system. In post-Soviet Russia, supporters of reform advocated differing paths, and at times Sobchak disagreed with Yeltsin on the pace and course of reform.

A tall, handsome man, Sobchak had a commanding presence and good speaking skills that were assets in Russia's expanded use of television in politics and elections. In the parliamentary elections of December 1993, he was a leader of one of several competing reform parties and was perceived as a possible future presidential candidate. He was also well respected abroad, where he made numerous appearances as mayor of Leningrad

Sobchak had difficulty in dealing with a cumbersome city council apparatus. He was criticized for an intransigent administrative style. In The Struggle for Russia (1995), Yeltsin wrote that "Sobchak had to change in his job as St Petersburg's town governor' from his old image as a liberal, from a well-respected politician and law professor to a harsh, authoritarian administrator." Sobchak's image as a haughty national leader in-waiting did not enhance his local popularity as mayor. In a period of economic decline and hardship, he also suffered, with others, from a general public disillusionment with the fathers of liberal economic reforms. He was perceived by many Russians as cold and detatched. He alienated many with his strong anti-communist positions and was accused of spending more time away from the city than in it.

Sobchak was unexpectedly defeated in the second round of the 1996 mayoral elections by Vladimir Yakovlev, an economist specializing in municipal affairs and Sobchak's Deputy Mayor responsible for housing. The campaign was recriminatory, with accusations by Sobchak and his wife, Lyudmila Narusova, a deputy to the state Duma from St. Petersburg, that Yakovlev, who spent far more than the 125-million-ruble limit on his campaign, had exerted pressure on the local media to provide favorable coverage for Yakovlev. Yakovlev and media employees retorted that Sobchak, who as mayor had a weekly call-in television show with a huge regular audience, and Narusova had regularly attempted to dictate coverage during his term of office.

Narusova, an influential woman like Raisa Gorbacheva, was both admired and resented by others in political life. She and Sobchak had two daughters. Although successful in his own political career, Sobchak had reservations about politicians and political life. He functioned both as a political actor and as an observer of the very process in which he participated. His ambivalence can be summarized in a passage from his book, For a New Russia: "If we overcome the system's resistance and build a market economy, powerful democratic forces capable of preventing any relapse into the past will appear. Then we … will feel free to go back to our private lives. We are mere recruits, and most of us dream of completing the work that was suspended in spring 1989 until better times. I dream of my books, my research, and the joys of life within a Russian intellectual's compass."

Further Reading

Anatoly Sobchak, For a New Russia (1992) is an interesting chronicle of the years 1985 to 1991 and includes an autobiographical sketch of his life. It is a useful resource to understand the man and his thinking. David Remnick, Lenin's Tomb: The Last Days of the Soviet Empire (1993) offers insights on Sobchak's role in the anticoup movement. Stephen Sestanovich's article, "Amateur Hour," in the New Republic (January 27, 1992) gives a good analysis of Sobchak and his views on politics. Articles on Sobchak's public activities can be found in The Economist, Central European, and World Press Review. See especially Peter Kurth, "Great Prospekts," Condé Nast Traveler (February 1994). The Soviet Biographical Service provides well-updated information on public figures. Events of the Post-Soviet period are discussed in Boris Yeltsin, The Struggle for Russia (1995) and G.D.G. Murrell, Russia's Transition to Democracy (1997).

 
Russian History Encyclopedia: Anatoly Alexandrovich Sobchak

(1937 - 2000), law professor; mayor of St. Petersburg.

Anatoly Sobchak was one of the leading liberal politicians of the perestroika era. Born in Chita, he completed a law degree at Leningrad State University in 1959. He settled permanently in Leningrad in 1962 and joined the faculty of Leningrad State University in 1973, heading the economic law institute and rising to be dean. Unusually for so senior an academic, Sobchak was for many years not a member of the Communist Party. He only joined during the presidency of Mikhail Gorbachev, becoming a candidate member in May 1987, and a full member in June 1988. The next year he was elected to the Congress of People's Deputies, where he became a leader of the Inter-Regional Deputies group and chaired the committee investigating the massacre of demonstrators by Soviet troops in Tiflis in April 1989.

A loyal supporter of Boris Yeltsin, Sobchak was elected mayor of Leningrad in June 1991, the same day that a referendum approved changing the city's name to St. Petersburg. He opposed the August 1991 coup attempt and persuaded the army not to deploy troops in the city. Sobchak presided over the liberalization of the city's economy, whose many defense plants had suffered greatly from the Soviet economic collapse. On the recommendation of the rector of Leningrad State University, Stanislav Merkouriev, Sobchak hired a young ex-KGB officer, Vladimir Putin, to handle relations with foreign investors. Putin had been a student in one of Sobchak's classes but they were not personally acquainted. Putin became Sobchak's deputy in 1993 and ran his re-election campaign in July 1996. Sobchak, surprisingly, lost to a challenge from his former deputy, Vladimir Yakovlev.

The next year Yakovlev (known as governor rather than mayor) filed a libel suit against Sobchak after the latter accused him of ties to organized crime in a newspaper interview. In October 1997 Sobchak suffered a heart attack while being questioned by police about corruption allegations, mainly pertaining to the distribution of city-owned apartments. Sobchak went to France for medical treatment and remained there in voluntary exile - beyond the reach of investigators.

The rise of Putin (who became head of the Federal Security Service in July 1998) and the dismissal of Procurator Yuri Skuratov in April 1999 enabled Sobchak to return to Russia in July 1999. The charges against him were dropped, but his public image was tarnished, and he failed to win a seat in the State Duma in the December 1999 elections. Sobchak died of a heart attack in February 2000 while on a trip to Kaliningrad as Putin's envoy. An emotional Putin attended his funeral and pledged revenge on his enemies, blaming them for his death. Observers took this as referring to Vladimir Yakovlev, but Putin failed to prevent Yakovlev's reelection as St. Petersburg governor in May 2000.

Sobchak's career, in which he evolved from a principled liberal to a defender of Russian capitalism and backer of Vladimir Putin, reflected the broader hopes and disappointments of the Russian transition from communism. Sobchak himself was aware of the contradictions, commenting just before his death that "We have not achieved a democratic, but rather a police state over the past ten years."

Bibliography

Holiman, Alan. (2000). "Remembering Anatoly Sobchak." Demokratizatsiya: The Journal of Post-Soviet Democratization 8 (3):324 - 329.

—PETER RUTLAND

 
Wikipedia: Anatoly Sobchak
Official photography of Anatoly Sobchak as Mayor of Saint Petersburg
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Official photography of Anatoly Sobchak as Mayor of Saint Petersburg

Anatoly Alexandrovich Sobchak (Russian: Анато́лий Алекса́ндрович Собча́к, August 10, 1937February 20, 2000) was a Russian politician, a co-author of the Constitution of the Russian Federation, the first democratically-elected mayor of Saint Petersburg, and a mentor of Vladimir Putin.

Biography

Soviet law scholar

Anatoly Sobchak was born in Chita, Siberia, on August 10, 1937 into a Polish-Russian family. His father, Alexander Antonovich, was a railroad engineer and his mother, Nadezhda Andreyevna Litvinova, was an accountant. Anatoly was one of four brothers. In 1939, the family moved to Uzbekistan where Anatoly lived until 1953 before entering Stavropol Law College. In 1954, he was transferred to Leningrad State University. In 1958, he married Nonna Gandzyuk, a student of Hertzen Teacher's College. They had a daughter, Maria Sobchak, who is currently a Petersburg lawyer.

After graduating from Leningrad State University he worked for three years as a lawyer in Stavropol, then returned to Leningrad State University for graduate studies (19621965). After obtaining his Ph.D., he taught law at Leningrad police school and Leningrad institute for technology of cellulose and paper industries (1965-1973). In 1973 - 1990 he taught at Leningrad State University. In 1980 he married Lyudmila Narusova at that time a history student at Leningrad Academy of Soviet Culture later a prominent MP. They had a daughter Ksenia Sobchak, currently a TV presenter and the most notorious figure of Moscow's high society.

Since 1982 after obtaining his D.Sci he was a Professor and Head of Department for Common Law in Socialist Economics. He was very popular among law students especially for his mildly anti-government comments. During his work at Leningrad State University he established close relations with its administrator of international affairs Vladimir Putin, that he kept for the rest of his life.

Legislator

In 1989 after changing of Russian election laws in Perestroika time he was elected as an independent candidate into the Congress of People's Deputies of Soviet Union. He was one of only a few deputes who had legal background so he contributed enormously into most of the laws created during 1989-1991. He became one of the founders and a co-chairman of Inter-regional Deputies Group, along with Andrei Sakharov and Boris Yeltsin. He also was a chairman of the Parliamentary commission on investigation of events of April 9 1989 in Tbilisi. The commission condemned the military, which had caused so many deaths trying to disperse demonstrators. The commission's report made it more difficult to use military power against demonstrations of civil unrest in the Soviet Union and Russia.

He was a member of President's Consultative Council during Mikhail Gorbachev's time and contributed into legislation the came from presidential administration.

After disbanding of the Soviet Union in 1991 Sobchak was not a member of central Parliament, but was a member of Yeltsin's Presidential Council and the chairman of Constitutional Assembly, that prepared in 1993 the Constitution of the Russian Federation. The constitution is often informally called Sobchak's constitution, although its real authors have been somewhat less known.

Mayor of Saint Petersburg

In April 1990 Sobchak was elected a deputy at Leningrad City Council, in May he became the chairman of the Council. The Council decided to change the structure of the city governance so to have a Mayor elected by direct elections. The first of such elections in June 1991 were combined with the referendum on the city name. Anatoly Sobchak won the elections and the city voted to return to the historical name Saint Petersburg. The name change was established on one of the last sessions of Congress of People's Deputies of Soviet Union September 12 1991. The change required amendment of Constitution of Soviet Union and so took a lot of efforts from Sobchak to be passed.

Sobchak was Mayor of Saint Petersburg in 1991-1996. During his tenure the city became the place of glamourus cultural and sporting events. Most of the everyday control of the city structure were handled by two Mayor's deputies - Vladimir Yakovlev and Vladimir Putin. The critiques alleged deterioration of city infrastructure, growing corruption and crime.

In 1996 on the mayoral election Sobchak stand against his former first deputy Vladimir Yakovlev and lost by a margin of 1.2%. The major pitch of the Yakovlev's campaign was that Sobchak's patronage of the art (with city money) and involvement into federal politics prevented him from solving the real problems of the city .

Emigration and Return

In 1997 a criminal investigation started against Sobchak. He was accused of irregularities in privatization of his own apartment, his elder daughter's apartment and his wife's artistic studio. By the standards of the 1990's in Russia the allegations were relatively minor (although still the alleged losses for city finances were in the tens of thousands of dollars). Thus, Sobchak's supporters saw the criminal process as a political repression.

On November 7 1997 Sobchak flew to Paris on a private plane without passport control on the Russian side. The formal reason for his departue was hospital treatment in a Paris hospital for his heart condition, but Sobchak never checked in at the hospital. In 1997 - 1999 he lived a typical life of a political immigrant in Paris.

In June 1999 his friend Vladimir Putin became much stronger (in a few weeks he became the Prime Minister of Russia) and he was able to make the prosecutors drop the charges against Anatoly Sobchak. On June 12 1999 Sobchak returned to Russia. After his return Sobchak became a very active supporter of Vladimir Putin in his quest for presidency of Russia.

Death

On February 20, 2000 Sobchak suddenly died in the town of Svetlogorsk of Kaliningrad Oblast during his trip to support Putin's election, shortly after his meeting with Putin on February 16. The official cause of death was a heart attack, but the results of two medical expertises were contradictory according to journalist Andrey Karaulov [1]. A criminal investigation of Sobchak death was opened only on May 6 2000, more than two months later [2]. Democratic Union party led by Valeria Novodvorskaya made an official statement that not only Anatoly Sobchack, but also two his aides had heart attacks simultaneously, which indicated poisoning [3]. Two other men were present with Sobchack during his death, but their names were not publicly disclosed [4]. This led to speculations about the reasons of his death [5], [6].

He was interred in Tikhvin Cemetery at the Alexander Nevsky Monastery in St. Petersburg, near the grave of Galina Starovoitova [7].

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    Political Biography. A Dictionary of Political Biography. Copyright © 1998, 2003 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
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    Russian History Encyclopedia. Encyclopedia of Russian History. Copyright © 2004 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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