Sergei Obukhov deputy. Sergey Obukhov

Russian politician, deputy State Duma fifth and sixth convocations from the Communist Party of the Russian Federation, member of the State Duma Committee on Affairs of Public Associations and Religious Organizations. Member of the Presidium, Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation. Doctor political sciences, Deputy Director of the Center for Research of Political Culture of Russia.

Family

He grew up in a military family. Married, three daughters (Daria, Elena, Anastasia), grandson Ilya and granddaughter Maria and Irina.

Biography

Born in 1958 in the city of Lvov.

He joined the CPSU in 1981.

In 1989 he graduated from the Kostroma Agricultural Institute. He began his career in research laboratories. I was at Komsomol work in the Lvov, Kostroma regions and Moscow.

He defended his PhD thesis at the Institute of International Economic and Political Research of the USSR Academy of Sciences. Worked as a scientific consultant for the international department Central Committee of the Komsomol.

Since 1990 - in the apparatus of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR, he was involved in the creation civil service in media relations. Later he worked in the Constitutional Court of Russia as press secretary of the chairman Valeria Zorkina.

After the October events of 1993, he was dismissed from the Constitutional Court. Worked as a journalist in the newspapers "Megapolis-Continent", " Soviet Russia", "Is it true".

Since 1997 - leading referent of the faction apparatus Communist Party of the Russian Federation in the State Duma.

In December 2007, he was elected to the State Duma of the fifth convocation. The deputy mandate was transferred to Obukhov after refusal Nikolai Osadchy become a State Duma deputy. Joined the Committee on Affairs of Public Associations and Religious Organizations.

In the same 2007, he defended his doctoral dissertation in political science, on the problems of parliamentarism.

Sergey Obukhov is considered a specialist in the field of socio-political processes and crisis situations in the countries of Eastern, Central Europe and Russia, as well as a practitioner in the conduct of election campaigns and the study of public opinion.

Sergei Obukhov is one of the founders of the analytical organization of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation - Center for Research of Political Culture of Russia.


In December 2011, he was elected to the State Duma of the sixth convocation from the Communist Party of the Russian Federation. Currently - Deputy Chairman of the State Duma Committee on Affairs of Public Associations and Religious Organizations.

On January 16, 2015, State Duma deputies from the Communist Party of the Russian Federation Sergei Obukhov and Valery Rashkin prepared a request to the Prime Minister of the Russian Federation Dmitry Medvedev with a request to review the criteria for the effectiveness of the management bodies of state corporations that affect the payment of bonuses, in particular, this applies to employees JSC "Russian Railways".

"A logical step in updating the bonus system for managers and members of the management bodies of state corporations is to establish performance criteria related, first of all, not to an increase in profits, but to the performance of state and socially significant functions assigned to corporations by the state and enshrined in their charters".

Author and co-author of 10 monographs and brochures ("The Russian Question of Russia", "The Unforgotten Revolution", "Communists: the right to power", "Russian parliamentarism between recognition and rejection. (1989-2005)"). Laureate of the Prize of the Union of Journalists of Russia for 1994. Winner of the journalistic prize of the newspaper "Soviet Russia" "Word to the People" for 1996.

Income

According to the declaration for 2013, the deputy earned more than 2 million 400 thousand rubles. Spouse - more than 350 thousand rubles. Daughter - more than 100 thousand rubles. Owned by the deputy: land plot for individual housing construction- 1200 sq. m., residential building - 32 sq. m., apartment - 92.9 sq. m. (social rent). Passenger car, Ford Focus.

Scandals

During the ongoing election campaign in Krasnodar region(2014) State Duma deputy from the Communist Party of the Russian Federation Sergei Obukhov sent a request to the Kuban administration for support from the Krasnodar regional branch of the organization " Russian Union of Former Minor Prisoners of Nazi Concentration Camps"(KKO RSBNU).

In particular, the communist writes: " I believe that this organization deserves more attention from the executive branch. To achieve the statutory goals of this organization, material support is required, similar to what is currently provided to veterans' councils. Based on the above, I urge you to find opportunities to organize ongoing assistance in the work of the RSBNU KCO".

However, local media claim that this organization has a very dark past and criminal leadership. Moreover, according to political circles in Kuban, Deputy Obukhov knows this very well.

"Is it really possible that a person whose electoral base is precisely among members of such organizations is not familiar with the situation in the RSBNU KCO? Or is it his usual populist tactic before the elections to become a “defender” of all those offended by the “corrupt government”, no matter how tarnished their reputation is? And at the same time, ask officials to find an opportunity to provide assistance “similar to what is currently provided to veterans’ councils,” although their numerical composition is significantly different"- write local media.

Secretary of the Krasnodar Regional Committee of the Alternative Left Party "Communists of Russia" Dmitry Pechinsky believes that such tactics are not new for the Communist Party of the Russian Federation in general and for Obukhov in particular.

"For them, this is a cheap way to promote themselves, to show themselves as defenders of the rights of citizens, which they essentially have not been for a long time. Before the elections to the State Duma, they also suddenly paid attention to young people, began to promote the Komsomol, and then threw it out as waste material as unnecessary. Then they created the “People's Militia” and actively promoted it. And where is it now? “Children of War”, I believe, expects to take the same into account. The Zyuganovites will squeeze everything they can out of them, and when people realize that they are being fooled and there will be no payments for them, they will cancel the project and come up with a new one".

Obukhov Sergey Pavlovich, member of the Presidium, secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation, deputy of the State Duma from the Krasnodar region of the fifth and sixth convocations, deputy director of the Center for Research of Political Culture of Russia, Doctor of Political Sciences

Obukhov Sergey Pavlovich, Doctor of Political Sciences – specialist in the field of socio-political processes and crisis situations in the countries of Eastern, Central Europe and Russia, conducting election campaigns, and studying public opinion. One of the first organizers of the public relations and media relations system in the authorities state power(Supreme Council and Constitutional Court of the RSFSR).

Born in 1958 in Lvov, in the family of a military man.

After studying at the university, he worked in research laboratories. Then - at Komsomol work in the Lvov, Kostroma regions and Moscow. After defending his dissertation at the Institute of International Economic and Political Studies (IMEPI) of the USSR Academy of Sciences (formerly the Institute of the World Socialist System of the USSR Academy of Sciences), he worked as a scientific consultant for the International Department of the Komsomol Central Committee.

Since 1990 - in Soviet work in the apparatus of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR. One of the founders of the country's first public service for media relations - in the Supreme Council of the RSFSR. As a specialist in information and analytical support for the activities of the highest bodies of state power of the Russian Federation, he was invited to work at the Constitutional Court Russian Federation, where he worked as press secretary of the Chairman of the Constitutional Court V.D. Zorkin.

After the events of 1993 and dismissal from the Constitutional Court, he began working as a journalist: member of the editorial board and political observer of the independent international newspaper Megapolis-Continent, regular contributor to the newspapers Soviet Russia and Pravda.

Member Communist Party since 1981.

From 1997 until his election as a deputy of the State Duma, he was the leading assistant in the apparatus of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation faction. From December 2007 to September 2016 - deputy of the State Duma, member of the Committee on Affairs of Public Associations and Religious Organizations.

S.P. Obukhov was one of the founders of the Center for Research of Political Culture of Russia - a scientific and analytical structure that ensures the activities of the party and faction of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation in the State Duma.

Author and co-author of 10 monographs and brochures. Among them: “The Russian question of Russia: political parties and the identity of the nation", "The Unforgotten Revolution", "Communists: the right to power", « Duma parties in the system of socio-political institutions », "Political Sociology: The Temptation of Bipartisanship: Popular Sentiments and Election Campaigns." And also books - “Veche” parliamentarism of Russia: at the turn of the era (1989-1993): mass perception of the people. representation during the period of growth. transformation", « Russian parliamentarism between recognition and rejection. (1989-2005)" - so far the only works in the scientific literature devoted to the study of society’s attitude to the institution of parliamentarism in Russia.

In 2007, he received an academic degree of Doctor of Political Science (he defended his dissertation on the problems of parliamentarism at the Institute of Sociology of the Russian Academy of Sciences).

Laureate of the Prize of the Union of Journalists of Russia for 1994. Winner of the “Word to the People” journalistic prize for 1996. In 2016 he was included in the TOP 20 best political strategists in Russia.

From 2007 to 2015 - member editorial board website.

At the XIII Congress of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation in November 2008, he was elected secretary and member of the Presidium of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation.

At the First Plenum of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation on February 24, 2013, convened at the end of the XV Congress of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation, he was re-elected secretary, member of the Presidium of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation.

On XVII Congress On May 27, 2017, the Communist Party of the Russian Federation was re-elected as a member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation. At the First Plenum of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation, convened after the congress, he was re-elected as a member of the Presidium, Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation.

Deputy of the State Duma of the V and VI convocations. He was elected to parliament from the Krasnodar region. From 2012 to 2016 - Deputy Chairman of the Committee of the State Duma of the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation on Affairs of Public Associations and Religious Organizations.

In 2012-2016 was a member of the Russian delegation to the Interparliamentary Assembly of Orthodoxy (IAP).

Since 2016 - deputy head of the apparatus of the Communist Party faction in the State Duma of the seventh convocation.

Married, father of three daughters. Has three grandchildren and two granddaughters.

Awarded party orders and medals. Recognized with the State Duma badge “For merits in the development of parliamentarism.” Awarded medals of the Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation and the Ministry of Emergency Situations.

Member of the Presidium, Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation Sergei Obukhov believes that after the presidential elections in Russia there are two political forces left - the “party of power” led by the Supreme Commander-in-Chief and the Communist Party of the Russian Federation, which represents a left-wing patriotic alternative. RIA “New Day” reports this

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According to Sergei Obukhov, the Communist Party deceived the expectations of those who promised it 3% in the elections and foreshadowed its imminent decline.

“We remember that before the start of the election campaign, everyone was shouting that Zhirinovsky would take second place, that Zyuganov would definitely lose to him, that this is sociology - the Communist Party of the Russian Federation will not gain more than 3%. So where is Zhirinovsky and where is the result of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation?” - Obukhov noted.

He expressed confidence that the nomination of Pavel Grudinin as a candidate for President of the Russian Federation from the Communist Party of the Russian Federation did not harm the party. At the same time, he emphasized that these were “not presidential elections, but elections of the Supreme Commander-in-Chief under conditions of external attacks.” Putin, in his opinion, “played on this, on the consolidation around himself.” However, even under these conditions, Grudinin, who had a reputation of 1% before the presidential elections, scored more than Zhirinovsky, Sobchak, Titov, and Suraikin in total.

Predicting the future fate of the LDPR, Sergei Obukhov noted “Zhirinovsky’s confusion on election night” and sincere surprise at the results. “You saw how he asked: How is this possible? I spent 400 million, I was everywhere and the people did not vote for me,” noted the Secretary of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation Central Committee and added that, in his assessment, the LDPR will survive as long as Vladimir Volfovich is alive.

“God grant him (Zhirinovsky) health and a long summer - the LDPR will for now be the party of a young actor and, how can I put it, a dashing back-up dancer of athletic young men - a corps de ballet of young dancers and singers. By the way, they sing well, I really like them. They sing and dance wonderfully. They are also champions in the pool and in the bathhouse,” Obukhov joked.

Much sadder, in his opinion, is the political future of the “just Russians,” since “the further existence of this entity is in question.”

In addition, Obukhov drew attention to the fact that United Russia is no longer needed by the president, who received twice as many votes as United Russia.

“Putin can now attack her (“ United Russia") look down on them and demand that they click their heels and move faster. Otherwise, he will say: bring another “United Russia” - this one is broken,” the communist sneers.

Speaking about the prospects for further cooperation between the Communist Party of the Russian Federation and Grudinin, Obukhov noted that their candidate “must come to his senses and catch his breath a little.” “I think that now you can’t pester a person at all - after what he went through and how he was bullied,” noted the secretary of the Communist Party Central Committee.

Answering the question from New Day whether Grudinin would join the Communist Party of the Russian Federation, Obukhov replied that it would be “his personal choice.” “If he says that he will join, he will be accepted immediately. We are always happy to use its potential,” he said.

Obukhov also suggested that all the attacks did not cool Grudinin’s desire to be in politics. “I do not rule out that he will participate in the gubernatorial campaign - one of them,” said the secretary of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation Central Committee, without specifying the region, although information appeared in the press about his gubernatorial ambitions in the Moscow region.

The Communist Party, according to Obukhov, hopes for the continuation of the activities of the left-patriotic coalition and advocates its further development. Already on March 31, a plenum of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation will be held, at which the results of the elections will be discussed, including future plans coalition.

“The very fact that the topic of the pension referendum lived for two months, and the authorities were afraid to immediately strangle it, speaks volumes. Yes, in the end the referendum was strangled. But we now see a lot of opportunities for developing the political process. And now I do not rule out that if the situation within Russia turns sharply, the authorities themselves will resort to a referendum to relieve social tension.” This statement was made by the Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation Sergei Obukhov in an interview with the Svobodnaya Pressa publication.

Sergei Obukhov emphasized that the initiative with the referendum took the authorities by surprise - “The public resonance around the referendum was so strong that they were afraid to immediately declare the initiative worthless and legally untenable,” he noted.

At the same time, the politician recalled that in the late 1990s and early 2000s, “The Central Electoral Commission did exactly this: it recognized hundreds of thousands – without exaggeration – of signatures as unreliable or invalid, and immediately banned the holding of a referendum. Or regional election commissions decided to refuse to register initiative groups on the grounds that the proposed issues did not comply with the Constitution. This was the case in the fall of 2002, when the leadership of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation began to prepare the initiative to hold an all-Russian referendum.”

In his opinion, now, against the background of acute dissatisfaction with the pension reform, the authorities are afraid to act in this way. “Instead, they revived the law “On Referendum” and clearly showed how, within the framework of the law, any initiative with a nationwide vote can be destroyed,” noted Sergei Obukhov.

“The key contradiction in the law “On Referendum” is that the Central Election Commission can approve any number of variants of questions on one topic, but in the regions it is possible to register only one initiative subgroup, which will promote only its formulation. It was precisely this contradiction that the authorities played on and were able to administratively “gore” the referendum. Purely technically, this was done with the help of fake initiative subgroups. Thus, the election commission of the Omsk region registered a subgroup, headed by the head local branch Union of Gardeners of Russia. The Tomsk Election Commission decided to register a subgroup, one of whose authorized representatives is the responsible officer of the Tomsk Veterans Council. In the Lipetsk region, the organizers of the initiative subgroup were a cleaner and a driver of the regional budgetary institution"Center for Patriotic Education" But, according to my data, most of the initiative subgroups were registered by mothers with many children. It was they – poor women – who suddenly had several million rubles to pay for notary services and trips to the regions. It is clear that behind all this there is an administrative resource. Everywhere where the Communist Party of the Russian Federation tried to register its subgroups, fake subgroups immediately popped up, which by some miracle managed to submit an application for a referendum earlier,” explained the Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation.

In his opinion, the Kremlin chose effective tactics, but only partially solved the problem. “By turning to the topic of a referendum to channel the protest, the authorities showed that this instrument is within the scope of current legislation. This means it can be used in practice. We don't live just one day after all. Now the Communist Party of the Russian Federation will fight for holding a referendum in the Constitutional Court. Let me note that the Chairman of the Constitutional Court Valery Zorkin in an article in “ Rossiyskaya newspaper”, published on October 10, made serious criticism of the pension reform. So, I believe, it is quite possible to launch an adjustment mechanism,” explained Sergei Obukhov.

“De facto, the idea of ​​a referendum proposed by the Communist Party of the Russian Federation was an attempt to give the authorities the opportunity to save face: by citing the voting results, cancel the reform. But the authorities did not take advantage of this opportunity. Well, persistence in a wrong cause always leads to losses. This applies, first of all, to the party in power – losses in the very near future,” he said.

, Lvov) - Russian politician, deputy of the State Duma of the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation of the fifth (2007-2011) and sixth (2011-2016) convocations, member of the State Duma Committee on Public Associations and Religious Organizations, member of the faction of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation. Member of the Presidium, Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation. Doctor of Political Sciences, Deputy Director of the Center for Research of Political Culture of Russia.

Biography

Born in 1958 in Lvov into the family of a military man. Graduated (1980), (1989), worked in research laboratories. Subsequently, he was at Komsomol work in the Lvov, Kostroma regions and Moscow. After defending his dissertation at the Institute of International Economic and Political Studies of the USSR Academy of Sciences, he went to work as a scientific consultant for the international department of the Komsomol Central Committee. Member of the CPSU since 1981.

Author and co-author of 10 monographs and brochures (“The Russian Question of Russia”, “The Unforgotten Revolution”, “Communists: the right to power”, “Russian parliamentarism between recognition and rejection. (1989-2005)”). Doctor of Political Science (2007). Winner of the Prize of the Union of Journalists of Russia for 1994. Winner of the journalistic prize of the newspaper “Soviet Russia” “Word to the People” for 1996.

Family

Married, has three daughters (Daria, Elena, Anastasia), a grandson Ilya and a granddaughter Maria. On April 12, 2014, the second granddaughter Irina was born.

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Notes

Links

  • - official website of Sergei Obukhov
  • and on the website of the State Duma Federal Assembly Russian Federation
  • // Echo of Moscow, December 23, 2008

An excerpt characterizing Obukhov, Sergey Pavlovich

Rostov felt Denisov’s gaze on him, raised his eyes and at the same moment lowered them. All his blood, which was trapped somewhere below his throat, poured into his face and eyes. He couldn't catch his breath.
“And there was no one in the room except the lieutenant and yourself.” Here somewhere,” said Lavrushka.
“Well, you little doll, get around, look,” Denisov suddenly shouted, turning purple and throwing himself at the footman with a threatening gesture. “You better have your wallet, otherwise you’ll burn.” Got everyone!
Rostov, looking around Denisov, began to button up his jacket, strapped on his saber and put on his cap.
“I tell you to have a wallet,” Denisov shouted, shaking the orderly by the shoulders and pushing him against the wall.
- Denisov, leave him alone; “I know who took it,” Rostov said, approaching the door and not raising his eyes.
Denisov stopped, thought and, apparently understanding what Rostov was hinting at, grabbed his hand.
“Sigh!” he shouted so that the veins, like ropes, swelled on his neck and forehead. “I’m telling you, you’re crazy, I won’t allow it.” The wallet is here; I'll take the shit out of this mega-dealer, and it will be here.
“I know who took it,” Rostov repeated in a trembling voice and went to the door.
“And I’m telling you, don’t you dare do this,” Denisov shouted, rushing to the cadet to hold him back.
But Rostov snatched his hand away and with such malice, as if Denisov were his greatest enemy, directly and firmly fixed his eyes on him.
- Do you understand what you are saying? - he said in a trembling voice, - there was no one in the room except me. Therefore, if not this, then...
He couldn't finish his sentence and ran out of the room.
“Oh, what’s wrong with you and with everyone,” were the last words that Rostov heard.
Rostov came to Telyanin’s apartment.
“The master is not at home, they have left for headquarters,” Telyanin’s orderly told him. - Or what happened? - added the orderly, surprised at the upset face of the cadet.
- No, nothing.
“We missed it a little,” said the orderly.
The headquarters was located three miles from Salzenek. Rostov, without going home, took a horse and rode to headquarters. In the village occupied by the headquarters there was a tavern frequented by officers. Rostov arrived at the tavern; at the porch he saw Telyanin's horse.
In the second room of the tavern the lieutenant was sitting with a plate of sausages and a bottle of wine.
“Oh, and you’ve stopped by, young man,” he said, smiling and raising his eyebrows high.
“Yes,” said Rostov, as if it took a lot of effort to pronounce this word, and sat down at the next table.
Both were silent; There were two Germans and one Russian officer sitting in the room. Everyone was silent, and the sounds of knives on plates and the lieutenant’s slurping could be heard. When Telyanin finished breakfast, he took a double wallet out of his pocket, pulled apart the rings with his small white fingers curved upward, took out a gold one and, raising his eyebrows, gave the money to the servant.
“Please hurry,” he said.
The gold one was new. Rostov stood up and approached Telyanin.
“Let me see your wallet,” he said in a quiet, barely audible voice.
With darting eyes, but still raised eyebrows, Telyanin handed over the wallet.
“Yes, a nice wallet... Yes... yes...” he said and suddenly turned pale. “Look, young man,” he added.
Rostov took the wallet in his hands and looked at it, and at the money that was in it, and at Telyanin. The lieutenant looked around, as was his habit, and suddenly seemed to become very cheerful.
“If we’re in Vienna, I’ll leave everything there, but now there’s nowhere to put it in these crappy little towns,” he said. - Well, come on, young man, I’ll go.
Rostov was silent.
- What about you? Should I have breakfast too? “They feed me decently,” Telyanin continued. - Come on.
He reached out and grabbed the wallet. Rostov released him. Telyanin took the wallet and began to put it in the pocket of his leggings, and his eyebrows rose casually, and his mouth opened slightly, as if he was saying: “yes, yes, I’m putting my wallet in my pocket, and it’s very simple, and no one cares about it.” .
- Well, what, young man? - he said, sighing and looking into Rostov’s eyes from under raised eyebrows. Some kind of light from the eyes, with the speed of an electric spark, ran from Telyanin’s eyes to Rostov’s eyes and back, back and back, all in an instant.
“Come here,” Rostov said, grabbing Telyanin by the hand. He almost dragged him to the window. “This is Denisov’s money, you took it...” he whispered in his ear.
– What?... What?... How dare you? What?...” said Telyanin.
But these words sounded like a plaintive, desperate cry and a plea for forgiveness. As soon as Rostov heard this sound of the voice, a huge stone of doubt fell from his soul. He felt joy and at the same moment he felt sorry for the unfortunate man standing in front of him; but it was necessary to complete the work begun.
“People here, God knows what they might think,” Telyanin muttered, grabbing his cap and heading into a small empty room, “we need to explain ourselves...
“I know this, and I will prove it,” said Rostov.
- I…
Telyanin's frightened, pale face began to tremble with all its muscles; the eyes were still running, but somewhere below, not rising to Rostov’s face, sobs were heard.
- Count!... don’t ruin young man...here is this unfortunate money, take it... - He threw it on the table. – My father is an old man, my mother!...
Rostov took the money, avoiding Telyanin’s gaze, and, without saying a word, left the room. But he stopped at the door and turned back. “My God,” he said with tears in his eyes, “how could you do this?”
“Count,” said Telyanin, approaching the cadet.
“Don’t touch me,” Rostov said, pulling away. - If you need it, take this money. “He threw his wallet at him and ran out of the tavern.

In the evening of the same day, there was a lively conversation between the squadron officers at Denisov’s apartment.
“And I’m telling you, Rostov, that you need to apologize to the regimental commander,” said a tall staff captain with graying hair, a huge mustache and large features of a wrinkled face, turning to the crimson, excited Rostov.
Staff captain Kirsten was demoted to soldier twice for matters of honor and served twice.