Andrey Yurievich Brezhnev. Andrei Brezhnev found evidence that he is the grandson of the Secretary General The start of a political career

diets 26.06.2019
diets

Andrey Yurievich Brezhnev

Studied with his brother high school No. 711 on Kutuzovsky Prospekt. In 1983 he graduated from the Faculty of International Economic Relations of the Moscow State Institute international relations(MGIMO) under the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the USSR. He studied with Vladimir Potanin and Alexei Mitrofanov.

From 1983 to 1985, he worked as an engineer at the Soyuzkhimexport foreign trade association of the USSR Ministry of Foreign Trade.

In 1985–1988, he was an attaché at the Office of International economic organizations Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the USSR, from where he was fired after the publication of the essay "Heirs" in Nedelya.

From 1989 to 1991 - Deputy Head of the Foreign Relations Department of the USSR Ministry of Trade.

In post-Soviet times, he worked in commercial structures. From 1991 to 1992, he was an expert at the Soviet-French enterprise Moskva.

Since 1996 - Head charitable foundation"Children are the hope of the future."

In September 1998, he created the All-Russian Communist Public Movement (OKOD), becoming its general secretary.

In the summer of 1999, he put forward his candidacy for the post of governor of the Sverdlovsk region; was not registered (Eduard Rossel was elected governor).

In September 1999, he was nominated by the Liberal Democratic Party as a candidate for the post of vice-mayor of Moscow, paired with a candidate for mayor A. Mitrofanov. On October 7, 1999, Mitrofanov and Brezhnev were denied registration as a candidate for the post of mayor of Moscow. The Moscow City Electoral Committee motivated its decision by the fact that when forming the electoral fund, Mitrofanov violated the instructions on the procedure for the formation and spending Money election funds of candidates. On October 18, 1999, they were again denied registration with the wording: "The Liberal Democratic Party has already exercised its right to nominate a candidate for the post of mayor of the capital" (meaning the first unsuccessful attempt). Then Mitrofanov and Brezhnev put forward their candidacies not from the Liberal Democratic Party, but as self-nominated candidates and were registered on November 16, 1999.

In the mayoral elections on December 19, 1999, the Mitrofanov-Brezhnev couple received 0.61% of the vote (sixth place out of eight; Yury Luzhkov and Valery Shantsev won).

On the same day, December 19, 1999, he unsuccessfully ran for the State Duma of the Russian Federation in the Odintsovo single-mandate constituency No. 110 near Moscow as a self-nominated candidate (2.35%; 11th place, Yabloko candidate Yevgeny Sobakin was elected deputy).

In January 2001, he was registered as a candidate for the post of governor of the Tula region in the April 8, 2001 elections. According to the results of the first round of voting, he took the fourth, last place (1.18%; in the second round, the then acting governor Vasily Starodubtsev won).

In April 2002, he registered the organizing committee of the New Communists party with the Ministry of Justice (the authorized person of the organizing committee is A. Yu. Brezhnev).

June 20, 2002 announced the forthcoming establishment of a new party, the name of which will be determined at the congress. He stated that in the presidential elections in 2004 this party would not support the candidacy of Gennady Zyuganov, since "the Communist Party of the Russian Federation does not meet either its goals or its tasks", and its top represents "the worst version of the leadership of the CPSU."

On June 30, 2002, he was elected Secretary General of the New Communist Party (NKP), which, unlike the Communist Party of the Russian Federation, according to him, is based on the principles of internationalism and atheism.

On October 21, 2002, at a press conference, he again stated that in order to succeed in the future presidential elections, the Communist Party of the Russian Federation must change its leader: “Of course, we will support the communist candidate, but if it is Zyuganov again, I personally will be offended.”

In October 2004 he joined the Communist Party. At the ceremony of presenting him with a party card on October 21, 2004, he stated that he had always considered himself a "convinced communist" and respected the Communist Party of the Russian Federation.

friendly with only son academician Sakharov Dmitry Andreevich (dachas of the dissident and the general secretary were nearby).

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Andrey Yurievich Brezhnev(born March 15, 1961, Moscow, RSFSR) - Soviet economist and Russian politician, grandson of the General Secretary of the Central Committee of the CPSU Leonid Ilyich Brezhnev, First Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Social Justice (2014 - 2016).

Biography

In 1983 he graduated from the Faculty of International Economic Relations of the Moscow State Institute of International Relations (MGIMO) under the USSR Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

In 1983-1985, he was an engineer at the Soyuzkhimexport foreign trade association of the USSR Ministry of Foreign Trade.

In 1985-1988, he was an attaché at the Department of International Economic Organizations of the USSR Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

In 1989-1991, Deputy Head of the Foreign Relations Department of the USSR Ministry of Trade.

In 1991-1997 he worked in various commercial structures.

In 1996-1998, the head of the charity foundation "Children - the hope of the future"

Political activity

In 1998-2001, he organized and headed the All-Russian Communist Public Movement (OKOD) as General Secretary.

In 1999, at the election of the governor of the Sverdlovsk region, he put forward his candidacy, but the election commission refused to register Andrei Brezhnev.

In 1999, in the election of the vice-mayor of Moscow, he was nominated as a candidate from the Liberal Democratic Party, but the electoral committee refused to register the party, then Andrei Brezhnev was nominated as a self-nominee and registered, and received 0.61% of the votes in the elections. In the elections to the State Duma, he also participated as a candidate for deputies in the Odintsovo single-mandate constituency No. 110 as a self-nominated candidate, receiving 2.35%.

In 2001, at the election of the Governor of the Tula region, he ran as a candidate for governor as an independent candidate, receiving 1.18% of the vote.

In 2002-2004 he was the general secretary of the unregistered "New Communist Party" (NKP) he created. He stated that in the presidential elections in 2004 his party would not support the Communist Party of the Russian Federation if it nominated Gennady Zyuganov. However, the Ministry of Justice refused to register his party.

In 2004-2014 he was a member of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation.

Elected First Secretary in 2014 central committee"Communist Party of Social Justice" (Central Committee of the CPSU), organized and registered in 2012 by Andrey Bogdanov. In the same year, he was nominated as a candidate for deputy from the CPSU-2012 party as the first number on the party list in the elections of deputies of the State Assembly of the Republic of Mari El of the 6th convocation, to the State Council of the Republic of Crimea and the Legislative Assembly of the city of Sevastopol of the 1st convocation, however, the party in the elections in the Republic of Mari El received 2.21% (5,085 votes), in the Republic of Crimea it received 0.84% ​​(6,199 votes) and in Sevastopol - 0.53% (886 votes), due to which it did not pass to parliament.

In 2016, the CPSU headed by him was not among the parties approved by the Ministry of Justice, which are exempt from collecting signatures. In the elections to the State Duma of the 7th convocation, he was nominated by the Rodina party in the regional part in the city of Sevastopol and in the single-mandate district.

A family

  • Grandson of the General Secretary of the Central Committee of the CPSU Leonid Brezhnev.
  • Father - Yuri Brezhnev (1933 - 2013) - First Deputy Minister of Foreign Trade of the USSR.
  • Andrei Brezhnev was married twice.
    • The first wife Nadezhda Lyamina was then the wife of the banker Alexander Mamut (she died in March 2002).
    • Two sons from first marriage:
      • senior Leonid works as an interpreter in the military department;
      • the younger Dmitry graduated from Oxford University and works in software sales.
    • Second wife Elena.
      • Lives separately with children.

Andrey Yuryevich himself currently [when?] lives in Sevastopol.

Brezhnev's great-granddaughter Galina, whose biography will be considered in this article, is a woman with an incredibly tragic fate. Being the favorite of her famous great-grandfather, she early years grew up in love and luxury. Surrounding, looking at Check mark, were convinced that she was destined for a happy future. They couldn't imagine how wrong they were. Instead of a prosperous life, Brezhnev's great-granddaughter was destined to learn from her own experience what the betrayal of her own mother, poverty and a psychiatric hospital are.

Childhood and youth
Galina Mikhailovna Filippova was born in Moscow on March 14, 1973. Her mother was the granddaughter of the Secretary General of the USSR Leonid Brezhnev Victoria Evgenievna Milayeva. The baby's father was the banker Mikhail Filippov. When the girl was 5 years old, her parents divorced. Soon her stepfather Gennady Varakuta appeared. He treated the girl very well and raised her as if she were his. real daughter. For some time, Victoria lived with her new husband in love and harmony, but years later they started having problems that led to a divorce.

Brezhnev's great-granddaughter Galina from early childhood was surrounded by care and affection. At home, her personal nanny Nina Ivanovna looked after her. Galya studied at an elite Moscow school with an English bias, after graduation she entered the philological faculty of Moscow State University. Classmates and classmates remembered her as a capricious and wayward young lady.

Brezhnev's great-granddaughter Galina

Work days
After receiving a diploma in higher education stepfather arranged for Galina to work as a secretary in one of the Moscow firms. Answer to phone calls, the girl quickly got tired of maintaining documentation and preparing coffee for the boss. She went to work without much zeal, and when the company began to cut staff, she quit.

Personal life
Until the age of 25, Brezhnev's great-granddaughter remained unmarried. The girl's biography changed after her mother found her a groom through a wedding agency. Young man his name was Oleg Dubinsky, he worked as an engineer and, according to Victoria Evgenievna, was quite suitable for her daughter. Galina did not resist the will of her mother and agreed to marry. The wedding of the great-granddaughter of Leonid Ilyich took place in 1998 and passed without much luxury.

The joint life of the young spouses did not work out from the very beginning, and a year after the marriage they filed for divorce. But the relationship between Galina and Oleg did not end there. Shortly after parting, they reconciled and lived for another 4 years in civil marriage. Unfortunately, the woman never managed to know maternal happiness. Tired of regular quarrels, the couple decided to finally leave. After that, Brezhnev's great-granddaughter Galina was left alone. From her marriage to Dubinsky, she received only a stamp in her passport. Oleg was much more fortunate: living together with a close relative of the former General Secretary of the USSR brought him a promotion, a dacha and a personal car.

First treatment in a psychiatric hospital
Finally parting with her husband, Galya Filippova returned to her mother. Because of the vicissitudes of life, she began to drink, which Victoria Evgenievna really did not like. To rid her daughter of addiction, her mother sent her for treatment to mental asylum named after Kashchenko. So Galya, at the age of 28, found herself in an institution for the mentally ill for the first time. While she was undergoing treatment, Victoria Evgenievna became entangled in real estate transactions and was left without two expensive apartments belonging to her. Finding herself without a roof over her head, she went to live with her fiancé in the Moscow region. For all the time while Galya was being treated, her mother never visited her.

homeless life
Leaving the hospital, the great-granddaughter of Leonid Ilyich turned out to be useless to anyone. Left without an apartment, she began to wander. For almost a year, Filippova wandered through the Moscow gateways, getting her own food in garbage cans. In the summer she lived behind garages not far from Tretyakov Gallery. AT winter time Galina spent the night in wooden houses for children located in the yards.
Second time in Kashchenko
The appearance of the woman has changed beyond recognition. She was emaciated, without teeth, with her head shaved baldly (so as not to get lice), she bore little resemblance to the spoiled girl she once was. At 33, homeless Galina went to warm herself in the entrance of the house ex-husband. The mother-in-law did not recognize in the sleeping on stairwell homeless daughter-in-law and called her ambulance. The paramedics who arrived again took the woman to Kashchenko.

At first, none of the doctors believed that Galina Filippova, standing in front of them, was Brezhnev's great-granddaughter. Only after she gave the head of the department the telephone number of her nanny and she recognized her as her pupil, did the attitude towards the woman change. It was clear that she had nothing to do in a psychiatric hospital, but the doctors understood that there was nowhere for the unfortunate woman to go, so they allowed her to stay with them for a while. Galya swept, mopped the floors, helped deliver meals. All the medical staff treated her well, but no one could keep the woman permanently in the hospital. In order not to doom the unfortunate life to a homeless life, the manager helped her formalize her disability and placed her in a boarding school for mentally ill people.

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Galina Filippova Brezhnev's great granddaughter

The second time Brezhnev's great-granddaughter Galina spent 7 years in a mental hospital. The biography of this woman became known to the public only 2 years ago, when presenter Andrey Malakhov spoke about her in his program Let them talk. For all the time that Galya was homeless and was in a lunatic asylum, her mother did not remember her. The woman wrote letters to her, begged to take her to her, but all her requests remained unanswered. did not want to help his daughter and father Mikhail Filippov, a banker living in Malta. After breaking up with Victoria, the man married again, and the fate of his daughter from his first marriage did not bother him much. The only person who remembered Gala was her old nanny. From her, the great-granddaughter of the Secretary General of the USSR occasionally received letters and parcels with gifts.
unexpected help
It is not known how the fate of Galina Filippova would have developed if the circus artists Alexander and Natalya Milaev, half-brother and sister of Victoria Evgenievna, had not learned about her misadventures. They lived in the USA for many years and did not know what fate befell their niece. Returning to Russia, the Milayevs decided to help Galina. They ensured that Brezhnev's great-granddaughter underwent psychiatric examinations, as a result of which she was recognized as fully sane and capable. Relatives helped the woman get new documents and began to look for good people who could provide her with housing.

Expensive gift
In order for her niece to have her own apartment, Natalya Milayeva agreed to speak on television, where she spoke about the tragic life of Galina to the whole country. Her efforts were crowned with success: there were wealthy people who were touched by the story of Brezhnev's great-granddaughter. They bought Filippova a one-room apartment in Zvenigorod near Moscow, where she moved in 2014. Finding a job remains a problem for a woman, because she does not know how to do anything. However, as Galina said in one of her few interviews, she is ready to work even as a cleaner, because the pension of 14 thousand rubles that the state pays her is only enough to pay utilities, cigarettes and coffee

Former general secretary of the New Communist Party (NKP), grandson of Leonid Ilyich Brezhnev.


In 1983 he graduated from the Faculty of International Economic Relations of the Moscow State Institute of International Relations (MGIMO) under the USSR Ministry of Foreign Affairs. He studied with Vladimir Potanin and Alexei Mitrofanov.

From 1983 to 1985, he worked as an engineer at the Soyuzkhimexport foreign trade association of the USSR Ministry of Foreign Trade.

In 1985-1988 - Attache of the Department of International Economic Organizations of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the USSR.

From 1989 to 1991 - Deputy Head of the Foreign Relations Department of the USSR Ministry of Trade.

In post-Soviet times, he worked in commercial structures. From 1991 to 1992 he was an expert of the Soviet-French enterprise "Moscow".

Since 1996 - the head of the charity foundation "Children - the hope of the future."

In September 1998, he created the All-Russian Communist Social Movement (OKOD), becoming its general secretary.

In January 1999, he was one of the initiators of the creation of the Union of Ural Plants.

In the summer of 1999 he put forward his candidacy for the post of governor of the Sverdlovsk region; was not registered (Eduard Rossel was elected governor).

In September 1999, he was nominated by the Liberal Democratic Party as a candidate for the post of vice-mayor of Moscow, paired with a candidate for mayor A. Mitrofanov. October 7, 1999 Mitrofanov and Brezhnev) was denied registration as a candidate for the post of mayor of Moscow. The Moscow City Electoral Committee justified its decision by the fact that when forming the electoral fund, Mitrofanov violated the instructions on the procedure for the formation and spending of funds from the electoral funds of candidates. On October 18, 1999, they were again denied registration with the wording "The LDPR has already exercised its right to nominate a candidate for the post of mayor of the capital" (meaning the first unsuccessful attempt. Then Mitrofanov and Brezhnev put forward their candidacies no longer from the LDPR, but as self-nominated and were 16 November 1999 registered.

In the mayoral elections on December 19, 1999, the Mitrofanov-Brezhnev couple received 0.61% of the vote (6th place out of 8; Yuri Luzhkov and Valery Shantsev won).

On the same day, December 19, 1999, he unsuccessfully ran for the State Duma of the Russian Federation in the Odintsovo single-mandate electoral district No. 110 near Moscow as a self-nominated candidate (2.35%; 11th place, Yevgeny Sobakin, candidate of Yabloko, was elected deputy).

In January 2001, he was registered as a candidate for the post of governor of the Tula region in the elections on April 8, 2001. According to the results of the first round of voting, he took the fourth, last place (1.18%; in the second round, the incumbent governor Vasily Starodubtsev won).

In April 2002, he registered the organizing committee of the New Communists party with the Ministry of Justice (the authorized person of the organizing committee is A.Yu. Brezhnev).

June 20, 2002 announced the forthcoming establishment of a new party, the name of which will be determined at the congress. He stated that in the presidential elections in 2004 this party will not support the candidacy of Gennady Zyuganov, since "the Communist Party of the Russian Federation does not meet either its goals or its tasks," and its top represents "the worst version of the leadership of the CPSU."

June 30, 2002 was elected General Secretary of the New Communist Party (NKP), which, unlike the Communist Party, he said, is based on the principles of internationalism and atheism.

On October 21, 2002, at a press conference, he again stated that in order to succeed in the future presidential elections, the Communist Party of the Russian Federation must change its leader: "Of course, we will support the communist candidate, but if it is Zyuganov again, I personally will be offended."

In October 2004 he joined the Communist Party. At the ceremony of presenting him with a party card on October 21, 2004, he stated that he had always considered himself a "convinced communist" and respected the Communist Party of the Russian Federation. In the light of the forthcoming tightening of legislation on elections and parties, he considers alternative communist projects, including the All-Russian Communist Party of Bolsheviks (VKPB) created by Vladimir Tikhonov, to be frivolous.

In March 2005, he called the television series Brezhnev "disgusting" and threatened to sue its creators.

Married with a second marriage. The first wife (Nadezhda Lyamina) was then the wife of the banker Alexander Mamut (died March 2002); A. Brezhnev's sons grew up in the Mamut family.

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