A n saveliev. Andrey Nikolaevich Savelyev: biography

05.03.2022

Recently, there has been growing interest from the media in the activist of the Russian national idea, the fighter against illegal migration Andrei Savelyev, who heads Great Russia, a party that is not registered with the Russian Ministry of Justice.

From the biography of a politician

Citizen of the Russian Federation Andrei Nikolaevich Savelyev is a native of the Amur Region. Born on August 8, 1962

In 1979, he became a student, enrolling at the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology, where he studied until 1985.

Then for five years he was an employee at the Institute of Chemical Physics and at the Institute for Energy Problems of Chemical Physics.

After graduating from graduate school in 1990, he became a candidate of physical and mathematical sciences. He defended his PhD in chemical physics.

From the same year, Andrei Savelyev worked as a deputy in the Moscow City Council. At first he was on the commission dealing with the consumer market, then he joined the commission in charge of the affairs of public organizations.

At the time of the dissolution of the Moscow City Council in 1993, Andrey Nikolaevich Savelyev served as director at the Public Center of the Moscow City Council.

Passion for political science

Since 1992, Saveliev has a new hobby - political science. By the next year, he completed two courses at the Moscow Law Institute, and in 1994 he was a student at a stock market specialist course.

From 1995 to 1998, Andrey Savelyev worked in various think tanks, including the Russian Public and Political Center.

Since 1998, he began active work in the International Congress of Russian Communities.

Since 1999, Andrei Savelyev began to serve as an adviser to Dmitry Rogozin, deputy of the State Duma of the Federal Assembly of Russia, who at that time was chairman of the Duma Committee on International Affairs and was the special representative of the president in Kaliningrad. Rogozin held this position until the fall of 2003.

The year 2000 was remembered by Savelyev for the fact that he became a doctor of political sciences, the topic of his dissertation also concerned processes.

From the autumn of 2002 until April 2003, political scientist Andrei Savelyev was engaged in analytical work in the "Rogozin Bureau", was the head of the Kaliningrad apparatus.

Deputy activity

In December 2003, Saveliev was elected to the State Duma. He represented the Rodina association, which, in addition to the Party of Russian Regions, included the Socialist United Party and the National Revival Party called Narodnaya Volya.

In the Duma, Savelyev was introduced to the committee dealing with constitutional legislation and state building. Subsequently, he received the post of vice-chairman of this committee. In addition, he was a member of the Duma Counting Commission.

On January 21, 2005 Andrey Savelyev decided to join the hunger strike, which was announced by the Motherland faction.

This action was held in protest against the State Duma's refusal to include on the agenda a proposal to consider an alternative version of the bill regarding social problems that may occur after the benefits are replaced by cash payments.

In addition to party chairman Dmitry Rogozin, several deputies also participated in this action: Markelov M., Kharchenko I., Denisov O.

Mikhail Markelov promised that in order to avoid various kinds of provocative actions, the entire hunger strike procedure would be displayed around the clock on the website of the Rodina party.

After a week of hunger strike, Saveliev was diagnosed with "low blood sugar", which was the reason for his hospitalization.

The action was terminated in early February 2005, the protesters failed to achieve a positive result.

The hunger strikers demanded the resignation of a number of ministers, such as Mikhail Zurabov (health), Alexei Kudrin (finance), German Gref (economic development and trade). They also suggested creating an emergency commission to find the best way out of the current crisis situation.

Conflict with Zhirinovsky

In March 2005, the media reported that a fight broke out within the walls of the State Duma, the participants of which were nationalist Andrei Savelyev and LDPR leader Vladimir Zhirinovsky.

In a speech to the press, Zhirinovsky stated that he had submitted an application to the Prosecutor General's Office, which referred to the need to initiate criminal cases against Savelyev and Rodina chairman Dmitry Rogozin.

In response, the deputies of the Motherland and the Communist Party of the Russian Federation initiated a collection of signatures for a proposal to recall Zhirinovsky from the vice-speaker's post.

In addition, it was proposed to deprive the leader of the Liberal Democratic Party of parliamentary immunity and declare him a boycott.

These proposals did not find support in the deputy corps.

Savelyev had to testify to employees of the Prosecutor General's Office about the fight that took place in the Duma with Vladimir Zhirinovsky.

Fight against abuses in RAO "UES"

In the summer of 2005, massive power outages took place in the capital and the Moscow region.

These circumstances prompted Savelyev to suggest that his fellow deputies make an inquiry to the government in order to find out the size of the salary of the management of RAO "UES of Russia" and leaders in the regions.

This idea was approved by the deputies.

On June 16, 2005, Savelyev took part in an action held by representatives of the Rodina branch in the capital, where they symbolically sent Chubais "on a well-deserved rest." A similar action was planned to be held by the President's birthday, but it was subsequently abandoned.

About the situation of guest workers

In the fall of 2005, Rogozin, Savelyev and Babakov proposed to the State Duma to change the situation with the situation of foreigners on the territory of our country.
In particular, it was proposed to introduce a ban on the sale of agricultural products to foreigners in order to protect local producers.

Experts from the Carnegie and Levada Centers suggested that on the eve of the election campaign to the Moscow City Duma, Rodina representatives, playing along with the xenophobic idea, were trying to get the support of the capital's residents.

Since March 2006, information has appeared that Savelyev is included in the directory "Ultra-right Russian radicals", which was released by human rights and anti-fascist organizations.

In addition to him, the list of nationalist ideologists included such well-known odious personalities as Alexander Barkashov ("Russian National Unity"), Alexander Ivanov-Sukharevsky ("People's National Party"), Alexander Demushkin ("Slavic Union") and Alexander Prokhanov (editor-in-chief newspaper "Tomorrow").

Vladimir Kvachkov, formerly a colonel in the Main Intelligence Directorate, who was accused of organizing the assassination attempt on Anatoly Chubais in March 2005, was also named the ideologue of nationalism.

Merger of political structures

Upon learning of the upcoming merger of the Rodina party with Mironov's Russian Party of Life, Savelyev sharply criticized this idea.

After the creation of A Just Russia, which united Rodina, the Russian Party of Life and the Russian Party of Pensioners, Savelyev made a statement that A Just Russia had "stolen the legal powers and status of membership in the Rodina party."

In his opinion, there were enough grounds for going to court with a corresponding claim, but there were no consequences after this statement.

The politician remained in the Motherland faction, which since January 2007 joined the People's Patriotic Union and was renamed A Just Russia - Motherland.

DPNI

In the fall of 2006, Savelyev joined the Movement Against Illegal Immigration, known by the acronym DPNI.

He was the first of the deputies to join this structure, famous for its xenophobic spirit. The politician claimed that this movement is not extremist.

In his remarks to media correspondents, Andrey Savelyev said the following about Putin: The Kremlin has launched a special campaign to counter the movement, as the head of state is afraid of his own future and is trying to make DPNI responsible for the intensification of interethnic conflicts in Russia.

Party "Great Russia"

In the spring of 2007, the newly created political party "Great Russia" held its founding congress. The initiators of the congress were the Rogozin Congress of Russian Communities and the DPNI, which was headed by Belov, but Andrei Savelyev was elected chairman of the party. "Great Russia" found its leader for a four-year term.

The congress, in addition to the election of the leading core of the political structure, adopted the corresponding charter and approved the symbol: the Ussuri tiger in a jump.

Some time after the congress, A. Savelyev was summoned by summons to the investigator of the Basmanny prosecutor's office of the city of Moscow, where he was interrogated for almost two hours.

According to Savelyev, the reason for the call to the investigator was a request to the General Prosecutor's Office of the Russian Federation, initiated by the LDPR faction, where it was proposed to find out where the funds for the creation of "Great Russia" were taken from and whether the disgraced businessman Berezovsky was participating in its financing.

According to Savelyev, prosecutors were satisfied with the testimony received from him, since the founders of the party did nothing illegal.

Books by Andrey Savelyev

Savelyev wrote more than three hundred articles of a journalistic and scientific nature. When publishing books, he sometimes used the pseudonym A. Kolyev.

2003 was marked by the release of "Political Mythology", 2005 - "The Nation and the State".

Andrei Savelyev wrote a lot about the monarchy.

He is the editor of The Russian System, The Inevitability of Empire, and other collections.

Savelyev's family - wife and two sons. Hobbies - martial arts.

Andrei Savelyev has been heard about as a supporter of radical ideas of rebirth through the Russian nation, a fighter against illegal immigration, and the leader of the unregistered national-patriotic party "Great Russia". By the way, the leading party propagandist was now the Deputy Prime Minister of the Russian government. But the paths of the comrades-in-arms diverged, since Savelyev considers any cooperation with the current government an indelible stigma.

Childhood and youth

Andrey Nikolayevich comes from the Far East, from the banks of the Amur. Born in August 1962 in a city with a non-trivial name Svobodny. In the first grade, Andrei went to school No. 186 in Moscow, completed his secondary education at the Experimental School No. 82 of the Academy of Pedagogical Sciences, located in the Moscow region, in the village of Chernogolovka.

In 1985, Savelyev received his higher education at the Faculty of Physics and Mathematics of the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology. After graduating from the university, he worked at specialized institutes of chemical physics and energy problems, while studying in graduate school at the same time. In 1990 he was awarded the "crust" of a candidate of sciences in the specialty "chemical physics".

For two years Andrei Savelyev tried to get a law degree, but did not graduate from the institute. Some courses on mastering the basics of the stock market appear in the biography of the chauvinist. In 2000 he defended his doctoral dissertation in the field of political science.

Business and social activities

Savelyev's activities for the benefit of society, as he understood it, began with the election of a deputy of the Moscow City Council. After the predecessor of the Moscow City Duma was dissolved by decree of the President of the Russian Federation, Savelyev worked at the ROPTs Foundation.

This was followed by the post of adviser to Dmitry Rogozin, who was then the head of the State Duma Committee on International Affairs. In 2003, Andrei Nikolayevich himself sat in the deputy chair, representing the Motherland bloc.


In the lower house of the Russian parliament, he was elected to the post of deputy chairman of the Committee on CIS Affairs and Relations with Compatriots, then moved to the Committee on Constitutional Legislation and State Building.

During his time as a deputy, Savelyev was remembered for participating in a public hunger strike of the Motherland faction, a fight with, launching a scarecrow, and a proposal to ban foreigners from trading in the markets. The name of the deputy was included in the directory "Ultra-Right Radicals in Russia", where he was named one of the ideologists of nationalism.

From 2004 to 2006 he was a member of the Motherland party, was a member of the presidium. After the change of leadership, the transformation of the party into A Just Russia, Savelyev left the party for ideological reasons.

From the mid-1990s, Savelyev was a member of the leadership of the political association "Congress of Russian Communities", left the organization when its leader Dmitry Rogozin proposed that the KRO join the All-Russian Popular Front. The ONF, as you know, was created to support the presidential elections in 2012.


In February 2005, while still in public service, Andrei Savelyev took the oath of allegiance, considering himself the head of the Russian imperial house, whose claims to the throne, as you know, are not accepted by everyone. This fact is captured in the photo, which is freely available on the Internet. The servant of the people did not give any explanation for his act.

2007 was marked by the creation of the Great Russia party, which Saveliev headed. Not without sarcasm, the new party leader said that after the founding congress he was summoned to the prosecutor's office, where they asked if a financially disgraced businessman supported the party.


"Great Russia" was twice denied official registration. The cell coordinator in Murmansk was the notorious Miron Kravchenko, an activist of the Christian State - Holy Rus' organization, which in 2017 became famous for its threats against the distributors of the film Matilda.

The goal of "Great Russia" Andrei Savelyev proclaimed the establishment of Russian national power. And it must be admitted that the ideas of the organization find supporters, are the subject of heated debate, videos are duplicated on the forums of various sites, LiveJournal platforms. On his LiveJournal page, Savelyev stated that the 2018 elections would be rigged, and the rigging is already embedded in the very procedure for holding elections.


Savelyev chose YouTube as the main mouthpiece of national-radical ideas, where he opened his own channel. On the hosting, the politician publishes “Russian News” weekly, where he sets out his vision of the state of affairs in Russia, conducts conversations on the topics of Russophobia, exposes the Kremlin’s policy, and shares his attitude towards former associates.

Andrei Nikolaevich did not ignore the judicial system, the topic of the removal of the Russian team from the Olympics. Videos titled “Who is Mr. Putin?”, “Putin's era is ending” gathered the greatest number of views.

At the same time, Andrei posted details where like-minded people and sympathizers can transfer funds to cover party expenses.

Personal life

About the personal life of Andrei Savelyev, it is only known that he is married, has two sons - Mikhail and Ivan. His wife Olga is a foreign language teacher. Andrey is a black belt in karate. On the page in

Birthday 08 August 1962

Russian statesman and politician, doctor of political sciences

Head of the international fund "Russian Information Center".

Origin

Born on August 8, 1962 in the city of Svobodny, Amur Region.

Education

In 1985 he graduated from the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology, Faculty of Molecular and Chemical Physics.

In 1990 he completed his postgraduate studies. He became a candidate of physical and mathematical sciences with a degree in chemical physics.

In 1993 he completed two courses at the Moscow Law Institute. In 1994 he graduated from the courses of stock market specialists.

In 2000 he defended his doctoral dissertation in political sciences, majoring in political institutions and processes.

Biography

From 1985 to 1990 he worked at the Institute of Chemical Physics and the Institute of Energy Problems of Chemical Physics of the USSR Academy of Sciences.

In 1990 he was elected to the Moscow City Council. He worked in the commissions for the consumer market and for public organizations, then as director of the Public Center of the Moscow City Council.

From 1995 to 1998, after the liquidation of the Moscow City Council, he worked in a number of analytical centers, in the Russian Public and Political Center.

From 1999 to 2003, he worked as an adviser to Dmitry Rogozin as Chairman of the State Duma Committee on International Affairs and the President's Special Representative in Kaliningrad. From November 2002 to April 2003, he worked in Kaliningrad as an analyst at the Rogozin Bureau. In December 2003, he was elected to the State Duma on the list of the Rodina bloc. In the Duma, he worked as deputy chairman of the Committee on CIS Affairs and Relations with Compatriots, then - the Committee on Constitutional Legislation and State Building.

From 2004 to 2006 he was a member of the Motherland party, was a member of the presidium of the party. After changing the leader, ideology and name of the party (transformation into "Fair Russia"), he left it. Then he took part in the restoration congress of the KRO. In May 2007, at the founding congress of the Great Russia political party, he was elected its chairman. The party has not passed state registration. The refusal of state registration was challenged in the European Court of Human Rights.

By political convictions, he is a legitimist monarchist, in 2005 he became the first deputy of the State Duma since 1912 to take the oath of allegiance, the so-called. "Head of the House of Romanov" - Maria Vladimirovna. In 2008-2011 was a member of the Russian Imperial Union-Order.

Personal life

A family

Married, has two sons.

Hobbies and interests

Engaged in active sports. Particular preference is given to martial arts (karate). The range of scientific interests includes such topics as: conservative ideology, political anthropology, political mythology, Russian national idea, state theory, ethnopolitics and much more.

Reviews

In his dissertation for the title of Doctor of Historical Sciences “Formation of the foreign policy development strategy of the Russian Federation in the context of globalization (1992-2003)”, Mikhail Chaika wrote that in the works of a number of Russian authors, including A. N. Savelyev, “in sufficient detail, although not always indisputably, the trends and evolution of Russia's foreign policy development in the system of world relations are considered, a historical analysis of the development of events is given not only at the international, but also at the domestic level. Kanash Munir Yousef expressed a similar opinion in his dissertation for the title of candidate of historical sciences.

In his dissertation for the title of Candidate of Political Science “Terrorism as a means of political struggle in the countries of Western Europe”, Denis Chigarev wrote that the works of a number of authors, including A. N. Savelyev, “reveal the relationship between the social myth and the emergence of extremist ideas and views capable of initiate terrorist activity."

It was also noted that one of the topics of A. N. Savelyev's research was the role of the sign-symbolic sphere in the life of society.

Publications

  • "Rebellion of the nomenklatura" (1995);
  • "Ideology of the Absurd" (1995);
  • "Chechen trap" (1997);
  • "The myth of the masses and the magic of the leaders" (1999);
  • "Political Mythology" (2003);
  • “Nation and State. The Theory of Conservative Reconstruction” (2005);
  • "Image of the enemy. Rasology and political anthropology” (2007); second edition - 2010,
  • "Russophobia in Russia" (2006-2009) (2010)
  • "Motherland against demons" (2011)
  • "Real Sparta" (2011)
  • "Fragments of the Putin Era" (in two books - "Bureocracy Against the Nation", "Dossier on the Regime" (2011)
  • "Experiences of Russian resistance" (2011)
  • "How the USSR was killed. Who became a billionaire" (2011)
  • "Will KRO Russify Russia" (2011)
  • "Russophobia in Russia. 2010" (2011)

Editor and co-editor of scientific collections:

  • "The Inevitability of Empire" (1996);
  • "Russian system" (1997).
  • "The racial meaning of the Russian idea. Issue 1" (1999)
  • "Racial sense of the Russian idea. Issue 2" (2003)
  • "The Return of Russian History" (2011)
  • Manifesto for the Revival of Russia (1993-1996 editions)
  • "National Manifesto" (2009)
  • "Become Russian in Russia" (together with B.A. Vinogradov, 2011)

Andrey Nikolaevich Savelyev is a Russian statesman and politician. Deputy Chairman of the State Duma Committee on Constitutional Legislation and State Building. Member of the Presidium of the KRO. Chairman of the political party "Great Russia". Head of the international fund "Russian Information Center". Doctor of Political Sciences.

Biography

Born on August 8, 1962 in the city of Svobodny, Amur Region, in a Russian family. In 1985 he graduated from the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology, Faculty of Molecular and Chemical Physics. From 1985 to 1990 he worked at the Institute of Chemical Physics and the Institute of Energy Problems of Chemical Physics of the USSR Academy of Sciences. In 1990 he completed his postgraduate studies. In the same year he was elected to the Moscow Council. He worked in the commissions for the consumer market and for public organizations, then as director of the Public Center of the Moscow City Council. A year later, he became a candidate of physical and mathematical sciences with a degree in chemical physics.

In 1993 he completed two courses at the Moscow Law Institute. In 1994 he graduated from the courses of stock market specialists. From 1995 to 1998, after the illegal liquidation of the Moscow City Council, he worked in a number of analytical centers, in the Russian Public and Political Center. From 1999 to 2003, he worked as an adviser to Dmitry Rogozin as Chairman of the State Duma Committee on International Affairs and the President's Special Representative in Kaliningrad. In 2000 he defended his doctoral dissertation in political sciences, majoring in political institutions and processes. From November 2002 to April 2003, he worked in Kaliningrad as an analyst at the Rogozin bureau. In December 2003, he was elected to the State Duma on the list of the Rodina bloc. In the Duma, he worked as deputy chairman of the Committee on CIS Affairs and Relations with Compatriots, then - the Committee on Constitutional Legislation and State Building.

From 2004 to 2006 he was a member of the Motherland party, was a member of the presidium of the party. After changing the leader, ideology and name of the party (transformation into "Fair Russia"), he left it. Then, he joined the DPNI and took part in the restoration congress of the KRO, where he was elected a member of the Presidium of the movement. In May 2007, at the founding congress of the Great Russia political party, he was elected its chairman.

Personal life

Married, has two sons.

Hobbies and interests

Engaged in active sports. Particular preference is given to martial arts. The range of scientific interests includes such topics as: conservative ideology, political anthropology, political mythology, Russian national idea, state theory, ethnopolitics and much more.

"Rebellion of the nomenklatura" (1995);

"Ideology of the Absurd" (1995);

"Chechen trap" (1997);

"The myth of the masses and the magic of the leaders" (1999);

"Political Mythology" (2003).

Editor and co-editor of scientific collections:

"The Inevitability of Empire" (1996);

"Russian system" (1997);

"The Racial Meaning of the Russian Idea" (1999, 2000, 2002).

Leader of the Great Russia party, doctor of political sciences, monarchist, imperialist, Russian nationalist, militarist, Orthodox fundamentalist, national conservative.

Born on August 8, 1962 in the city of Svobodny, Amur Region. In 1979 he graduated from school, in 1985 - the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology. From 1985 to 1990 he worked at the Institute of Chemical Physics and the Institute of Energy Problems of Chemical Physics. In 1990, he completed his postgraduate studies and received the degree of candidate of physical and mathematical sciences (specialty "chemical physics").
In the same year he became a deputy of the Moscow City Council (he worked in the commissions for the consumer market and for public organizations, then became director of the Public Center of the Moscow City Council). He worked there until it was liquidated.
Since 1992 he has been engaged in political science.
In 1998 he moved to work in the International Congress of Russian Communities.
In 2000, Savelyev defended his doctoral dissertation in political sciences (major in political institutions and processes)

In December 2003, Andrei Nikolayevich was elected to the State Duma from the Rodina association. In the State Duma, he joined the committee on constitutional legislation and state building, and was later elected deputy chairman of the committee. He was included in the Counting Commission of the Duma.

On January 21, 2005, Savelyev joined the hunger strike within the walls of the Parliament declared by representatives of the Motherland faction. This hunger strike was announced after the deputies learned that the agenda of the State Duma did not include consideration of an alternative statement "On the negative social consequences of replacing benefits with cash payments."

A week after the start of the hunger strike, Savelyev was hospitalized with a diagnosis of low blood sugar. The rest of the deputies ended their hunger strike in early February 2005. Their demands (resignation of Minister of Health Mikhail Zurabov, Minister of Finance Alexei Kudrin and Minister of Economic Development and Trade German Gref; introduction of a moratorium on the operation of the law on the monetization of benefits; creation of an emergency commission to find ways out of the current crisis) were never fulfilled.

At the end of March 2005, Saveliev's name appeared in the media in connection with a fight in the State Duma. It was reported that Savelyev had a fight with LDPR leader Vladimir Zhirinovsky. Zhirinovsky told reporters that he had filed an application with the Russian Prosecutor General's Office with a demand to initiate criminal proceedings against Savelyev and the head of the Motherland faction, Rogozin. In response, deputies from the Communist Party of the Russian Federation and Rodina began collecting signatures for the recall of Zhirinovsky from the post of vice speaker. They also suggested that their colleagues deprive Zhirinovsky of his parliamentary immunity and declared a boycott on him, but this proposal was not accepted, and in April 2005, Savelyev still had to testify at the Prosecutor General's Office in connection with the fight.

In June 2005, shortly after the mass blackout in Moscow and the region, Savelyev suggested that the deputies ask the government for data on the salary of members of the board of directors and the board of directors of RAO UES of Russia, as well as heads of regional energy enterprises that are part of the holding. The State Duma approved his proposal. On June 16, Savelyev took part in an action by representatives of the Moscow branch of the Rodina party, during which an inflatable stuffed animal of the head of RAO UES of Russia, Anatoly Chubais, was launched into the sky. As Savelyev explained, in this way his party comrades sent Chubais ahead of schedule "to retire" and can hold a similar action on the occasion of the birthday of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

In early October 2005, Rogozin, Savelyev, and their party ally Alexander Babakov submitted amendments to the law on the status of foreigners in Russia to the State Duma. The deputies proposed to ban foreigners from trading in the markets, referring to the need to protect the Russian manufacturer. The liberal media have repeatedly tried to accuse the Rodina party of xenophobia.

After it became known in the summer of 2006 about the impending merger between Rodina and the Russian Party of Life, speaker of the Federation Council Sergei Mironov, Savelyev sharply criticized what was happening. When the unification of Rodina, the RPL and the Russian Party of Pensioners that joined them led to the creation of a new Just Russia party, the politician said: “They (Fair Russia) stole legal powers from us. Moreover, 150,000 of our supporters had the status of being a member of the Rodina party, which has now been stolen from them.”



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