Boris Yeltsin
Boris Nikolayevich Yeltsin (“The Liberator”) (1931-2007) was born to a peasant family in Butka, studied at Ural State Technical University, and became a construction manager, and First Secretary of the Sverdlovsk Communist Party. After rising through the Party ranks and backing Mikhail Gorbachev’s perestroika reforms, he resigned in 1987 because he decided the Party was not moving quickly enough toward a multi-party democracy.
In 1991, a popular leader for democracy, he was elected president of Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (RFSFR), and the successor independent Russian Federation upon the dissolution of the Soviet Union.
During his presidency newly democratic Russia was rocked by economic turmoil, charges of corruption and a rigged election., and Yeltsin’s (failed) impeachment. He was reelected in 1996, but resigned at the end of 1999, opening the way to the presidency of Vladimir Putin. The story is told in detail in Herbert J. Ellison, Boris Yeltsin and Russia’s Democratic Transformation (University of Washington Press, 2006.):
Throughout his crucial years of power, Yeltsin showed himself to be a sturdy advocate of democratic institutions and practices, even though he confronted recurrent opposition-dominated legislatures and, in the presidential election of 1996, the serious possibility of being replaced as president by a communist leader who intended to reverse his major reforms. His tenacious pursuit of constitutional reform and commitment to democratic practice eventually produced a stable constitutional order despite the chaotic conditions of post-Soviet Russia.” (Ellison @71).
“Yeltsin destroyed the communist dictatorship, freed the national republics of the Soviet Union, launched a vast program to create a market economy, and then, in 1993, replaced a non-functional communist constitution with one modeled on that of a Western democracy. Three parliamentary and two presidential elections at the national level and a vast decentralization of power to elected regional and local governments followed these events. And although one cannot ignore the many shortcomings of the reform process – particularly in the economy – his successor Vladimir Putin would have had scant hope of realizing his own program for Russia without the Yeltsin legacy.” (Ellison @ 139-40)
In his wide-ranging news conference on May 30, 1990, on his first day as chairman of the RFSFR (Russian) republic, Yeltsin extemporaneously addressed the issue of the relations between the “center” (the central government in Moscow) and the fifteen newly sovereign constituent republics.
Celestine Bohlen of the New York Times reported thus (from Moscow 5/31/90):