Sergey Glazyev

January 8, 2024
Russian Politician

Quick Facts

Sergey Glazyev
Full Name Sergey Glazyev
Occupation Russian Politician
Date Of Birth Jan 1, 1961(1961-01-01)
Age 63
Birthplace Zaporizhzhia
Country Ukraine
Horoscope Capricorn

Sergey Glazyev Biography

Name Sergey Glazyev
Birthday Jan 1
Birth Year 1961
Place Of Birth Zaporizhzhia
Birth Country Ukraine
Birth Sign Capricorn
Siblings Yuliya Sinelina
Spouse Oksana Glazyeva

Sergey Glazyev is one of the most popular and richest Russian politician who was born on January 1, 1961 in Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine. The book then outlines Glazyev’s opinions on the stark choice facing Russia at the eve in the twenty-first century.

The 1999 publication A Genocide: Russia And The New World Order, Glazyev asserts that loss of population in Russia during the 1990s was “more than double the rate of loss during the period of Stalinist repression and mass famine in the first half of the 1930s …. There has been nothing like this in the thousand-year history of Russia.” Glazyev connects the decline in population back to “the conscious policy of the oligarchy that ruled the country. Its exploitation of power for purposes of personal enrichment effectively led to genocide against the Russian people.”

While he (and other challengers of Putin) had been polling in the single- digits, Glazeyev was seen by observers as the candidate with the most likely chance of experiencing a last-minute surge in support and posing a challenge to Putin. He was seen as a relatively strong candidate. This partially derived from the fact that his Rodina bloc had seen its share of support surge at the tail end of the 2003 legislative election from nearly zero to 9%. However, that was largely due to an effort by the Kremlin to increase support of Rodina to the detriment of the Communist Party. Additionally, analysts believed that Glazyev held greater potential than Gennady Zyuganov would of appealing to moderate left Russians. This made him the challenger which the Putin campaign was most focussed on, as Putin hoped to avoid seeing any opponent achieve a strong enough performance that they might be perceived as a potential frontrunner for the next presidential election.

Glazyev ran as an independent candidate in the 2004 Russian presidential election. His campaign slogans were “We’ll take Russia back” and “There is a choice”.

In the State Duma as a member of the Democratic Party of Russia in 1993, he initially partnered with his friend at the time and then fierce rival, Dmitry Rogozin. He left office prior to the time his first four-year mandate was over, because the duo was appointed economic security advisor to the Federation Council of Russia and the head of the Council’s analytical department. He was also a partner with Rogozin along with Aleksandr Lebed in the short-lived nationalist political movement known as known as the Congress of Russian Communities.

Sergey Glazyev Net Worth

Net Worth $5 Million
Source Of Income Russian politician
House Living in own house.

Sergey Glazyev is one of the richest Russian Politician from Ukraine. According to our analysis, Wikipedia, Forbes & Business Insider, Sergey Glazyev 's net worth $5 Million. (Last Update: December 11, 2023)

Sergey Yurievich Glazyev (Russian: Sergei Iur’evich Glz’ev ) (born 1 January 1961 from Zaporozhye, Ukrainian SSR, USSR) is a Russian politician and economist advisor on behalf of President Putin of the Russian Federation on regional economic integration, a member of the National Financial Council of the Bank of Russia as well as in 2008, has been a full-time part of the Russian Academy of Sciences. Professor. Glazyev was Minister of Foreign Economic Relations in Yeltsin’s cabinet, and was the only person in the Russian government to step down in protest at President Yeltsin’s removal of the Parliament as well as the Constitution at the end of 1993. Glazyev was an active member of the State Duma in 1993-2007, as a presidential candidate in the Russian Federation in 2004, and one of the chiefs of the block of voters Rodina during 2003-2004.

Born in Zaporizhia which was part of Zaporizhia, in the Ukrainian SSR in the Ukrainian SSR as the child of an Russian father and an Ukrainian mother. Glazyev studied at Moscow State University, earning the degree of Doctor of Philosophy degree in Economics. He joined the federal government in 1991, and was appointed the First Vice Minister for External Economic Relations under Yegor Gaidar. He was in that position for a year, after that he was promoted into Minister under Viktor Chenomyrdin. working until 1993, at which point the Minister resigned.

In 1999, he resigned once again to run for the Duma, and was elected this time as an independent on the list of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation. This time, however, he clashed with the party’s leadership and, in 2003, he abandoned the party to help form Rodina, a nationalist party on the left wing of the Russian political spectrum. That year, he became one of 37 Rodina candidates elected to the State Duma. Other prominent candidates included Dmitry Rogozin, Chairman of the Duman Foreign Affairs Committee and co-chairman (with Glazyev) of Rodina, and also former Central Bank head Viktor Gerashchenko.

Height, Weight & Body Measurements

Sergey Glazyev height Not available right now. Sergey weight Not Known & body measurements will update soon.

Who is Sergey Glazyev Dating?

According to our records, Sergey Glazyev married to Oksana Glazyeva. As of December 1, 2023, Sergey Glazyev’s is not dating anyone.

Relationships Record : We have no records of past relationships for Sergey Glazyev. You may help us to build the dating records for Sergey Glazyev!

Glazyev endorsed Putin in the 2012 presidential election.

Facts & Trivia

Sergey Ranked on the list of most popular Russian politician. Also ranked in the elit list of famous people born in Ukraine. Sergey Glazyev celebrates birthday on January 1 of every year.

In August 2013 Glazyev said that stating that all Ukrainians favor Ukraine to integrate in the European Union “is some kind of sick self-delusion” and, citing a December 2012 poll, said “surveys by Ukrainian sociological services say something different: 35% of people prefer the European Union and 40% the Customs Union”. He blamed “numerous political scientists and experts, who have fed on European and American grants for 20 years, and a whole generation of diplomats and bureaucrats that has appeared after the years of the ‘orange’ hysteria, who are carrying out an anti-Russian agenda” and “who are too far from the economy and real life, don’t really know their country’s history and are divorced from its spiritual traditions” for creating “an effect that Ukraine doesn’t want”.

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