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Vladimir Ivashko

Soviet Ukrainian politician (1932-1994)In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming conventions, the patronymic is Antonovich and the family name is Ivashko.

Vladimir Antonovich Ivashko (Russian: Влади́мир Анто́нович Ива́шко; Ukrainian: Володимир Антонович Івашко, Volodymyr Antonovych Ivashko; 28 October 1932 – 13 November 1994) was a Soviet Ukrainian politician, briefly acting as General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU) during the period from 24 to 29 August 1991. On 24 August Mikhail Gorbachev resigned from the post, and on 29 August the CPSU was suspended by the Supreme Soviet. Before becoming General Secretary he had been voted Gorbachev's Deputy General Secretary within the Party on 12 July 1990, a newly created position as a result of the 28th Congress of the Communist Party.

Contents

  • 1 Background
  • 2 Notes
  • 3 References
  • 4 Sources
  • 5 External links

Background

The Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU) during the time between Mikhail Gorbachev's resignation and its suspension was politically impotent. By the time of the 28th Congress in July 1990, the party was largely regarded as being unable to lead the country and had, across the fifteen republics of the Soviet Union, split into opposing factions favouring either independent republics or the continuation of the Soviet state. Stripped of its leading role in society, the party lost its authority to lead the nation or the cohesion that kept the party united. Actual political power lay in the positions of President of the Soviet Union (held by Gorbachev) and President of the Russian SFSR (held by Boris Yeltsin). During the August Coup he did not make public statements but on behalf of the Secretariat distributed letters to local party organizations calling on them to uphold the CPSU.

Gorbachev brought in his ally Ivashko in to replace the long-serving Volodymyr Shcherbytsky as First Secretary of the Ukrainian Communist Party on 28 September 1989. Ivashko led the Communists to victory in the first relatively free parliamentary election held in the Ukrainian SSR, which took place from 4 March to 18 March 1990, the Communists winning 331 seats to the Democratic Bloc's 111 seats. Ivashko was elected by the communist majority to the post of the Chairman of the Verkhovna Rada of the Ukrainian SSR on 4 June 1990. Since the abandonment by the Communists of their "leading role" in early 1990 this position now superseded that of First Secretary of the Communist Party as the most powerful position in Ukraine.

He resigned his position as First Secretary on 22 June 1990 following opposition demonstrations against his simultaneous occupation of both the posts of First Secretary of the ruling party and Chairman of the legislature. However, on 9 July 1990 he too resigned as Chairman of the Verkhovna Rada of the Ukrainian SSR after declining to be recalled to Kyiv during the 28th Congress of the Communist Party in Moscow, and a few days later successfully secured the position of Deputy General Secretary of the CPSU.

On August 23, 1990, a secret memorandum from Ivashko outlined strategies to hide the Communist Party's *ets through Russian and international joint ventures because Boris Yeltsin, who was the new president of the Russian Republic in the Soviet Union, wanted to levy taxes on the Communist Party's vast administrative property holdings and on the party itself. The memorandum was to organize the transfer of CPSU funds, CPSU financing and support of its operations through *ociations, ventures, foundations, etc. which are to act as invisible economics. In November 1990, the offs* structure Fimaco was formed by the Russian Central Bank, then known as Gosbank, to hide these funds. According to Sergei Tretyakov, KGB chief Vladimir Kryuchkov sent US$50 billion worth of funds of the Communist Party to an unknown location in the lead-up to the collapse of the USSR.

Ivashko retired in 1992 and died on 13 November 1994, at the age of 62, after an undetermined long illness.

Notes

    References

      Sources

      • Belton, Catherine (23 June 2020). Putin's People: How the KGB Took Back Russia and Then Took on the West. Farrar, Straus, Giroux. ISBN:978-0374238711.
      • Earley, Pete (2008). Comrade J: The Untold Secrets of Russia's Master Spy in America After the End of the Cold War. Putnam. ISBN:9780399154393.

      External links

      • Volodymyr Ivashko in the Encyclopedia of History of Ukraine
      Departments of the
      Central Committee
      • Administrative Organs
      • Agriculture
      • Chemical Industry
      • Construction
      • Culture
      • Defence Industry
      • Foreign Cadres
      • General
      • Heavy Industry
      • Information
      • International
      • Light- and Food Industry
      • Machine Industry
      • Organisational-party Work
      • Planning and Financial Organs
      • Political Administration of the Ministry of Defence
      • Propaganda
      • Science and Education
      • Trade and Consumers' Services
      • Transportation-Communications
      Factions
      • Group of Democratic Centralism (1919–1921)
      • Workers' Opposition (1920–1921)
      • Workers' Truth (1921–1923)
      • Left Opposition (1923–1927)
      • Workers' Group (1923–1930)
      • Right Opposition (1924–1933)
      • United Opposition (1926–1927)
      • Left-Right Bloc (1930)
      • Union of Marxist-Leninists (1932)
      • Bloc of Soviet Oppositions (1932–1933)
      • Anti-Party Group (1957)
      • Soyuz (1990–1991)
      • State Committee on the State of Emergency (1991)
      See also
      • Bloc of Communists and Non-Partisans
      • General Jewish Labour Bund in Lithuania, Poland and Russia
      • League of Russian Revolutionary Social Democracy Abroad
      • League of Struggle for the Emancipation of the Working Cl*
      • Siberian Social-Democratic Union
      • Social Democracy of the Kingdom of Poland and Lithuania
      • Union of Russian Social Democrats Abroad
      List of chairmenHistoric
      predecessors
      • Central Council of Ukraine
      • All-Ukrainian Congress of Soviets
        • Central Executive Committee of Ukraine
      • Ukrainian Cons*uent *embly (never realized)
      • Labor Congress of Ukraine
      • Soim
        • Carpathian Ukraine
      • Ukrainian National Council
        • West Ukraine
      • Council of Republic
      See also
      • Politics of Ukraine
      • Political parties in Ukraine
      • Elections in Ukraine
      • Piano voting in Ukraine