Central Committee of the 27th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union

The Central Committee of the 27th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union was in session from 1986 until 1990.[1] Its 1st Plenary Session elected the Politburo, the Secretariat and the Party Control Committee of the 27th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.

History

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Election and composition

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The 27th Congress witnessed the greatest turnover of Central Committee members in the party's history since 22nd Party Congress (held in 1961) during Nikita Khrushchev's leadership.[2] The numbers of full membership were reduced from 319 in the 26th Central Committee to 307, while candidate membership was increased from 151 to 170.[3] Of the 307 full members elected to the 27th Central Committee, 102 (making up 33 percent of membership) were newcomers.[4] 25 officials, who had previously served as candidate members in the 26th Central Committee, were promoted to full membership.[4] In total 125 new full members were appointed, making up 41 percent.[4] 182 members (59 percent) were reelected to the 27th Central Committee, a decrease from the 26th Congress, in which 238 (75 percent) were reelected.[4] Of the 170 candidate members, 54 (32 percent) were reelected, while the other 116 were newcomers.[4] The 1st Plenary Session elected Lev Zaykov (then First Secretary of the Leningrad City Party Committee) to full membership in the Politburo, while Nikolay Slyunkov (Communist Party of Byelorussia First Secretary) and Yuri Solovyev [ru] (First Secretary of the Leningrad Regional Party Committee) were given Politburo candidate membership.[5] The plenum elected five newcomers to the Secretariat; Alexandra Biryukova (the first women to hold high party office since Yekaterina Furtseva in the Khrushchev era), Anatoly Dobrynin, Vadim Medvedev [ru], Georgy Razumovsky and Alexander Yakovlev.[5] The 1st Plenary Session reelected Mikhail Gorbachev to the office of the general secretary.[6]

In a similar vein, Gorbachev managed to get close advisers elected to the Central Committee.[3] Anatoly Chernyaev (Gorbachev's foreign adviser) and Anatoly Lukyanov, (head of the party's General Department) were promoted to full membership, while Valery Boldin was elected to the 27th Central Committee as a candidate member.[3] Several figures within the Central Academy of Social Sciences, most notably Evgeny Velikhov, were appointed to the Central Committee as candidate members.[3] Notably the 27th Congress did not reelect Richard Kosolapov, the longtime editor of the party's theoretical journal Kommunist, and was replaced by Ivan Frolov.[3] Several Brezhnev appointed heads of Central Committee departments failed to be reelected to the Central Committee; Ivan Sakhnyuk [ru] (Agricultural-Machine Building Department), Kirill Simonov (Transport and Communications Department) and Vasily Shauro [ru] (Culture Department).[7] Nikolay Savkin (Administrative Organs Department) and Vladimir Karlov [ru] (Agriculture and Food Industry Department) were the two last remaining Central Committee departments heads appointed by Brezhnev.[7] Of the 23 department heads, fourteen were replaced by the 1st Plenary Session.[8] Four leading officials from the Brezhnev era, who retired from the Politburo and the Secretariat at the 27th Congress, were reelected to the Central Committee; Nikolai Tikhonov (former chairman of the Council of Ministers), Nikolai Baibakov (the former chairman of the State Planning Committee), Boris Ponomarev (former head of the International Department) and Vasili Kuznetsov (the former first deputy chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet).[9]

Tenure

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Combating party formalism; 1st–2nd Plenary Sessions

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The newly elected leadership was united in supporting reforms, principally behind the slogan uskoreniye (literally "acceleration"), which called for improving the Soviet economy,[6] and to combat formalism[further explanation needed], corruption, nepotism and centralism within the party.[6] Beginning in March 1985, the Central Committee (through the Soviet press) began criticizing the norms and organizational habits of the party; criticism increased by the discovery of corruption rings in the communist parties of Kazakhstan (CPK, Kirghizia (CPKi), Turkmenistan (CPT), Moldavia (CPM), Uzbekistan (CPU) and Azerbaijan (ACP).[10] The policy of appointing officials on the basis of "personal loyalty, servility and protectionism" were blamed on the party's subpar performance in certain areas, and in areas in which this was not the case, the Central Committee focused on the lack of inner-party democracy.[11] To strengthen party democracy, Gorbachev called for an increase in criticism and self-criticism (claiming it was as critical "for us as air")[12] to overcome "'paradeness, ballyhoo . . . [and] the embellishment of reality".[13] An article in Pravda noted that "In some places people try to 'prepare' the discussion in such a way as to avoid any tricky issues in it. Speeches are usually made only by 'staff' speakers, usually in a predetermined order. Things even go as far as the editing of draft texts of speeches."[13] Meetings became ceremonial, and lacked effective power—which led local authorities to misinform the central authorities on the situation in the given area.[13] All forms of "window-dressing", or hiding abuses of power in general, were to be stopped.[14] In the current situation, Solovyev noted;[14]

The main demand which the party makes under modern conditions on the party committee secretary and the staff officer is ensuring that nowhere, under no circumstances, does word part from deed since any discrepancy here causes palpable damage to the authority of our policy and cannot be tolerated in any form.[14]

Boris Griaznov, the First Secretary of the Frunze District Party Committee, was signalled out as an official "'accustomed to stagnation, encouraged ostentation, ignored collective opinion, lost the feeling of party comradeship, and only pretended to be carrying out restructuring",[14] while party leaders in Kazakhstan had difficulty of ridding"themselves of elements of excessive administration and a commander-like style [behaviour]".[14] The central leadership continued to highlight the party work ethics of first secretaries at every level; at the 2nd Plenary Session Gorbachev condemned certain localities of not committing themselves to the new work-style.[14] In other cases, as noted by Gorbachev, party leaders did not know how to react to criticism or how to introduce changes, noting that "Sometimes words are substituted for deeds, no action is taken in response to criticism, and self-criticism takes the form of self-flagellation."[15] Historian Graeme Gill asserts;[16]

"complaints about the way in which the party was operating which resounded through the press in 1985 and 1986 amounted to a condemnation of the party's organisational culture. [...] During the first eighteen months or so of Gorbachev's tenure as General Secretary, there seems to have been a general underestimation of the strength and sources of this culture and of what was necessary to eradicate it. The heart of the solution the Gorbachev leadership pursued was thoroughly traditional in the Soviet context, personnel.[16]

Collectivity of leadership, and collectivism in general, was hailed as "a reliable guarantee against the adoption of volitional, subjective decisions, manifestations of the cult of personality, and the infringement of Leninist norms of party life."[17] In tandem, the Central Committee began calling for psychological restructuring of party members.[17] However, since the 27th Congress failed to create institutions which oversaw the implementation of these measures (and others), individual members who had no interest in changing their work habits were not punished.[17] The reason for the lack of oversight was Gorbachev's belief that the party was a "healthy organism", and as Graeme Gill concludes, "A healthy organism clearly did not need radical institutional surgery."[18] When it became clear to Gorbachev that the reforms to "invigorate" the party had failed, the reform consensus within the leadership was split asunder.[19] Gorbachev began moving in a more radical directions, while several prominent colleagues in the Politburo, Secretariat and the Central Committee opposed his new measures.[19] The schism in the leadership led to the failure to convene the 3rd Plenary Session in the last half of 1986 (being postponed to January 1987).[19] Nonetheless, before the 3rd Plenary Session, the Central Committee was able to remove Dinmukhamed Konayev, the CPK First Secretary.[20] The removal of Konayev, who was widely perceived to support an out-dated work ethic and to be corrupt, led to the Jeltoqsan riots when it was discovered that Konayev would be replaced by Gennady Kolbin, an ethnic Russian who had never lived in the Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic.[21]

Democratization: 3rd–7th Plenary Sessions

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On 23 December 1985, the Politburo appointed Boris Yeltsin, an official from Sverdlovsk, First Secretary of the Moscow City Committee (de facto mayor of Moscow).[22] Gorbachev had endorsed the appointment, heeding the advice of Yegor Ligachev (the party's informal second-in-command) who personally recommended him.[23] In contrast, Nikolai Ryzhkov told Gorbachev in private that "He [Yeltsin] will cause you only grief. I would not recommend him."[23] Yeltsin, who had introduced himself as something of a centrist at the 27th Congress, proved himself to be a supporter of radical change, going even as far, as on 19 January 1986, of criticising Gorbachev personally for "exaggerat[ing] the changes that had occurred" during his leadership.[24]

Gorbachev opened the 3rd Plenary Session by criticising the party's performance, claiming the party's failure to reform was due to "conservatism and inertia, lenience and lack of demandingness, toadyism and personal adulation, red tape, formalism, intolerance and suppression of criticism, ambition and careerism, administration by decree, permissiveness, mutual coverups, careerism, departmentalism, parochialism, nationalism, substitutionism, a weakening of the role of party meetings and elective bodies,embezzlement, bribery, report-padding and violation of discipline."[25] The cure for this "disease" was "demokratizatsiya", literally the democratization of society.[25] He called for open, democratic debates in the primary party organizations and to allow a secret ballot during plenary sessions of the district, area, city, region and territory party committees and the central committees of the republican parties to elect the executive organs.[25] This was an attack on the nomenklatura, a system in which leading officials appointed the cadres at the level below, the basis of the Soviet system.[26] The plenary session opposed his suggestions, and while his criticisms were mentioned in the Resolution of the 3rd Plenary Session, the idea of multi-candidate elections within the Party were omitted from the text.[27]

In preparation of the 4th Plenary Session, Gorbachev had prepared a speech on Soviet and Party history.[28] In it he condemned the rule of Joseph Stalin and Stalinism in general, but the speech was amended by Politburo.[28] Conservatives such as Ligachev, Andrei Gromyko, Mikhail Solomentsev and Vitaly Vorotnikov did not share Gorbachev's views, or at least, did not support a public anti-Stalinist proclamation.[28] Despite the conservative reaction, Gorbachev was able to rehabilitate Nikolay Bukharin and Nikita Khrushchev, while referring to Stalin's repressive regime as "immense and unpardonable".[28]

"People have often asked me—and later I asked myself the same question—why didn't Gorbachev decide to get me out of the way once and for all [in 1987]. . . . I could easily have been pensioned off or sent as ambassador to some faraway country. Yet Gorbachev let me stay in Moscow, gave me a relatively high placed job, and, in effect, kept a determined opponent close by him. It is my belief that if Gorbachev didn't have a Yeltsin, he would have had to invent one.... In this real-life production, the parts have been appropriately cast, as in a well-directed play. There is the conservative Ligachev, who plays the villain; there is Yeltsin, the bully-boy, the madcap radical; and the wise omniscient hero is Gorbachev himself. That, evidently, is how he sees it."

—Boris Yeltsin on his appointment as First Deputy Chairman of the State Committee for Construction.[29]

The 4th Plenary Session was supposed to discuss economic reforms, but instead of focusing on the matter at hand Yeltsin, according to Gorbachev, attacked the speed of perestroika, the work of the Secretariat and Ligachev personally.[30] From this point on, the relationship between Gorbachev and Yeltsin would only grow worse—however, by this time, the press mistakenly had begun to present Yeltsin as Gorbachev's closest reformist associate in the Politburo.[30] In the summer of 1987, when Gorbachev was on vacation, Ligachev (on Gorbachev's bidding) led the party apparatus (and chaired the meetings of the Politburo).[31] On 10 September he organized an Inquiry Commission of the Central Committee to investigate the performance of the Moscow City Committee under Yeltsin's stewardship—Yeltsin reacted to the inquiry by becoming the first Politburo member in history to willingly resign from his seat.[30] In respsonse Gorbachev told Yeltsin they could discuss the situation after the 70th Anniversary of the October Revolution.[32] At the 5th Plenary Session, which was devoted to the aforementioned anniversary, Yeltsin completely broke by protocol by denouncing Gorbachev and Ligachev personally, and resigned from the Politburo.[32] The central leadership reacted in kind, by criticizing him at the plenary session; Yakovlev contended that he had been "reacting immaturely to 'petty offenses'", while Ryzhkov accused him of being driven by "ambition pure and simple".[33] Soon after his resignation, Yeltsin was hospitalized, either for suffering a heart attack (as Yeltsin contends) or for "a fake suicide attempt with scissors" (as Gorbachev and the members of the central leadership contends).[34] At a session of the Moscow City Committee on 11 November 1987, the party leadership dragged Yeltsin out of the hospital and forced him to attend the meeting in which he was relieved of his duties as First Secretary and unceremoniously humiliated.[32] The meeting proved to be a mistake; the Soviet populace began sympathising with Yeltsin—a problem which was compounded "by the mistake" of Gorbachev attending the Moscow City Committee session.[34] In the aftermath, Yeltsin was appointed First Deputy Chairman of the State Committee for Construction (chaired by Yuri Batalin [ru]), but was told on the day of his appointment by Gorbachev that he could not participate in politics.[34]

At the 6th Plenary Session Ligachev delivered the first speech, the first time that Gorbachev had not done so himself.[35] Ligachev attacked what he perceived as the excesses of glasnost, the influence of rock music in society, "the blackening of Soviet history" and the failure of the leadership to do anything with the growing nationalism in the republics.[35] Gorbachev did not speak until the second day of the plenum, and gave a defensive speech in which he defended his reform efforts but called for the establishment of a "middle ground" in which balanced Soviet historiography and supported using Soviet patriotism to counter the rising nationalism in the republics.[36] The plenary session relieved Yeltsin of his duties as candidate member of the Politburo and member of the Secretariat, and elected Razumovsky (Head of the Organisational-Party Work Department) and Yuri Maslyukov (Chairman of the State Planning Committee) to Politburo candidate membership.[36] Leading conservative figures, such as General Dmitry Yazov, had begun criticising Gorbachev's democratising policies openly in December 1987, claiming they weakened the honour of the Soviet military, while party first secretaries in the republics called for a tightening of party control in reaction to the growing nationalism amongst the populace.[36]

In between the 6th and the 7th plenary sessions, the Nina Andreyeva Affair took place.[37] Andreyeva, "an hitherto unknown lecturer at a Leningrad chemical institute, wrote an article in Sovetskaya Rossiya titled "I Cannot Forsake My Principles".[37] She condemned Gorbachev's reforms and called for their reversal.[37] She criticized the Gorbachev leadership's habit of opening the previous black spots in Soviet history, which she claimed only helped to denigrate the Soviet past.[37] In addition, the article is notable for its antisemitism; of all the Jews mentioned, only Karl Marx was not accused of participating in blackening of Soviet history and destroying the Soviet order.[37] The importance of the article does not lay in its author, but rather how it was interpreted by the forces in the Central Committee — both conservatives, centrists and reformers fought Nina Andreyeva was a pseudonym used by a high-standing official.[37] It was consistently referred to posthumously as "an anti-perestroika manifesto".[37] The publication of the article had been chosen carefully by conservative forces within the Central Committee apparatus and Valentin Chikin [ru], the editor-in-chief of Sovetskaya Rossiya, and it was published on 13 March to coincide with Gorbachev's visit to Yugoslavia and Yavkovlev's visit to Mongolia on 14 March.[38] With both of the leading reformers gone, the conservative Ligachev was in charge of the Central Committee apparatus.[38] Ligachev endorsed the article, stating it was "a benchmark for what we need in our ideology today."[38] In the words of historian Archie Brown "Old habits of prudence rapidly reasserted themselves in the face of an apparent signal of change in the balance of forces at the top of the party hierarchy and of a return to a time when dissenting intellectuals would no longer be treated with tolerance."[38] Upon his return on 18 March, Gorbachev discussed it with the Politburo.[38] To his surprise several of his colleagues supported the content of the article, among them Vorotnikov, Gromyko, Ligachev, Solomentsev and Viktor Nikonov [ru].[38] The article was discussed in the 24–26 March Politburo meeting, in which the aforementioned conservatives alongside Viktor Chebrikov, the chairman of the KGB, and Anatoly Lukyanov, a close associate of Gorbachev and the Head of the General Department, supported the article.[38] Chebrikov condemned the criticisms of the Soviet system which had appeared with Gorbachev's reforms, and lamented the scheming "of our ideological adversary".[38] Despite forming a majority, the conservatives did not opt for removing Gorbachev, largely because the institution of General Secretary still meant something in Soviet politics.[39] Gorbachev insisted that every Politburo member had to openly state their position on the matter; Yakovlev, Ryzhkov, Medvedev and Eduard Shevardnadze condemned the article.[39] In light of the pro-reformist stance of this mentioned, and Gorbachev himself, they managed to push the conservatives on the defensive, and got their approval to publish a formal reply to the article.[39]

In light of this event, Gorbachev would seek to consolidate his power within the apparatus even further, especially in the Secretariat (which oversaw the work of the Central Committee apparatus).[39] In his first years as General Secretary, Gorbachev had never chaired a meeting of the Secretariat, leaving that responsibility to the conservative.[39] But in light of the strong backing the Andreyeva article had in the Central Committee apparatus, Gorbachev chaired the first Secretariat meetings in the affair's aftermath.[39]

Plenums

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The Central Committee was not a permanent institution. It convened plenary sessions. 21 CC plenary sessions were held between the 27th Congress and the 28th Congress. When the CC was not in session, decision-making power was vested in the internal bodies of the CC itself; that is, the Politburo and the Secretariat. None of these bodies were permanent either; typically they convened several times a month.[40]

Plenary sessions of the Central Committee
[41]
Plenum Date Length
1st Plenary Session 6 March 1986 1 day
2nd Plenary Session 16 June 1986 1 day
3rd Plenary Session 27–28 January 1987 2 days
4th Plenary Session 25–26 June 1987 2 days
5th Plenary Session 21 October 1987 1 day
6th Plenary Session 17–18 February 1988 2 days
7th Plenary Session 23 May 1988 1 day
8th Plenary Session 29 July 1988 1 day
9th Plenary Session 30 September 1988 1 day
10th Plenary Session 28 November 1988 1 day
11th Plenary Session 10 January 1989 1 day
12th Plenary Session 15–16 March 1989 2 days
13th Plenary Session 25 April 1989 1 day
14th Plenary Session 22 May 1989 1 day
15th Plenary Session 2 June 1989 1 day
16th Plenary Session 19–20 September 1989 2 days
17th Plenary Session 9 December 1989 1 day
18th Plenary Session 25–26 December 1989 2 days
19th Plenary Session 5–7 February 1990 3 days
20th Plenary Session 11, 14, 16 March 1990 3 days
21st Plenary Session 29 June 1990 1 day

Apparatus

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Individuals employed by Central Committee's bureaus, departments and newspapers made up the apparatus between the 27th Congress and the 28th Congress. The bureaus and departments were supervised by the Secretariat, and each secretary (member of the Secretariat) supervised a specific department. The leaders of departments were officially referred to as Heads, while the titles of bureau leaders varied between chairman, first secretary and secretary.[citation needed]

Traditional structure (1986–88)

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Central Committee Apparatus of the 27th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union established by the 1st Plenary Session
Institution Leader Cyrillic Took office Left office Length of tenure
Administrator of Affairs Nikolay Kruchina Николай Кручина 6 March 1986 24 August 1988 2 years and 171 days
Administrative Organs Department Nikolai Savinkin Николай Савинкин 6 March 1986 17 January 1987 317 days
Anatoly Lukyanov Анатолий Лукьянов 17 January 1987 30 September 1988 1 year and 257 days
Agriculture and Food Industry Department Vladimir Karlov Влади́мир Ка́рлов 6 March 1986 October 1986 209 days
Cadres Abroad Department Stepan Chervonenko Степан Червоненко 6 March 1986 30 September 1988 2 years and 208 days
Chemical Industry Department Veniamin Afonin Вениамин Афонин 6 March 1986 30 September 1988 2 years and 208 days
Construction Department Alexander Melnikov Александр Мельников 6 March 1986 30 September 1988 2 years and 208 days
Culture Department Yuri Voronov Юрий Во́ронов 6 March 1986 30 September 1988 2 years and 208 days
Defence Industry Department Oleg Belyakov Олег Беляков 6 March 1986 30 September 1988 2 years and 208 days
Economic Department Vacant
6 March 1986 17 January 1987 317 days
Nikolay Slyunkov Никола́й Слюнько́в 17 January 1987 30 September 1988 1 year and 257 days
General Department Anatoly Lukyanov Анатолий Лукьянов 6 March 1986 17 January 1987 317 days
Valery Boldin Валерий Болдин 17 January 1987 30 September 1988 1 year and 257 days
Heavy Industry and Energy Department Ivan Yastrebov Иван Ястребов 6 March 1986 30 September 1988 2 years and 208 days
Institute of Marxism–Leninism Anatoly Yegorov Анато́лий Его́ров 6 March 1986 17 January 1987 317 days
Georgy Smirnov Анато́лий Его́ров 17 January 1987 30 September 1988 1 year and 257 days
International Department Anatoly Dobrynin Анато́лий Добры́нин 6 March 1986 30 September 1988 2 years and 208 days
Kommunist Ivan Frolov Иван Фролов 6 March 1986 17 January 1987 317 days
Nail Bikkenin Иван Фролов 17 January 1987 30 September 1988 1 year and 257 days
Light Industry and Consumer Goods Department Leonid Bobykin Леонид Бобыкин 6 March 1986 30 September 1988 2 years and 208 days
Machine-Building Department Arkady Volsky Арка́дий Во́льский 6 March 1986 30 September 1988 2 years and 208 days
Organizational-Party Work Department Georgy Razumovsky Гео́ргий Разумо́вский 6 March 1986 30 September 1988 2 years and 208 days
Propaganda Department Yuri Sklyarov Юрий Скляров 6 March 1986 30 September 1988 2 years and 208 days
Pravda Viktor Afanasyev Ви́ктор Афана́сьев 6 March 1986 30 September 1988 2 years and 208 days
Relations with Communist and Workers Parties Department Vadim Medvedev Вадим Медведев 6 March 1986 30 September 1988 2 years and 208 days
Science and Education Department Valentin Grigoriev Юрий Скляров 6 March 1986 30 September 1988 2 years and 208 days
Trade and Domestic Services Department Nikolai Stashenkov Николай Сташенков 6 March 1986 30 September 1988 2 years and 208 days
Transport and Communications Department Viktor Pasternak Виктор Пастернак 6 March 1986 30 September 1988 2 years and 208 days

Reorganisation (1988–90)

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Central Committee Apparatus of the 27th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union established by the 9th Plenary Session
Institution Leader Cyrillic Took office Left office Length of tenure
Administrator of Affairs Nikolay Kruchina Николай Кручина 30 September 1988 13 July 1990 1 year and 286 days
Agricultural Department Ivan Skiba Иван Скиба 30 September 1988 13 July 1990 1 year and 286 days
Commission on Agrarian Policy Yegor Ligachyov Егор Лигачёв 30 September 1988 13 July 1990 1 year and 286 days
Commission on International Policy Alexander Yakovlev Алекса́ндр Я́ковлев 30 September 1988 13 July 1990 1 year and 286 days
Commission on Legal Policy Viktor Chebrikov Виктор Че́бриков 30 September 1988 20 September 1989 355 days
Vacant
20 September 1989 13 July 1990 296 days
Commission on Party Building and Cadre Work Commission Policy Georgy Razumovsky Гео́ргий Разумо́вский 30 September 1988 13 July 1990 1 year and 286 days
Commission on Socio-Economic Policy Nikolay Slyunkov Никола́й Слюнько́в 30 September 1988 13 July 1990 1 year and 286 days
Defence Department Oleg Belyakov Олег Беляков 30 September 1988 13 July 1990 1 year and 286 days
General Department Valery Boldin Валерий Болдин 30 September 1988 13 July 1990 1 year and 286 days
Ideology Commission Vadim Medvedev Вадим Медведев 30 September 1988 13 July 1990 1 year and 286 days
Ideology Department Aleksandr Kapto Александр Капто 30 September 1988 13 July 1990 1 year and 286 days
Institute of Marxism–Leninism Georgy Smirnov Анато́лий Его́ров 30 September 1988 13 July 1990 1 year and 286 days
International Department Valentin Falin Baлeнтин Фaлин 30 September 1988 13 July 1990 1 year and 286 days
Kommunist Nail Bikkenin Иван Фролов 30 September 1988 13 July 1990 1 year and 286 days
Party Building and Cadre Work Department Valery Sharkov Валерий Шарков 30 September 1988 13 July 1990 1 year and 286 days
Pravda Viktor Afanasyev Ви́ктор Афана́сьев 30 September 1988 1989 93 days
Ivan Frolov Иван Фролов 1989 13 July 1990 1 year and 193 days
Socio-Economic Department Vladislav Shimko Владимир Шимко 30 September 1988 13 July 1990 1 year and 286 days
State Legal Policy Department Alexander Pavlov Александр Павлов 30 September 1988 13 July 1990 1 year and 286 days

Composition

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Members

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Members of the Central Committee of the 27th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union
[42][43][44][45]
Name Cyrillic 26th CC 28th CC Birth Death PM Ethnicity Gender
Sergey Afanasyev Серге́й Афана́сьев Old Resigned 1918 2001 1943 Russian Male
Viktor Afanasyev Ви́ктор Афана́сьев Old Not 1922 1994 1943 Russian Male
Veniamin Afonin Серге́й Афана́сьев Promoted Reelected 1931 2017 1957 Russian Male
Sergey Akhromeyev Серге́й Ахроме́ев Old Not 1923 1991 1943 Russian Male
Aleksandr Aksyonov Алекса́ндр Аксёнов Old Not 1924 2009 1945 Belarusian Male
Anatoly Alexandrov Анатолий Александров Old Resigned 1903 1994 1962 Ukrainian Male
Heydar Aliyev Гейда́р Али́ев Old Resigned 1923 2003 1945 Azerbaijani Male
Alexander Altunin Алекса́ндр Алту́нин Old Resigned 1921 1989 1943 Russian Male
Vladimir Anichtchev Владимир Анищев New Not 1935 2018 1961 Russian Male
Aleksey Antonov Алексей Антонов Old Resigned 1912 2010 1940 Russian Male
Georgy Arbatov Гео́ргий Арба́тов Old Not 1923 2010 1943 Russian Male
Boris Aristov Борис Аристов Old Not 1925 2018 1945 Russian Male
Ivan Arkhipov Иван Архипов Old Resigned 1907 1998 1928 Russian Male
Vladimir Arkhipov Владимир Архи́пов New Not 1933 2004 1957 Russian Male
Erkin Auelbekov Еркин Ауельбеков Old Not 1930 1999 1940 Kazakh Male
Alexander Babenko Александр Бабенко Promoted Not 1935 Alive 1961 Russian Male
Kamran Baghirov Кямран Багиров New Resigned 1933 2000 1961 Azerbaijani Male
Nikolai Baibakov Николай Байбаков Old Resigned 1911 2008 1939 Russian Male
Vadim Bakatin Вадим Бакатин New Reelected 1937 2022 1964 Russian Male
Vyacheslav Bakhirev Вячеслав Бахирев Old Resigned 1916 1991 1951 Russian Male
Boris Bakin Борис Бакин Old Not 1913 1992 1941 Russian Male
Oleg Baklanov Оле́г Бакла́нов New Reelected 1932 2021 1953 Ukrainian Male
Anatoly Balandin Анато́лий Бала́ндин Old Not 1927 2014 1954 Russian Male
Yuri Balandin Юрий Баландин Old Not 1925 2004 1944 Russian Male
Boris Balmont Борис Бальмонт Old Resigned 1927 2022 1956 Russian Male
Gennady Bartoshevich Геннадий Бартошевич New Not 1934 1993 1957 Belarusian Male
Sergei Bashilov Сергей Башилов Candidate Resigned 1923 2005 1947 Russian Male
Gennady Bashtanyuk Генна́дий Баштаню́к Candidate Not 1949 Alive 1977 Russian Male
Yuri Batalin Ю́рий Бата́лин New Not 1927 2013 1956 Russian Male
Vladimir Bazovsky Владимир Базовский Old Not 1917 1993 1942 Russian Male
Igor Belousov Игорь Белоусов New Not 1928 2005 1955 Russian Male
Oleg Belyakov Олег Беляков New Not 1933 2003 1961 Russian Male
Anatoly Beryozin Анатолий Берёзин New Not 1931 1998 1954 Russian Male
Aleksandra Biryukova Александра Бирюкова Old Not 1929 2008 1956 Russian Female
Filipp Bobkov Фили́пп Бобко́в New Not 1925 2019 1944 Russian Male
Gennady Bogomyakov Генна́дий Богомя́ков Old Not 1930 2020 1959 Russian Male
Valery Boldin Валерий Болдин Promoted Reelected 1935 2006 1960 Russian Male
Ivan Boldyryov Иван Болдырёв New Not 1937 Alive 1956 Russian Male
Vasily Borisenkov Василий Борисенков Old Not 1927 2005 1946 Russian Male
Leonid Borodin Леонид Бородин Old Resigned 1923 2008 1948 Russian Male
Viktor Boyko Виктор Бойко New Not 1931 2014 1954 Ukrainian Male
Vladimir Brovikov Владимир Бровиков Old Not 1931 1992 1958 Belarusian Male
Lidiya Bryzga Лидия Брызга Promoted Not 1943 2014 1975 Belarusian Female
Boris Bugayev Борис Бугаев Old Not 1923 2007 1942 Ukrainian Male
Aleksandr Chakovsky Александр Чаковский Candidate Not 1913 1994 1941 Russian Male
Yevgeniy Chazov Евгений Чазов Old Not 1929 2021 1962 Russian Male
Viktor Chebrikov Виктор Че́бриков Old Not 1923 1999 1950 Ukrainian Male
Vasily Cherdintsev Василий Чердинцев Old Not 1927 2018 1956 Russian Male
Valentina Cherkashina Валентина Черкашина New Not 1942 2012 1972 Russian Female
Vladimir Chernavin Владимир Чернавин Candidate Not 1928 2023 1949 Russian Male
Viktor Chernomyrdin Ви́ктор Черномы́рдин New Not 1938 2010 1961 Russian Male
Anatoly Chernyaev Василий Шауро Candidate Not 1921 2017 1940 Russian Male
Stepan Chervonenko Степан Червоненко Old Resigned 1915 2003 1940 Ukrainian Male
Vladimir Chicherov Влади́мир Чи́черов Old Not 1933 1996 1964 Russian Male
Vladimir Chirskov Владимир Чирсков New Not 1935 Alive 1958 Russian Male
Aleksey Chornyy Алексей Чёрный Old Resigned 1921 2002 1931 Ukrainian Male
Pyotr Demichev Пётр Де́мичев Old Resigned 1917 2010 1939 Russian Male
Vasily Demidenko Василий Демиденко Old Resigned 1930 1998 1955 Ukrainian Male
Karen Demirchyan Каре́н Демирчя́н Old Resigned 1932 1999 1955 Armenian Male
Vasily Dinkov Василий Динков New Not 1924 2001 1946 Ukrainian Male
Viktor Dobrik Виктор До́брик Old Resigned 1927 2008 1954 Ukrainian Male
Anatoly Dobrynin Анато́лий Добры́нин Old Not 1919 2010 1945 Russian Male
Vladimir Dolgikh Владимир Долгих Old Resigned 1924 2020 1942 Russian Male
Valentin Falin Baлeнтин Фaлин Promoted Reelected 1926 2018 1953 Russian Male
Pavel Fedirko Па́вел Феди́рко Old Not 1932 2019 1957 Russian Male
Pyotr Fedoseyev Петр Федосеев Old Resigned 1908 1990 1939 Russian Male
Aleksandr Filatov Александр Филатов Old Resigned 1922 2016 1947 Russian Male
Pavel Finogenov Па́вел Финоге́нов Old Not 1919 2004 1943 Russian Male
Vladimir Foteyev Владимир Фотеев New Not 1935 Alive 1961 Russian Male
Ivan Frolov Иван Фролов New Reelected 1929 1999 1960 Russian Male
Konstantin Frolov Константин Фролов Promoted Not 1932 2007 1965 Russian Male
Dmitry Gagarov Дмитрий Гагаров New Died 1938 1989 1966 Russian Male
Andrey Girenko Андрей Гиренко Promoted Reelected 1936 2017 1963 Ukrainian Male
Natalya Gellert Наталья Геллерт Promoted Not 1953 Alive 1973 Russian Female
Ivan Gerasymov Иван Герасимов Candidate Resigned 1921 2008 1942 Ukrainian Male
Valentin Glushko Валенти́н Глушко́ Old Died 1908 1989 1956 Ukrainian Male
Mariya Golubeva Мария Голубева Candidate Not 1945 1991 1968 Russian Female
Valentina Golubeva Валентина Голубева Old Not 1949 Alive 1977 Russian Female
Boris Goncharenko Николай Голдин Old Not 1927 1997 1948 Ukrainian Male
Mikhail Gorbachev Михаил Горбачёв Old Reelected 1931 2022 1952 Russian Male
Leonid Gorshkov Леонид Горшков Old Not 1930 1994 1952 Russian Male
Sergey Gorshkov Серге́й Горшков Old Died 1910 1988 1942 Russian Male
Boris Gostev Бори́с Го́стев Old Not 1927 2015 1954 Russian Male
Vladimir Govorov Владимир Говоров Old Not 1924 2006 1946 Russian Male
Leonid Grekov Леонид Греков Old Not 1928 2004 1949 Russian Male
Anatoly Gribkov Анато́лий Грибко́в Old Resigned 1919 2008 1943 Russian Male
Vladimir Grigoriev Николай Грибачёв Promoted Reelected 1941 2011 1960 Belarusian Male
Petras Griškevičius Пя́трас Гришкя́вичюс Old Died 1924 1987 1945 Lithuanian Male
Pyotr Grishchenko Пётр Грищенко New Not 1931 2021 1956 Russian Male
Mariya Gromova Мария Громова Old Resigned 1929 2008 1973 Russian Female
Andrei Gromyko Андрей Громыко Old Resigned 1909 1989 1931 Belarusian Male
Semion Grossu Семён Гроссу Old Not 1934 Alive 1961 Moldovan Male
Aleksandr Gudkov Александр Гудков Old Resigned 1930 1992 1958 Russian Male
Vladimir Gusev Владимир Гусев Old Not 1932 2022 1963 Russian Male
Ivan Gustov Иван Густов Old Not 1911 1996 1932 Russian Male
Timofey Guzhenko Тимофей Гуженко Old Resigned 1918 2008 1941 Russian Male
Vadim Ignatov Вадим Игнатов Old Not 1931 1998 1953 Russian Male
Vladimir Ivashko Владимир Ивашко Promoted Reelected 1932 1994 1960 Ukrainian Male
Yevgeny Ivanovsky Евге́ний Ивано́вский Old Resigned 1918 1991 1941 Belarusian Male
Yevgeny Kachalovsky Евгений Качаловский Old Not 1926 2011 1947 Ukrainian Male
Dmitry Kachin Дмитрий Качин Old Not 1929 Alive 1953 Russian Male
Boris Kachura Борис Качура Old Not 1930 2007 1957 Ukrainian Male
Vladimir Kalashnikov Владимир Калашников New Reelected 1929 2008 1954 Russian Male
Vladimir Kamentsev Ка́менцев Миха́йлович Candidate Not 1928 2003 1954 Russian Male
Aleksandr Kapto Александр Капто Candidate Not 1933 2020 1955 Ukrainian Male
Vladimir Karlov Влади́мир Ка́рлов Old Resigned 1914 1994 1940 Russian Male
Vladimir Karpov Владимир Карпов Promoted Reelected 1922 2010 1943 Russian Male
Yevdokya Karpova Марина Журавлёва Old Resigned 1923 2000 1952 Russian Female
Valentina Kasimova Валентина Касимова Promoted Not 1944 Alive 1972 Russian Female
Konstantin Katushev Константин Катушев Old Not 1927 2010 1952 Russian Male
Vasily Kavun Василий Кавун Old Not 1928 2009 1954 Ukrainian Male
Leonid Kazakov Леонид Казаков Old Not 1951 Alive 1974 Russian Male
Vladimir Khodyryov Владимир Ходырёв New Not 1930 Alive 1954 Russian Male
Aleksandr Khomyakov Александр Хомяков Old Not 1932 2014 1958 Russian Male
Yuri Khristoradnov Юрий Христораднов Old Not 1929 2018 1951 Russian Male
Tukhtakhon Kirgizbayeva Тухтахон Киргизбаева Promoted Not 1942 Alive 1965 Uzbek Female
Mikhail Klepikov Михаил Клепиков Old Not 1927 1999 1956 Russian Male
Stepan Kleyko Степан Клейко Promoted Not 1935 Alive 1966 Russian Male
Ivan Klimenko Иван Клименко Old Resigned 1921 2006 1945 Russian Male
Vladimir Klyuyev Владимир Клюев Old Resigned 1924 1998 1949 Ukrainian Male
Mikhail Knyazyuk Михаил Князюк New Not 1940 Alive 1963 Belarusian Male
Vyacheslav Kochemasov Вячеслав Кочемасов Old Not 1918 1998 1944 Russian Male
Alexey Kolbeshkin Алексей Колбешкин Promoted Not 1945 Alive 1976 Russian Male
Gennady Kolbin Геннадий Колбин Old Not 1927 1998 1954 Russian Male
Alexander Koldunov Александр Колдунов Old Not 1923 1992 1944 Russian Male
Aleksandr Kolesnikov Александр Колесников Old Not 1930 2008 1966 Ukrainian Male
Vladislav Kolesnikov Владислав Колесников New Not 1925 2015 1961 Russian Male
Serafim Kolpakov Серафим Колпаков New Reelected 1933 2011 1956 Russian Male
Nikolay Konaryov Николай Конарёв New Not 1927 2007 1952 Ukrainian Male
Boris Konoplyov Борис Коноплёв New Resigned 1919 2008 1945 Russian Male
Valentin Koptyug Коптюг Афанасьевич Promoted Reelected 1931 1997 1961 Russian Male
Georgy Korniyenko Гео́ргий Корние́нко Old Resigned 1925 2006 1947 Ukrainian Male
Anatoly Korolyov Анатолий Королёв Old Not 1936 Alive 1967 Russian Male
Vitaly Kostin Виталий Костин Old Not 1938 2009 1961 Russian Male
Mikhail Kovalyov Михаил Ковалёв New Not 1925 2007 1962 Belarusian Male
Nikolay Kruchina Николай Кручина Old Reelected 1928 1991 1949 Russian Male
Zinaida Kruglova Зинаи́да Кругло́ва Old Resigned 1923 1995 1944 Russian Male
Vladimir Kryuchkov Влади́мир Крючко́в New Reelected 1924 2007 1944 Russian Male
Yuly Kvitsinsky Юлий Квицинский Promoted Not 1936 2010 1952 Russian Male
Dinmukhamed Kunaev Дінмұхаммед Қонаев Old Removed 1912 1993 1939 Kazakh Male
Fyodor Kulikov Фёдор Куликов Old Not 1925 2015 1949 Russian Male
Viktor Kulikov Виктор Куликов Old Resigned 1921 2013 1942 Russian Male
Valentin Kuptsov Валентин Купцов New Reelected 1937 Alive 1944 Russian Male
Semyon Kurkotkin Семё́н Курко́ткин Old Resigned 1917 1990 1940 Russian Male
Vasily Kuznetsov Василий Кузнецов Old Resigned 1901 1990 1927 Russian Male
Nikolay Lemayev Николай Лемаев New Not 1929 2000 1955 Russian Male
Oleksandr Liashko Алекса́ндр Ляшко́ Old Resigned 1915 2002 1942 Ukrainian Male
Yegor Ligachyov Егор Лигачёв Old Not 1920 2021 1944 Russian Male
Yury Litvintsev Юрий Литвинцев New Reelected 1934 2009 1956 Russian Male
Alexey Lizichev Алексей Лизичев New Not 1928 2006 1955 Russian Male
Yuri Lobov Юрий Лобов Promoted Not 1942 Alive 1975 Russian Male
Anatoly Logunov Анатолий Логунов Candidate Not 1926 2015 1960 Russian Male
Viktor Lomakin Виктор Ломакин Old Not 1926 2012 1953 Russian Male
Pyotr Lomako Пётр Лома́ко Old Resigned 1904 1990 1925 Russian Male
Vladimir Lomonosov Владимир Ломоносов Old Not 1928 1999 1950 Russian Male
Fodor Loshchenkov Фодор Лощенков Old Not 1915 2009 1943 Russian Male
Pyotr Luchinsky Пётр Лучинский Promoted Reelected 1941 Alive 1964 Moldovan Male
Anatoly Lukyanov Анатолий Лукьянов New Reelected 1930 2019 1953 Russian Male
Anatoly Lushchikov Анатолий Лущиков New Not 1917 1999 1942 Russian Male
Pyotr Lushev Пётр Лу́шев Old Not 1923 1997 1951 Russian Male
Ivan Lutak Иван Лутак Comeback Resigned 1919 2009 1940 Ukrainian Male
Viktor Makarenko Виктор Макаренко Old Resigned 1931 2007 1960 Ukrainian Male
Qahhor Mahkamov Кахар Махкамов New Reelected 1932 2016 1957 Tajik Male
Yuri Maksimov Юрий Максимов Candidate Not 1924 2002 1943 Ukrainian Male
Nikolai Malkov Николай Мальков Candidate Not 1932 2007 1954 Russian Male
Anatoly Malofeyev Анато́лий Малофе́ев New Reelected 1933 2022 1957 Belarusian Male
Viktor Maltsev Виктор Мальцев Old Resigned 1917 2003 1945 Russian Male
Vasily Malykhin Василий Малыхин New Not 1935 Alive 1958 Russian Male
Yuri Manayenkov Юрий Манаенков New Reelected 1936 2021 1960 Russian Male
Sergey Manyakin Сергей Манякин Old Not 1923 2010 1945 Russian Male
Gury Marchuk Гурий Марчук Old Reelected 1925 2013 1947 Russian Male
Georgy Markov Гео́ргий Ма́рков Old Not 1911 1991 1946 Russian Male
Absamat Masaliyev Абсамат Масалиев New Reelected 1933 2004 1960 Kyrgyz Male
Nikolay Maslennikov Николай Масленников Old Not 1921 2013 1951 Russian Male
Yuri Maslyukov Юрий Маслюков New Reelected 1937 2010 1966 Russian Male
Vitaliy Masol Виталий Масол Promoted Reelected 1928 2018 1956 Ukrainian Male
Anatoly Mayorets Анатолий Майорец Candidate Not 1929 2016 1957 Russian Male
Vadim Medvedev Вадим Медведев New Not 1929 Alive 1952 Russian Male
Alexander Melnikov Александр Мельников New Not 1930 2011 1957 Russian Male
Marat Mendybayev Марат Мендыбаев New Not 1936 2011 1958 Kazakh Male
Galina Merkulova Галина Меркулова Promoted Not 1951 Alive 1976 Uzbek Female
Valentin Mesyats Валентин Месяц Old Not 1928 2019 1955 Russian Male
Guram Metonidze Гурам Метонидзе Promoted Not 1935 Alive 1964 Georgian Male
Viktor Mironenko Виктор Мироненко Promoted Not 1953 Alive 1975 Ukrainian Male
Vasily Mironov Василий Миронов New Died 1925 1988 1949 Ukrainian Male
Oleg Miroshikhin Олег Мирошихин New Not 1928 Alive 1959 Russian Male
Viktor Mishin Виктор Мишин New Not 1943 Alive 1967 Russian Male
Fedir Morhun Фёдор Моргу́н Old Not 1924 2008 1952 Ukrainian Male
Ivan Morozov Иван Морозов Old Died 1924 1987 1943 Russian Male
Dmitry Motorny Дмитрий Моторный New Not 1927 2018 1951 Ukrainian Male
Ivan Mozgovoy Ива́н Мозгово́й Old Resigned 1927 2005 1940 Ukrainian Male
Vsevolod Murakhovsky Евгений Муравьёв Old Not 1926 2017 1946 Ukrainian Male
Yevgeny Muravyov Евгений Муравьёв Old Resigned 1929 1998 1952 Russian Male
Alexey Myasnikov Алексей Мясников New Not 1934 Alive 1974 Russian Male
Vladislav Mysnichenko Владислав Мысниченко Old Not 1929 2019 1955 Ukrainian Male
Nursultan Nazarbayev Нурсултан Назарбаев New Reelected 1940 Alive 1962 Kazakh Male
Mikhail Nenashev Михаи́л Нена́шев Promoted Reelected 1929 2019 1952 Russian Male
Viktor Nikonov Виктор Никонов Old Not 1929 1993 1954 Russian Male
Saparmurat Niyazov Сапармурад Ниязов New Reelected 1940 2006 1962 Turkmen Male
Anatoly Nochyovkin Анатолий Ночёвкин New Resigned 1928 Alive 1956 Russian Male
Genrikh Novozhilov Сапармурад Ниязов New Reelected 1925 2019 1951 Russian Male
Vladimir Odintsov Владимир Одинцов New Resigned 1924 2009 1944 Russian Male
Nikolai Orgakov Николай Огарков Old Resigned 1917 1994 1945 Russian Male
Vladimir Orlov Владимир Орлов Old Not 1921 1999 1948 Russian Male
Vladimir Osipov Владимир Осипов Promoted Not 1933 Alive 1958 Russian Male
Konstantin Panov Константин Панов Candidate Not 1933 2005 1967 Russian Male
Valentina Parshina Валентина Паршина Promoted Not 1937 2020 1965 Russian Female
Yemelyan Parubok Емелья́н Па́рубок New Reelected 1940 2017 1966 Ukrainian Male
Jumber Patiashvili Джумбер Патиашвили New Not 1940 Alive 1962 Georgian Male
Borys Paton Бори́с Пато́н Old Reelected 1918 2020 1952 Ukrainian Male
Nikolai Pavlov Николай Павлов Promoted Not 1950 Alive 1978 Russian Male
Vladimir Pavlov Влади́мир Па́влов Old Not 1923 1998 1948 Russian Male
Ivan Pentyukhov Иван Пентюхов Promoted Not 1929 1997 1962 Russian Male
Nina Pereverzeva Ни́на Переве́рзева Old Not 1929 2022 1970 Russian Female
Erlen Pervyshin Эрлен Первышин Candidate Not 1932 2004 1959 Russian Male
Vasily Petrov Васи́лий Петро́в Old Not 1917 2014 1944 Russian Male
Vladislav Petrov Владислав Петров Old Not 1935 2011 1961 Ukrainian Male
Yuri Petrov Юрий Петров New Not 1939 2013 1962 Russian Male
Alexander Plekhanov Александр Плеханов New Reelected 1932 2015 1960 Russian Male
Pyotr Pleshakov Пётр Плешаков Old Died 1922 1987 1944 Russian Male
Valentina Pletnyova Валентина Плетнёва New Not 1930 2012 1952 Russian Female
Ivan Polozkov Иван Полозков New Reelected 1935 Alive 1958 Russian Male
Viktor Polyakov Ви́ктор Поляко́в Old Resigned 1915 2004 1944 Russian Male
Alexey Ponomarev Алексей Пономарёв New Reelected 1930 2002 1957 Russian Male
Boris Ponomarev Борис Пономарёв Old Resigned 1905 1995 1919 Russian Male
Mikhail Ponomarev Михаил Пономарёв Old Resigned 1918 2001 1939 Russian Male
Filipp Popov Филипп Попов New Not 1930 2007 1957 Russian Male
Nikolay Popov Николай Попов Old Not 1931 2008 1960 Russian Male
Yevgeny Primakov Евгений Примаков Promoted Not 1929 2015 1959 Russian Male
Ilya Prokopyev Николай Приезжев Old Resigned 1926 2017 1946 Chuvash Male
Yuri Prokopyev Юрий Прокопьев New Not 1932 2017 2003 Russian Male
Vladimir Ptitsyn Влади́мир Пти́цын Old Resigned 1925 2006 1946 Russian Male
Nikolay Pugin Николай Пугин New Not 1940 Alive 1965 Russian Male
Boris Pugo Борис Пуго New Not 1937 1991 1963 Latvian Male
Oleg Rakhmanin Олег Рахманин Old Resigned 1924 2010 1942 Russian Male
Yevgeny Razumov Евгений Разумов Candidate Not 1919 2017 1942 Belarusian Male
Georgy Razumovsky Гео́ргий Разумо́вский Candidate Not 1936 Alive 1961 Russian Male
Alexander Rekunkov Александр Рекунков Old Resigned 1920 1996 1940 Russian Male
Anatoly Reut Анатолий Реут New Not 1928 2001 1955 Belarusian Male
Grigory Revenko Григорий Ревенко New Not 1936 2014 1962 Ukrainian Male
Ivan Romazan Иван Ромазан Promoted Not 1934 1991 1964 Russian Male
Yakov Ryabov Я́ков Ря́бов Old Not 1928 2018 1954 Russian Male
Anatoly Rybakov Анатолий Рыбаков Old Not 1927 2012 1961 Russian Male
Vasily Rykov Василий Рыков Old Resigned 1918 2011 1943 Russian Male
Nikolai Ryzhkov Николай Рыжков Old Reelected 1929 2024 1956 Russian Male
Kakimbek Salykov Какимбек Салыков New Not 1932 2013 1958 Kazakh Male
Nikolai Savinkin Николай Савинкин Old Resigned 1913 1993 1927 Russian Male
Valery Saykin Валерий Сайкин New Not 1937 2024 1966 Russian Male
Anatoly Sazonov Анатолий Сазонов New Not 1935 2019 1962 Ukrainian Male
Vitaly Shabanov Вита́лий Шаба́нов Old Not 1923 1995 1947 Russian Male
Midkhat Shakirov Мидха́т Шаки́ров Old Resigned 1916 2004 1944 Bashkir Male
Stepan Shalayev Степан Шалаев Old Not 1929 2022 1954 Russian Male
Vasily Shamshin Василий Шамшин Candidate Not 1926 2009 1962 Russian Male
Leonid Sharin Леонид Шарин New Not 1934 2014 1962 Russian Male
Mikhail Shchadov Михаил Щадов New Not 1927 2011 1947 Russian Male
Boris Shcherbina Борис Щербина Old Not 1919 1990 1939 Ukrainian Male
Volodymyr Shcherbytsky Влади́мир Щерби́цкий Old Died 1918 1990 1948 Ukrainian Male
Eduard Shevardnadze Эдуард Шеварднадзе Old Reelected 1928 2014 1936 Georgian Male
Valentyna Shevchenko Валентина Шевченко New Not 1935 2020 1957 Ukrainian Female
Mikhail Shkabardnya Михаил Шкабардня Candidate Not 1930 Alive 1960 Russian Male
Aleksey Shkolnikov Алексей Шко́льников Old Resigned 1914 2003 1940 Russian Male
Yevgeny Shulyak Евгений Шуляк New Not 1939 Alive 1961 Belarusian Male
Ivan Silayev Ива́н Сила́ев Old Reelected 1930 2023 1959 Russian Male
Vasily Sitnikov Василий Ситников New Not 1927 2016 1948 Russian Male
Yevgeny Sizenko Евгений Сизенко Old Not 1931 2016 1953 Russian Male
Yefim Slavsky Ефи́м Сла́вский Old Not 1898 1991 1918 Russian Male
Nikolay Slyunkov Никола́й Слюнько́в New Not 1929 2022 1954 Belarusian Male
Mikhail Smirtyukov Михаи́л Смиртюко́в Old Not 1909 2004 1940 Russian Male
Pavel Smolsky Павел Смольский New Died 1931 1987 1955 Russian Male
Valentin Smyslov Валентин Смыслов New Not 1928 2004 1956 Russian Male
Sergey Sokolov Серге́й Соколо́в Old Resigned 1911 2012 1937 Russian Male
Yefrem Sokolov Ефре́м Соколо́в Candidate Reelected 1926 2022 1955 Belarusian Male
Mikhail Solomentsev Михаи́л Соло́менцев Old Resigned 1913 2008 1940 Russian Male
Yuri Solovyev Михаи́л Соло́менцев Old Not 1925 2011 1955 Russian Male
Vladimir Stepanov Владимир Степанов New Not 1927 2022 1952 Karelian Male
Yegor Stroyev Его́р Стро́ев New Reelected 1937 Alive 1958 Russian Male
Boris Stukalin Борис Стукалин Old Not 1923 2004 1943 Russian Male
Apollon Systsov Аполлон Сысцов New Not 1929 2005 1961 Russian Male
Fikryat Tabeyev Фикрят Табеев Old Not 1928 2015 1957 Russian Male
Nikolai Talyzin Никола́й Талы́зин Old Not 1929 1991 1960 Russian Male
Vasily Taratuta Василий Таратута Old Not 1930 2008 1955 Ukrainian Male
Georgy Tarazevich Георгий Таразевич New Not 1937 2003 1967 Belarusian Male
Nikolay Tatarchuk Николай Татарчук New Not 1928 1991 1955 Ukrainian Male
Pyotr Telepnyov Пётр Телепнёв New Not 1930 2013 1956 Belarusian Male
Vladimir Terebilov Владимир Теребилов Candidate Resigned 1916 2004 1940 Russian Male
Nikolai Tereshchenko Николай Терещенко Candidate Died 1930 1989 1955 Russian Male
Valentina Tereshkova Валентина Терешкова Old Not 1937 Alive 1960 Russian Female
Vladimir Tikhomirov Тихомиров Порфирович Old Not 1934 1997 1958 Russian Male
Nikolai Tikhonov Николай Тихонов Old Resigned 1905 1997 1940 Russian Male
Aleksey Titarenko Алексе́й Титаре́нко Old Resigned 1915 1992 1940 Ukrainian Male
Lev Tolkunov Лев Толкунов Old Died 1919 1989 1943 Russian Male
Vladimir Tolubko Влади́мир Толу́бко Old Died 1914 1989 1939 Ukrainian Male
Ivan Tretyak Иван Третьяк Old Not 1923 2007 1943 Ukrainian Male
Pyotr Tretyakov Пётр Третьяков Candidate Resigned 1927 2018 1957 Russian Male
Yuri Trofimov Юрий Трофимов New Died 1931 1989 1956 Russian Male
Mikhail Trunov Михаил Трунов Old Resigned 1931 2010 1955 Russian Male
Yevgeny Tyazhelnikov Евге́ний Тяже́льников Old Not 1928 2020 1951 Russian Male
Raisa Udalaya Раиса Удалая New Not 1931 2020 1974 Russian Female
Gumer Usmanov Гумер Усманов Old Not 1932 2015 1953 Tatar Male
Inomjon Usmonxoʻjayev Инамджан Усманходжаев Old Not 1930 2017 1958 Uzbek Male
Vladimir Utkin Владимир Уткин Old Not 1923 2000 1940 Russian Male
Karl Vaino Карл Вайно Old Not 1923 2022 1940 Estonian Male
Grigory Vashchenko Григорий Ващенко Old Resigned 1920 1990 1943 Ukrainian Male
Nikolai Vasilyev Павел Бородин Old Resigned 1916 2011 1942 Russian Male
Gennady Vedernikov Геннадий Ведерников New Not 1937 2001 1965 Russian Male
Vladimir Velichko Владимир Величко New Not 1937 Alive 1963 Russian Male
Evgeny Velikhov Евгений Велихов Promoted Not 1935 Alive 1971 Russian Male
Aleksandr Vlasov Александр Власов Old Reelected 1932 2002 1956 Russian Male
Boris Volodin Борис Володин New Not 1931 Alive 1955 Russian Male
Arkady Volsky Борис Володин New Reelected 1932 2006 1958 Russian Male
Lev Voronin Лев Воронин Old Not 1928 2008 1953 Russian Male
Yuli Vorontsov Ю́лий Воронцо́в Old Not 1929 2007 1956 Russian Male
Mikhail Voropayev Михаил Воропаев Old Not 1919 2009 1945 Russian Male
Vitaly Vorotnikov Вита́лий Воротнико́в Old Not 1926 2012 1950 Russian Male
Augusts Voss Август Восс Old Not 1916 1994 1940 Latvian Male
Anatoly Voystrochenko Анатолий Войстроченко New Not 1937 2010 1958 Russian Male
Gennady Yagodin Геннадий Ягодин New Reelected 1927 2015 1948 Russian Male
Alexander Yakovlev Алекса́ндр Я́ковлев New Not 1923 2005 1944 Russian Male
Dmitry Yazov Дми́трий Я́зов Promoted Reelected 1924 2020 1944 Russian Male
Alexander Yefimov Александр Ефимов New Not 1923 2012 1943 Russian Male
Anatoly Yegorov Анато́лий Его́ров Old Resigned 1920 1997 1944 Russian Male
Yury Yelchenko Юрий Ельченко Old Not 1929 2019 1953 Ukrainian Male
Boris Yeltsin Борис Ельцин Old Not 1931 2007 1961 Russian Male
Nikolay Yemokhonov Николай Емохонов New Not 1921 2014 1947 Russian Male
Nikolay Yermakov Николай Ермаков New Died 1927 1987 1961 Russian Male
Lev Yermin Ле́в Е́рмин Old Resigned 1923 2004 1943 Russian Male
Neli Yershova Нэли Ершова Candidate Not 1939 Alive 1973 Russian Female
Aleksandr Yezhevsky Александр Ежевский Old Resigned 1915 2017 1945 Russian Male
Magomed Yusupov Магомед Юсупов New Not 1935 2018 1959 Avar Male
Vadim Zagladin Вади́м Загла́дин Old Not 1927 2006 1955 Russian Male
Mikhail Zaitsev Михаи́л За́йцев Old Resigned 1923 2009 1943 Russian Male
Vasily Zakharov Василий Захаров New Not 1934 2023 1964 Russian Male
Leonid Zamyatin Леонид Замятин Old Not 1922 2019 1952 Russian Male
Vladimir Zatvornitsky Владимир Затворницкий Old Not 1929 2017 1958 Russian Male
Lev Zaykov Лев Зайков Old Not 1923 2002 1957 Russian Male
Mikhail Zimyanin Михаил Зимянин Old Resigned 1914 1995 1939 Belarusian Male
Grigory Zolotukhin Григо́рий Золоту́хин Old Died 1911 1988 1939 Russian Male
Viktor Zorkaltsev Виктор Зоркальцев New Not 1936 2010 1962 Russian Male

Candidates

edit
Candidate Members of the Central Committee of the 27th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union
[42][43][44][45]
Name Cyrillic 26th CC 28th CC Birth Death PM Ethnicity Gender
Veniamin Afonin Серге́й Афана́сьев New Promoted 1931 2017 1957 Russian Male
Geny Ageyev Гений Агеев New Not 1929 1994 1952 Russian Male
Timur Alimov Тимур Алимов New Not 1936 2015 1967 Uzbek Male
Georgy Alyoshin Георгий Алёшин New Not 1931 2011 1957 Russian Male
Nikolai Antonov Никола́й Анто́нов Candidate Resigned 1921 1996 1944 Russian Male
Makhmut Aripdzhanov Махмут Арипджанов New Not 1938 Alive 1965 Uzbek Male
Alexander Babenko Александр Бабенко New Promoted 1935 Alive 1961 Russian Male
Anatoly Basistov Анатолий Басистов New Not 1920 1998 1945 Russian Male
Boris Batsanov Борис Бацанов New Not 1927 2005 1951 Russian Male
Valery Belikov Валерий Беликов New Died 1925 1987 1949 Russian Male
Anatoly Belyakov Анатолий Беляков New Not 1933 2017 1960 Russian Male
Leonid Bibin Леонид Бибин New Not 1930 Alive 1953 Ukrainian Male
Ratmir Bobovikov Ратмир Бобовиков Candidate Not 1927 2002 1947 Russian Male
Leonid Bobykin Леонид Бобыкин New Not 1930 Alive 1956 Russian Male
Valery Boldin Валерий Болдин New Promoted 1935 2006 1960 Russian Male
Zoya Borovikova Зоя Боровикова New Not 1939 1991 1968 Russian Female
Yevgeny Brakov Евге́ний Бра́ков New Not 1937 Alive 1963 Russian Male
Vladimir Brezhnev Владимир Брежнев New Not 1931 Alive 1959 Russian Male
Karen Brutents Карен Брутенц New Not 1924 2017 1945 Armenian Male
Lidiya Bryzga Лидия Брызга New Promoted 1943 2014 1975 Belarusian Female
Alexander Budyka Александр Будыка New Not 1927 1991 1949 Russian Male
Sergey Burenkov Сергей Буренков Candidate Resigned 1923 2004 1945 Russian Male
Mikhail Busygin Михаил Бусыгин New Not 1931 2016 1952 Russian Male
Ivan Kalin Иван Калин Candidate Not 1935 2012 1955 Moldovan Male
Boris Chaplin Бори́с Ча́плин Candidate Not 1931 2015 1961 Russian Male
Yevgeny Chekharin Евгений Чехарин New Not 1924 2001 1950 Russian Male
Ivan Cherepanov Иван Черепанов New Not 1929 2015 1957 Russian Male
Valentin Chikin Валентин Чикин New Member 1932 Alive 1956 Russian Male
Nikolay Davydov Николай Давыдов New Resigned 1928 2012 1952 Russian Male
Viktor Dementsev Виктор Деменцев New Resigned 1918 2010 1940 Russian Male
Ivan Dmitriyev Иван Дмитриев Candidate Not 1920 1992 1945 Russian Male
Valentin Dmitriyev Валентин Дмитриев Candidate Not 1927 2020 1947 Russian Male
Nikolai Dybenko Николай Дыбенко Candidate Not 1928 2002 1951 Russian Male
Ismail Dzhabbarov Исмаил Джаббаров New Not 1932 Alive 1959 Uzbek Male
Valentin Falin Baлeнтин Фaлин New Promoted 1926 2018 1953 Russian Male
Konstantin Fomichenko Константи́н Фомиче́нко Candidate Not 1927 2015 1948 Ukrainian Male
Konstantin Frolov Константин Фролов New Promoted 1932 2007 1965 Russian Male
Natalya Gellert Наталья Геллерт New Promoted 1953 Alive 1973 Russian Female
Andrey Girenko Андрей Гиренко Candidate Promoted 1936 2017 1963 Ukrainian Male
Ivan Gladky Иван Гладкий New Not 1930 2001 1953 Ukrainian Male
Nikolai Glushkov Николай Глушков New Resigned 1918 1999 1945 Russian Male
Marat Gramov Марат Грамов New Not 1927 1998 1951 Russian Male
Nikolai Gribachev Николай Грибачёв Candidate Not 1910 1992 1943 Russian Male
Vladimir Grigoriev Николай Грибачёв New Promoted 1941 2011 1960 Belarusian Male
Oles Gonchar Оле́сь Гонча́р Candidate Not 1918 1995 1946 Ukrainian Male
Leonid Illichev Леонид Ильичёв Candidate Not 1906 1990 1924 Russian Male
Tatyana Ivanova Татьяна Иванова Candidate Not 1939 Alive 1968 Russian Female
Vladimir Ivashko Владимир Ивашко New Promoted 1932 1994 1960 Ukrainian Male
Alexander Levlev Александр Иевлев New Not 1926 2004 1950 Russian Male
Gayrat Kadyrov Гайрат Кадыров New Not 1939 Alive 1963 Uzbek Male
Zakash Kamalidenov Закаш Камалиденов New Resigned 1936 2017 1960 Kazakh Male
Aleksey Kamay Алексей Камай New Member 1936 Alive 1960 Belarusian Male
Ivan Kapitanets Ива́н Капита́нец New Not 1928 2018 1952 Russian Male
Yury Karabasov Юрий Карабасов New Not 1939 2021 1962 Russian Male
Vladimir Karpov Владимир Карпов New Promoted 1922 2010 1943 Russian Male
Valentina Kasimova Валентина Касимова New Promoted 1944 Alive 1972 Russian Female
Vasily Kazakov Василий Казаков Candidate Not 1929 2008 1955 Russian Male
Izatullo Khayoyev Изатулло Хаёев New Member 1936 2015 1961 Tajik Male
Leonid Khitrun Леонид Хитрун New Member 1930 2009 1955 Belarusian Male
Tikhon Khrennikov Тихон Хренников Candidate Not 1913 2007 1940 Russian Male
Tukhtakhon Kirgizbayeva Тухтахон Киргизбаева New Promoted 1942 Alive 1965 Uzbek Female
Gennady Kiselyov Геннадий Киселёв New Not 1936 Alive 1961 Russian Male
Leonid Klotskov Леонид Герасимович Клёцков Candidate Not 1918 1997 1966 Belarusian Male
Stepan Kleyko Степан Клейко New Promoted 1935 Alive 1966 Russian Male
Yury Kochetkov Юрий Кочетков New Not 1932 1996 1956 Russian Male
Alexey Kolbeshkin Алексей Колбешкин New Promoted 1945 Alive 1976 Russian Male
Georgy Kolmogorov Георгий Колмогоров New Not 1929 Alive 1952 Russian Male
Yuri Kolomiyets Юрий Коломиец Candidate Not 1925 2014 1953 Ukrainian Male
Nikolai Komarov Николай Комаров Candidate Resigned 1918 2003 1945 Russian Male
Vasily Konovalov Василий Коновалов New Resigned 1926 Alive 1947 Russian Male
Anatoly Konstantinov Анатолий Константинов New Resigned 1923 2006 1943 Russian Male
Valentin Koptyug Валентин Коптюг New Promoted 1931 1997 1961 Russian Male
Aleksandr Korkin Алекса́ндр Ко́ркин Candidate Not 1927 2011 1949 Russian Male
Mikhail Korolyov Михаил Королёв New Not 1931 2016 1960 Russian Male
Temirbek Koshoyev Темирбек Кошоев New Resigned 1931 2009 1952 Kyrgyz Male
Yevgeny Kozlovsky Евге́ний Козло́вский Candidate Not 1929 2022 1955 Russian Male
Boris Kravtsov Борис Кравцов Candidate Not 1922 Alive 1943 Russian Male
Vasily Kryuchkov Василий Крючков Candidate Not 1928 2017 1949 Russian Male
Orazbek Kuanyshev Оразбек Куанышев Candidate Not 1935 1999 1961 Kazakh Male
Lev Kulidzhanov Лев Кулиджанов Candidate Not 1924 2002 1962 Armenian Male
Yuly Kvitsinsky Юлий Квицинский New Promoted 1936 2010 1952 Russian Male
Ivan Laptev Иван Лаптев New Not 1936 2010 1952 Russian Male
Vladimir Listov Владимир Листов Candidate Not 1931 2014 1962 Russian Male
Yuri Lobov Юрий Лобов New Promoted 1942 Alive 1975 Russian Male
Vadim Loginov Вадим Логинов New Not 1927 2016 1950 Russian Male
Pyotr Luchinsky Вадим Логинов New Promoted 1941 Alive 1964 Moldovans Male
Vladimir Lukyanenko Владимир Лукьяненко New Member 1937 Alive 1963 Ukrainian Male
Nikolai Lunkov Никола́й Лунько́в Candidate Not 1919 2021 1940 Russian Male
Salidzhan Mamarasulov Салиджан Мамарасулов New Member 1930 2005 1958 Uzbek Male
Vitaliy Masol Виталий Масол New Promoted 1928 2018 1956 Ukrainian Male
Mikhail Matafonov Михаил Матафонов Candidate Resigned 1928 2012 1952 Russian Male
Tengiz Menteshashvili Тенгиз Ментешашвили New Not 1928 2016 1952 Georgian Male
Galina Merkulova Галина Меркулова New Promoted 1951 Alive 1976 Uzbek Female
Guram Metonidze Гурам Метонидзе New Promoted 1935 Alive 1964 Georgian Male
Alexander Meshkov Александр Мешков New Not 1927 1994 1953 Russian Male
Viktor Mironenko Виктор Мироненко New Promoted 1953 Alive 1975 Ukrainian Male
Pavel Mozhayev Павел Можаев New Not 1930 1991 1958 Russian Male
Salamat Mukashev Саламат Мукашев New Resigned 1927 2004 1950 Kazakh Male
Rysbek Myrzashev Рысбек Мырзашев New Died 1932 1987 1960 Kazakh Male
Mikhail Nenashev Михаи́л Нена́шев Candidate Promoted 1929 2019 1952 Russian Male
Vladilen Nikitin Владилен Никитин New Not 1936 2021 1965 Russian Male
Valentin Nikiforov Валентин Никифоров New Not 1934 2021 1958 Russian Male
Boris Nikolsky Борис Никольский New Not 1937 2007 1963 Russian Male
Ivan Obraztsov Иван Образцов Candidate Not 1920 2005 1944 Russian Male
Vladimir Osipov Владимир Осипов New Promoted 1933 Alive 1958 Russian Male
Yuri Ovchinnikov Юрий Овчинников Candidate Died 1934 1988 1962 Russian Male
Valentina Parshina Валентина Паршина Candidate Promoted 1937 2020 1965 Russian Female
Pyotr Paskar Пётр Паскарь Candidate Not 1929 Alive 1956 Moldovan Male
Nikolai Pavlov Николай Павлов New Promoted 1950 Alive 1978 Russian Male
Ivan Pentyukhov Иван Пентюхов New Promoted 1929 1997 1962 Russian Male
Aleksey Petrishchev Алексей Петрищев Candidate Died 1924 1986 1951 Russian Male
Yevgeny Podolsky Евгений Подольский New Member 1934 2011 1959 Russian Male
Yakiv Pogrebnyak Я́ков Погребня́к Candidate Not 1928 2016 1943 Ukrainian Male
Mikhail Popkov Михаил Попков Candidate Not 1924 Alive 1943 Russian Male
Nikolay Popov Николай Попов Candidate Not 1931 2008 1960 Russian Male
Grigory Posibeyev Григо́рий Посибе́ев Candidate Member 1935 2002 1959 Mari Male
Yevgeny Primakov Евгений Примаков New Promoted 1929 2015 1959 Russian Male
Albert Rachkov Альбе́рт Рачко́в Candidate Not 1927 2023 1955 Russian Male
Leonid Radyukevich Леонид Радюкевич Candidate Not 1932 Alive 1959 Belarusian Male
Vladimir Reshetilov Владимир Решетилов New Not 1937 Alive 1963 Ukrainian Male
Viktor Rodin Виктор Родин New Not 1928 2011 1950 Russian Male
Dmitry Romanin Дмитрий Романин New Not 1929 1996 1952 Russian Male
Ivan Romazan Иван Ромазан New Promoted 1934 1991 1964 Russian Male
Jurijs Rubenis Юрий Рубэн Candidate Resigned 1925 2004 1953 Latvian Male
Aleksey Rybakov Алексей Рыбаков Candidate Resigned 1925 2016 1945 Russian Male
Mikhail Ryzhikov Михаил Рыжиков New Not 1930 Alive 1953 Russian Male
Hasan Sayidov Гасан Сеидов New Resigned 1932 2004 1956 Azerbaijani Male
Vytautas Sakalauskas Витаутас Сакалаускас New Not 1933 2001 1960 Lithuanian Male
Akil Salimov Акил Салимов New Not 1928 2014 1957 Uzbek Male
Fadey Sargsyan Фадей Саркисян New Resigned 1923 2010 1945 Armenian Male
Bruno Saul Бруно Саул New Not 1932 2022 1960 Estonian Male
Lev Shapiro Лев Шапиро Candidate Resigned 1927 2021 1959 Ukrainian Male
Arkady Shchepetilnikov Аркадий Щепетильников New Not 1930 Alive 1958 Ukrainian Male
Sergey Shcherbakov Сергей Щербаков New Not 1925 1992 1944 Russian Male
Grigory Shirshin Григо́рий Ши́ршин Candidate Member 1934 Alive 1958 Tuvan Male
Aleksandr Shitov Александр Шитов Candidate Not 1925 2001 1955 Russian Male
Nikolay Shubnikov Николай Шубников New Resigned 1924 Alive 1946 Russian Male
Vladimir Shuralyov Владимир Шуралёв New Not 1935 2020 1959 Russian Male
Vladimir Sidorov Владимир Сидоров Candidate Not 1924 2000 1949 Russian Male
Ivan Skiba Иван Скиба New Not 1937 Alive 1959 Ukrainian Male
Yuri Sklyarov Юрий Скляров Candidate Resigned 1925 2013 1944 Russian Male
Pyotr Slyozko Петро Слєзко New Not 1931 2004 1954 Russian Male
Georgy Smirnov Гео́ргий Смирно́в Candidate Not 1922 1999 1943 Russian Male
Viktor Smirnov Виктор Смирнов New Not 1929 Alive 1951 Russian Male
Boris Snetkov Виктор Смирнов New Not 1925 2006 1945 Russian Male
Vitaly Sologub Виталий Сологу Candidate Not 1926 2004 1927 Ukrainian Male
Alexey Sorokin Виктор Смирнов New Not 1922 2020 1943 Russian Male
Lev Spiridonov Лев Спиридонов New Not 1931 2009 1956 Russian Male
Nikolai Stashenkov Николай Сташенков New Not 1934 Alive 1960 Russian Male
Vladimir Toropov Владимир Торопов New Not 1938 1996 1962 Russian Male
Oleg Troyanovsky Олег Трояновский New Not 1919 2003 1947 Russian Male
Gennady Ulanov Олег Трояновский New Not 1929 2018 1956 Russian Male
Yuri Valov Юрий Валов New Not 1934 2012 1961 Russian Male
Valentin Varennikov Валентин Варенников New Not 1923 2009 1944 Russian Male
Yevgeny Varnachyov Евгений Варначёв New Not 1932 2018 1963 Russian Male
Lev Vasilyev Лев Васильев New Not 1925 2023 1951 Russian Male
Igor Velichko Игорь Величко New Not 1934 2014 1964 Ukrainian Male
Evgeny Velikhov Евгений Велихов New Promoted 1935 Alive 1971 Russian Male
Ivan Vladychenko Ива́н Влады́ченко Candidate Not 1924 2022 1943 Ukrainian Male
Gennady Voronovsky Геннадий Вороновский New Resigned 1924 Alive 1955 Russian Male
Ivan Yastrebov Иван Я́стребов Candidate Resigned 1911 2002 1941 Russian Male
Bally Yazkuliyev Баллы Язкулиев Candidate Not 1930 Alive 1953 Turkmen Male
Anatoly Yefimov Анатолий Ефимов New Member 1939 Alive 1966 Russian Male
Georgy Yegorov Гео́ргий Его́ров New Resigned 1918 2008 1942 Russian Male
Yevgeny Yeliseyev Евгений Елисеев New Not 1936 Alive 1959 Russian Male
Filipp Yermash Филипп Ермаш Candidate Resigned 1923 2002 1945 Russian Male
Vladimir Zakharov Владимир Захаров Candidate Not 1936 Alive 1961 Russian Male
Yuri Zhukov Юрий Жуков; Candidate Resigned 1908 1991 1943 Russian Male

References

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Citations

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  1. ^ "XXVII-й съезд Коммунистической партии Советского Союза 25.2 - 6.3.1986" (in Russian). Справочник по истории Коммунистической партии и Советского Союза 1898 - 1991. Retrieved 26 October 2014.
  2. ^ Central Intelligence Agency 1986, p. iii.
  3. ^ a b c d e Central Intelligence Agency 1986, p. 6.
  4. ^ a b c d e Central Intelligence Agency 1986, p. 5.
  5. ^ a b Central Intelligence Agency 1986, pp. 2–3.
  6. ^ a b c Gill 1994, p. 17.
  7. ^ a b Central Intelligence Agency 1986, pp. 6–7.
  8. ^ Gill 1994, p. 24.
  9. ^ Central Intelligence Agency 1986, p. 7.
  10. ^ Gill 1994, p. 19.
  11. ^ Gill 1994, pp. 19–21.
  12. ^ Gill 1994, p. 27.
  13. ^ a b c Gill 1994, p. 21.
  14. ^ a b c d e f Gill 1994, p. 22.
  15. ^ Gill 1994, pp. 22–23.
  16. ^ a b Gill 1994, p. 23.
  17. ^ a b c Gill 1994, p. 28.
  18. ^ Gill 1994, p. 29.
  19. ^ a b c Gill 1994, p. 32.
  20. ^ Gill 1994, p. 33.
  21. ^ Gill 1994, pp. 33–36.
  22. ^ Hough 1997, p. 318.
  23. ^ a b Hough 1997, p. 319.
  24. ^ Hough 1997, p. 320.
  25. ^ a b c Gill 1994, p. 37.
  26. ^ Gill 1994, p. 38.
  27. ^ Gill 1994, p. 30.
  28. ^ a b c d Brown 1997, p. 168.
  29. ^ Hough 1997, p. 326.
  30. ^ a b c Hough 1997, p. 321.
  31. ^ Hough 1997, p. 322.
  32. ^ a b c Hough 1997, p. 324.
  33. ^ Hough 1997, pp. 324–325.
  34. ^ a b c Hough 1997, p. 325.
  35. ^ a b Garthoff 2000, p. 347.
  36. ^ a b c Garthoff 2000, p. 348.
  37. ^ a b c d e f g Brown 1997, p. 172.
  38. ^ a b c d e f g h Brown 1997, p. 173.
  39. ^ a b c d e f Brown 1997, p. 174.
  40. ^ Simons & White 1984, pp. 423–425.
  41. ^ "Съезды, конференции, пленумы и заседания РСДРП - РСДРП(б) - РКП(б) - ВКП(б) - КПСС" [Congresses, conferences, plenums and meetings of the RSDLP - RSDLP(b) - RCP(b) - CPSU]. Knowbysight.info. Archived from the original on 8 April 2022. Retrieved 16 April 2022.
  42. ^ a b "Центральный Комитет, избранный XXVI съездом КПСС 3.3.1981, члены" [Central Committee elected by the XXVI Congress of the CPSU 3.3.1981, members]. Knowbysight.info. Archived from the original on 25 April 2022. Retrieved 21 May 2022.
  43. ^ a b "Центральный Комитет, избранный XXVII съездом КПСС 6.3.1986, члены" [Central Committee elected by the XXVII Congress of the CPSU 6.3.1986, members]. Knowbysight.info. Archived from the original on 16 April 2022. Retrieved 21 May 2022.
  44. ^ a b "Центральный Комитет, избранный XXVIII съездом КПСС 13.7.1990, члены" [Central Committee elected by the XXVIII Congress of the CPSU 13.7.1990, members]. Knowbysight.info. Archived from the original on 17 May 2022. Retrieved 21 May 2022.
  45. ^ a b "Персональный состав Центрального комитета РСДРП - РСДРП(б) - РКП(б) - ВКП(б) - КПСС" [Composition of the Central Committee of the RSDLP - RSDLP(b) - RCP(b) - VKP(b) - CPSU]. Knowbysight.info. Archived from the original on 31 March 2022. Retrieved 16 April 2022.

Bibliography

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