Alexander Voloshin: biography, personal life, family, career, photo. "Sanka-bond" (A

Decor elements 03.03.2024
Decor elements

Alexey Makarkin

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The beginning of Voloshin’s career as an entrepreneur is connected with the fact that, as an employee of the All-Union Research Market Institute (VNIKI), in 1990 he initiated the creation of the company “Analysis, Consulting and Marketing”. Working with him in this structure were his colleagues from the research institute Alexander Semenyaka, Leonid Gryaznov and others. The first Voloshin company was engaged, in particular, in economic monitoring - essentially the same thing as the department of the market research institute in which Voloshin worked (by the way, until 1992 his work record remained at VNIKI). The difference was that VNIKI “monitored” the foreign economy by issuing a bulletin of foreign commercial information, while Voloshin’s company monitored the domestic economy.

Voloshin was one of the first in the rapidly collapsing USSR who not only realized the importance of information for a market economy, but also created a structure for its collection and analysis. The next stage was the establishment in 1991 of the information and analytical agency AK&M, which was one of the first in the country to maintain a permanent economic information feed. Currently, AK&M is one of the largest Russian information economic structures within Voloshin’s sphere of influence. The sole founder of the agency is the ASMK company, which is owned by a group of individuals including Voloshin, Gryaznov, Semenyaka (the first president of AK&M) and other associates of the head of the presidential administration, including the current top managers of the agency: President Maxim Likana and General Director Zoya Larkina. Likane, in addition, heads the publishing house "Vremya", which publishes the newspaper "Vremya Novostey" and is engaged in the book publishing business.

In 1992-1993, according to media reports, Voloshin began close cooperation with Boris Berezovsky. During this period, he created two companies: investment "Intrust Ltd" (1992) and brokerage "Esta Corp." (1993). Gryaznov becomes the head of Intrust Ltd., Esta Corp. - Voloshin himself. During this period, the formation of the main part of the Voloshin team was completed. Thus, the financial director of Esta Corp. Vladimir Malin becomes the head of the software department - Maxim Likane. It is noteworthy that both companies are still operating successfully, having combined their activities in 2000 (now Intrust Ltd. is engaged in brokerage operations, and Esta Corp. manages assets). Their current leader is Evgeny Klokov, who met Voloshin back in the 80s, while studying at the Academy of Foreign Trade.

The media wrote a lot about the fact that "Esta Corp." was closely associated with Berezovsky, including in the famous Chara Bank case. Not only Voloshin actively collaborated with Berezovsky, but also another “iconic” member of his team, Alexander Chernoivan, who in 1992-1995 was vice-president of the Fund for Support of Privatization and Stock Market Development (the president of this structure was Leonid Valdman, one of the leaders of the famous AVVA project). Voloshin and Chernoivan also managed a number of check investment funds (Elite, Olympus, Prestige) established by Logovaz. Later, in 1996, Chernoivan worked for several months at the United Bank, which was also part of Berezovsky’s empire.

FFK and RFBR

In 1995, Voloshin reached a fundamentally new level - he became one of the organizers of the Federal Stock Corporation (FFC), created on the initiative of the Russian Federal Property Fund (RFFI) to organize and coordinate privatization auctions. The initial authorized capital of FFK was 1 million 500 thousand rubles, of which 810 thousand (controlling stake) were contributed by the Russian Federal Property Fund; in addition, regional property funds were co-founders.

The creation of FFK was associated with objective reasons: the vast majority of RFBR employees clearly did not have the skills to work with securities. Voloshin could offer the government structure work schemes and trained personnel. Semenyaka became the first president of FFK, Voloshin himself took the post of vice-president, Chernoivan became director of the department for depository operations. Malin also worked at FFK for some time until he moved to the civil service, taking the post of Deputy Chairman of the Russian Federal Property Fund - Voloshin found his man in this structure useful. Malin later made a successful career at the Russian Foundation for Basic Research. In 1997, he was promoted to first deputy chairman, and in May 2000 (when Voloshin was already heading the presidential administration) - chairman of the Russian Foundation for Basic Research. Alexandra Levitskaya, who is still one of Voloshin’s most trusted persons, became the executive director of FFK.

At the end of 1995, FFK was engaged in placing blocks of shares in Russian oil companies at loans-for-shares auctions. The most famous of them was the Sibneft auction, which brought victory to the Berezovsky-Smolensky-Abramovich triumvirate. However, the Voloshin structure also sells shares of other companies: for example, at an auction organized by it in the same 1995, ONEXIM bought a part of Sidanco. Subsequently, FFK closely cooperates with the Russian Foundation for Basic Research: in July 1998, the company received the status of coordinator of all representatives of the Russian Federal Property Fund for sales on an all-Russian scale, and in March 2001, it became a representative of the Russian Federal Property Fund for the sale of property confiscated by judicial authorities. Among the major transactions organized by FFK is the sale of shares in LUKOIL, Vostsibugol, Sayan Aluminum Plant, Severstal, etc.

Gazprom

FFK's "finest hour" came in 1996, when this company was entrusted with creating the market infrastructure of Gazprom. By that time, the gas monopolist, managed by Soviet-style managers, faced the need to attract specialists with experience in working in a market economy to manage the company. Initially, FFK acted as the organizer of the trading platform for Gazprom shares. Subsequently, FFK continued to work closely with Gazprom. However, this was only part of the overall plan to create a market infrastructure for Rem Vyakhirev, whose main guide to life was Voloshin.

In the same 1996, Gazprom, Gazprombank and a number of other companies (including Voloshin ASMK) established the investment company Horizon, whose task was to create and maintain a secondary market for Gazprom shares. First Semenyaka becomes the president of the company, and then Gryaznov, who left the post of head of Intrust Ltd. for this purpose. As a financial consultant to Gazprom, Horizon places ADRs of the Russian gas company on foreign markets. Of the five members of the board of directors of Horizon, three - Semenyaka, Gryaznov and Likane - belong to Voloshin’s closest circle.

Gradually, Voloshin’s employees are being introduced into Gazprom’s structures. So, in June 1996, Semenyaka was elected a member of the board of Gazprom, then also became the head of the company’s securities department (later he retained only the post of member of the board, and the department was headed by another “Voloshin resident”, Eduard Ivanov). Accordingly, Semenyaka serves as the curator of all Gazprom’s work with securities, including the activities of Horizon. This post seemed so important that he left the post of president of FFK, which was taken by Voloshin (thus formalizing his leadership position in the company). However, according to media reports, in the fall of 2001, a representative of Miller’s new Gazprom team, Leonid Axelrod, became the head of Horizon, which may mean Voloshin’s loss of control over this part of the Okologazprom business.

A significant part of Gazprom's financial flows traditionally passed through its subsidiary Gazprombank. In 1996, Chernoivan joined this structure, initially to the local post of head of the depository operations department. However, the very next year he received the rank of deputy chairman of the bank’s board, and in 1998 he became the first deputy chairman (“man number 2” in the bank). Gradually, it is Chernoivan that concentrates the real management of the bank in its hands, especially since the “first person” (until recently) of Gazprombank, Viktor Tarasov, has reached retirement age.

Already this year, the former management of Gazprom agreed with the Federal Securities Commission on a plan to transform the Settlement and Depository Company (SDC) into the only depository for shares of the gas monopolist. RDK was established by Gazprombank (96%, curator - Chernoivan) and the Intrust company (4%). RDK is headed by Reuben Kogan, who is also on the board of directors of FFK. This plan led to a serious conflict with the Moscow Stock Exchange.

Another area of ​​Gazprom’s activity in which Voloshin residents actively participated is legal. Voloshin organized a group of lawyers who acted as consultants to Gazprom on issues of Russian law. In 2000, they formed the backbone of the team of the Liniya Prava company, half of whose shares belong to Horizon. The general director of Liniya Prava is Andrey Novakovsky (formerly the head of the legal department of FFK), the deputy general director is Andrey Davydov (formerly the chief lawyer of the AK&M agency), in addition, Tatyana Kalinina, who was previously a lawyer at Horizon, works in the firm. Over the past year, Liniya Prava has advised Gazprom on the Blue Stream project, and has also become a leading consultant to Gazprom on improving its management structure.

Was Voloshin a representative of a well-known Family in Gazprom and structures around Gazprom? The answer can be simple: yes and no. While creating the market infrastructure of the gas monopolist, the future head of the presidential administration performed primarily technical functions. Only after 1998 was the “family” group able to partially establish control over Gazprom’s financial flows. Voloshin played a decisive role in this process only since 1999, when he took the post of head of the presidential administration.

Policy

In November 1997, Voloshin took up his first post in the civil service, becoming assistant to the head of the presidential administration for economics. According to some reports, Berezovsky organized assistance in finding employment for Voloshin. Valentin Yumashev, another key “family” figure who then headed the administration, needed an employee with knowledge of practical market economics (unlike Yumashev’s then-deputy, the “theorist” Alexander Livshits) and who did not belong to Anatoly’s team of “young reformers” that competed with the Family Chubais. In addition, the Family was interested in promoting another “one of their own” person to the presidential structures.

In August 1998, Voloshin actually replaced Livshits, who resigned after the default, but he officially became deputy head of the administration only on September 12 - in an environment of growing crisis there was no time to complete the paperwork. In a rather vague capacity, Voloshin is part of the working group under the acting. Prime Minister Chernomyrdin to develop urgent measures to overcome the financial crisis. This body, dissolved after Yevgeny Primakov came to the White House, is interesting for its composition: in addition to Voloshin, it included such figures as the then little-known banker Alexander Mamut, acting. Head of the Russian Federal Property Fund Igor Shuvalov, Head of Vnesheconombank Andrey Kostin. The group was headed by Boris Fedorov, later an ally of Voloshin during the fierce struggle over the restructuring of RAO UES.

In the political sphere, Voloshin first showed himself in September 1998, when he became one of the few Kremlin officials who insisted on introducing the candidacy of Viktor Chernomyrdin to the Duma for the third time. In the context of the collapse of the ruble and the active anti-Kremlin game of the situational coalition of Luzhkov, communists and a number of governors, in order to take such a position, one had to have strong nerves.

At the beginning of 1999, Voloshin became one of the most decisive critics of the economic policy of the government of Yevgeny Primakov. In this capacity, he gains direct access to Boris Yeltsin, who promotes Voloshin to the post of head of the Kremlin administration, given his firmly pro-presidential position and ability to realistically assess the situation. However, the “first pancake” turned out to be lumpy - Voloshin, inexperienced in public politics, went to the Federation Council and personally addressed the senators with the justification for the removal of Yuri Skuratov from the post of Prosecutor General. The reaction of members of the upper house to the “newcomer” was sharply negative, and the vote was “pro-skuratov”. No one could have imagined then that Voloshin would play a significant role in the reform that would destroy the Federation Council as a governor’s club the following year.

Voloshin did not make such mistakes again. It is significant that he did not take with him to the presidential administration any of his old colleagues who are competent in market economics, and not in practical politics. Only Alexandra Levitskaya became Voloshin’s assistant, and in 2000 she took the key post of first deputy head of the government apparatus. In the political sphere, Voloshin relied on PR professionals led by Vladislav Surkov, a “polyvalent” manager who had previously worked at MENATEP, Alfa Bank and ORT.

In the spring of 1999, Surkov became Voloshin's adviser, and in August his deputy - such a career ladder confirms that it was Voloshin who brought Surkov to the Kremlin. It is possible that Alexander Abramov, who worked with Surkov at MENATEP and Alpha, played a certain role in the choice made - in the late 70s, Abramov studied at the same Moscow Institute of Railway Engineers as Voloshin (only a junior year). However, Surkov always retained (and still retains) a certain autonomy, striving to be Voloshin’s ally, and not his “client”.

In December 1999, Abramov became Voloshin’s deputy for work with the regions. Voloshin’s entourage (as his assistants) also includes two former deputies of the State Duma of the first convocation, who, after the expiration of their term of office, worked together with Surkov and Abramov in the structures of Alpha. These are Andrei Popov (since 2000 - head of the Main Directorate of Internal Policy, since 2001 - head of the Main Territorial Directorate of the President) and Vadim Boyko, who unsuccessfully ran for mayor of Sochi, and is currently vice-president of the MDM group. According to some reports, not without Voloshin’s participation, another former employee of Surkov and Abramov at MENATEP and Alpha, Alexander Antonets, became Deputy Minister of Agriculture in 2000.

However, in his “hardware” contacts, Voloshin does not confine himself to the “Surkov group”. So, for some time, his freelance adviser was the now ex-chairman of the board of MDM Bank, Alexander Mamut. In general, the institute of assistants to the head of the administration under Voloshin is turning from a purely technical one into a “signature” one - for example, this year, the former head of the economic department of the Prosecutor General’s Office, Nazir Khapsirokov, known for his revealing materials in the media, became Voloshin’s next assistant. The head of the Foundation for Effective Politics, Gleb Pavlovsky, also actively worked with Voloshin (on a freelance basis), and his employees Maxim Meyer and Simon Kordonsky took responsible positions in the presidential administration. Meyer, however, was forced to leave her; The media claim that this was due to the release into the information space of a message about the resignation of the head of the board of Gazprom, Alexei Miller.

As a manager, Voloshin was able to create an effective scheme that made it possible to implement a number of projects in the first stage of Putin’s presidency. Among them are federal reform, the “taming” of the State Duma, the liquidation of Gusinsky’s “media empire,” the seizure of ORT from Berezovsky (in the latest story, Voloshin allegedly personally demanded that his former partner give control over the company to the state). Of course, these schemes could not be used without powerful administrative resources, but the authorities under Boris Yeltsin used similar opportunities much less effectively.

Voloshin, as a politician, differs in that he takes into account only real values ​​(primarily, the balance of power of the main players) and attaches much less importance to mythologies. Thus, in conditions of information dominance, the authorities were able to carry out an operation to seize NTV from Gusinsky with minimal costs, despite existing fears that the problem of freedom of speech would significantly damage the presidential rating. The “problematic” appointment of Khapsirokov also aroused minimal public interest - state electronic media simply “didn’t notice” him, and most print media reacted extremely restrainedly to this fact.

Disregard for the possible negative reaction of the capital’s crowd to his actions makes Voloshin an even more useful figure for the president. The head of the administration, who is not too concerned about his own popularity, acts as a “lightning rod” both for the population (who perceive him as a member of the “old Yeltsin team”) and for part of the elite.

Voloshin’s ability to perform extraordinary actions was manifested, according to some sources, in the well-known story of the leak to the media of recordings of telephone conversations in the Voloshin reception room. During this period, Voloshin’s position in the apparatus weakened, and once again there was talk of his resignation. In this situation, the “stuffing” of harmless compromising material did not further weaken, but, on the contrary, strengthened the position of the head of the administration in the Kremlin hierarchy. The fact is that it is not the president’s style to fire an official based on the results of a negative PR campaign against him.

As a politician, Voloshin is in close contact with the “family” group, but his unsinkability is also explained by his “primary” loyalty to the president. An example is the above-mentioned incident with Berezovsky. The “standard” approach to the Family as a single whole is not applicable in the case of Voloshin and because of a number of his discrepancies with other “family” ones. This was especially evident during the conflict over the restructuring of RAO UES, where Voloshin and presidential assistant Andrei Illarionov actively played not only against Anatoly Chubais, but also (at the final stage) against the government decision approved by Mikhail Kasyanov, who is classified as a “family” group. The logic of the apparatus struggle here took precedence over clan solidarity.

According to media reports, Voloshin took part in the development of the draft reform of the Ministry of Railways and played a significant role in the fact that the government approved the “Aksenenko option”. At the same time, the newly created RAO Russian Railways, which would be responsible for the market infrastructure of the railway department, was repeatedly mentioned as one of Voloshin’s career options after leaving the civil service.

In his political and economic views, Voloshin is a Westerner and a marketist. Unlike the Berezovsky model of 1996-1998, he is not inclined to get carried away with the “Russian idea”, nor to flirt with the communists (despite the fact that he has established close cooperation with one of them, Gennady Seleznev - but the speaker of the Duma has long been little reminds me of a Marxist-Leninist). From time to time, Voloshin’s ideological views break through the “armor” of the administrator - for example, he was not delighted with the new music of the national anthem, but, according to some sources, he was far from opposed to the removal of Lenin’s body from the mausoleum. In September 2001, Voloshin was among those representatives of Putin’s circle who spoke out for maximum rapprochement with the United States - contrary to the sentiments among the “siloviki” and a significant part of the political elite.

Since the spring of 2000, rumors have periodically spread about Voloshin's impending resignation, which reached their climax in December of this year. However, while the president has not found an adequate replacement for the “creator of the schemes,” Voloshin continues to occupy his current post.

Voloshin and RAO "UES of Russia"

In June 1999, Voloshin was elected chairman of the board of directors of RAO UES of Russia. As a rule, such a post is associated with the performance of formal duties, but in the case of Voloshin it turned out differently.

The external side of Voloshin’s activities at RAO UES of Russia is the fight against the company’s restructuring project proposed by Chubais. However, the main content of this struggle was not an attempt to cancel the restructuring and not solidarity with supporters of the “nationalization” of the energy sector such as Deputy Minister Kudryavy, but the strengthening of the positions of a group of Irkutsk managers who share control over the financial flows of RAO with Chubais. We are talking about Chubais' first deputy Leonid Melamed and deputy Mikhail Abyzov. Previously, they were part of the management of the Novosibirsk bank Alemar, one of the largest shareholders of Novosibirskenergo. Another native of Novosibirsk and also an Alemarovite, Dmitry Zhurba, is the financial director of RAO. Before joining RAO, Abyzov worked for some time at the Federal Financial-Industrial Group CJSC under the Presidential Administration; Melamed and Zhurba were top managers of the Rosenergoatom concern.

Currently, managers close to Abyzov and Melamed manage such large joint-stock energos as Kuzbassenergo (Sergey Mikhailov) and Krasnoyarskenergo (Mikhail Kuzichev). Both Mikhailov and Kuzichev were previously members of the governing bodies of Alemar Bank. It is noteworthy that we are talking about regions in which the economic interests of the “family” group can be clearly traced. However, the Company magazine notes that the interests of Abyzov and Abramovich, which overlapped in 1998-1999, have now diverged significantly due to opposing interests in the field of tariff policy. However, the interests of the “Novosibirsk residents” and Voloshin, apparently, did not diverge.

Among other “landmark” decisions of Chubais, one can note the transfer of management of the Kolenergo company to the ESN-Energo company, whose owner Grigory Berezkin is associated with Mamut and Abramovich. Thus, the head of RAO UES found himself involved in a complex relationship with the “family group.” However, Voloshin does not always seek to limit Chubais’s resource - for example, they jointly ensured the removal from the post of general director of Mosenergo, Remezov, who was disloyal to the management of RAO RAO. Voloshin did not interfere with the appointment of acting the general director of this company, close to Chubais, Arkady Evstafiev. At the same time, it is noteworthy that Evstafiev is still in a “limbo” state, and the above-mentioned Berezkin is still called one of the possible contenders for the position of head of Mosenergo.

RAO UES is also a personnel reserve for Voloshin. Thus, the deputy chairman of the board of RAO Yulia Mozharenko this year moved to work as Voloshin’s adviser on legal issues.

Voloshin and the military-industrial complex

At first glance, the military-industrial complex is a sphere far from Voloshin’s traditional interests. However, increasing the role of the defense sector in the Russian economy inevitably had to involve a manager sensitive to new processes in the struggle for control over the largest firms in the military-industrial complex.

At the same time, Voloshin, as in the political sphere, faced the need to attract a “borrowed” team. According to some reports, having headed the presidential administration, he established contacts with the former general director of Rosvooruzhenie, Alexander Kotelkin, who by that time held a mid-level position in the Moscow government. At the end of 1999, Kotelkin officially returned to the arms trade, taking the post of adviser to the general director of Rosvooruzhenie, Alexei Ogarev, who is closely associated with the “family” group. However, in November 2000, Rosvooruzhenie was merged with Promexport into the Rosoboronexport company, controlled by St. Petersburg people from the presidential circle.

However, by that time, Kotelkin’s people had occupied key positions in Antey CJSC (produces air defense systems, including the famous S-300), whose general director is 64-year-old Yuri Svirin. However, issues of trade in Antey products are dealt with by a group of Kotelkinites headed by the former head of the strategic planning and analysis department of Rosvooruzhenie, Colonel Mikhail Vorobyov (now deputy general director of Antey).

In 2000, Antey was planned to be included in the Defensive Systems financial and industrial group, which, according to Kommersant, is associated with Deputy Prime Minister Ilya Klebanov. However, the deal was broken as a result of a two-move combination. At the first stage, Voloshin, as the same Kommersant claims, wrote a letter to Mikhail Kasyanov justifying that the deal to transfer the state stake in Antey to Defense Systems was inappropriate. The second stage was the issuance of a presidential decree in October 2000, stipulating that when forming holding structures in the military-industrial complex, 51% of their shares must be in federal ownership. And in the management company "Defense Systems" most of the shares belonged to non-state structures.

Klebanov, however, did not back down and proposed creating an air defense concern from Antey, Defensive Systems and the defense Central Design Bureau Almaz. At the same time, the Deputy Prime Minister planned to appoint Vladimir Simonov, the head of the Russian Agency for Management Systems and the then head of the board of directors of Antey, to the position of head of the new structure. However, Voloshin managed to initiate the issuance of a presidential decree, according to which Antey was included in the list of enterprises whose candidacies for chairmen of boards of directors and general directors are subject to approval by the presidential administration. As a result, Simonov was not re-elected to his post in Antey for a new term. At the same time, General Director Svirin, whose resignation Simonov sought, retained his post. The arbiter in the dispute should be Voloshin's deputy, Viktor Ivanov, who, however, belongs to the St. Petersburg group - he was recently elected to the boards of directors of Antey and Almaz, and then headed them.

Moreover, this year the president signed a special decree on Antey OJSC, in which he officially assigned state-owned shares in 16 defense enterprises to this company. Initially, it was planned that Antey would receive only 49% of the shares in each of the enterprises, but in the final version of the decree this figure was sharply increased - to 74.5%. Antey was also granted the right to engage in foreign economic activity for a period of one year. Initially, Antey asked to be allowed to sell weapons himself for 5 years, and only the tough position of Rosoboronexport led to a reduction in this period (which, however, can be extended).

Prospects

The results achieved by Voloshin at the age of 45 look impressive. However, there is reason to believe that his system of influence may be threatened by at least two dangers.

The first of them is obvious and objective in nature: Voloshin is a civil servant, and as such, sooner or later he will resign. In such cases, the level of influence of a politician inevitably falls, even if he becomes a top manager of a large company (like Anatoly Chubais at RAO UES of Russia). But there are also some signs of Voloshin’s weakening political influence at the present time. It is significant that the newspaper Vremya Novostei, which is close to Voloshin, was on the verge of closure in early November after Vnesheconombank announced the termination of its funding (however, the newspaper still managed to find new financial sources). Political analyst close to Voloshin Gleb Pavlovsky announced in December that he was abandoning his media outlets on the Internet (such as Strana.ru, SMI.ru, Vesti.ru). In the information field, this was also perceived as a defeat for Voloshin. From the same line is the resignation of the above-mentioned Maxim Meyer, who held the post of deputy head of the Main Directorate of Internal Policy of the President of the Russian Federation.

The second danger is associated with the possible attack of competitors on Voloshin’s position in business. The active expansion of the St. Petersburg residents in Gazprom and Gazprombank calls into question the future of the company’s market infrastructure management system, created with the active participation of Voloshin. We have already noted that St. Petersburg resident Leonid Axelrod has become the new head of the Okologazprom company Horizon. Klebanov's appointment to the post of Minister of Industry, Science and Technology (while retaining the post of Deputy Prime Minister) strengthens his position in the struggle for control over Antey. Moreover, in October, Deputy Head of the Presidential Administration Viktor Ivanov, who in the media is considered one of the “St. Petersburg residents” who opposes the “family”, became the chairman of the board of directors of Antey in October. In the future, the ousting of Voloshin from the business sphere may continue as part of a campaign to limit the influence of people and groups associated with the Family to one degree or another.

- biography

Alexander Stalyevich Voloshin was born on March 3, 1956 in Moscow.

In 1978 he graduated from the Moscow Institute of Transport Engineers, until 1986 he worked in the railway transport system - according to some sources, in the locomotive depot of the Moscow-Sortirovochnaya Moscow Railway, according to others - in the laboratory for the scientific organization of labor.

During these years I was engaged Komsomol work.

Alexander Stalyevich Voloshin- Chairman of the Board of Directors of RAO "UES of Russia", in position since June 1999.

Former head of the Russian presidential administration under Boris Yeltsin (1999) and Vladimir Putin (2000-2003).

Before his resignation from this post, he was considered one of the most influential persons in the state.

Previously, Voloshin worked as deputy (1998-1999) and assistant (1997-1998) to the head of the presidential administration, and before that he held positions in various commercial structures associated with entrepreneur Boris Berezovsky.

____________________________________

In 1986, Alexander Voloshin graduated from the All-Union Academy of Foreign Trade and came to work at the All-Russian Research Institute of Economic Markets of Russia, rising to the rank of deputy head of the department.

According to some reports, during this period he began to provide information assistance to various organizations in the export of automotive products on a commercial basis.

At the same time, he met entrepreneur Boris Berezovsky, who at that time held the post of head of the AVVA automobile alliance. Subsequently, Voloshin became his close business partner and acted as the entrepreneur’s personal stock agent.

In 1992-1993, Voloshin was vice-president of JSC "Analysis, Consulting and Marketing".

In 1993, he headed four investment firms - subsidiaries of the Logovaz company, owned by Berezovsky.

In 1995, he became the head of the company for managing the assets of pension funds "Finko-Investment" and founded the consulting firm "ASMK" CJSC.

Also in 1993-1996, he served as president of the ESTA Corp company, which in 1994 acted as an intermediary in the sale of shares of Berezovsky's AVVA concern to the Chara bank and acquired domestic foreign currency government loan bonds from the Credit-Moscow joint-stock bank - transactions that in the press of that time they were called dubious.

In 1995, Alexander Voloshin was vice-president, and in 1996-1997 - president of the joint-stock company "Federal Stock Corporation" (FFK), acting as the general agent of the Russian Federal Property Fund (RFFI) for conducting specialized cash auctions.

According to some reports, FFK lobbied for the interests of Berezovsky and Roman Abramovich during the privatization of the oil company Sibneft. CJSC United Stock Corporation Ltd. was mentioned in the media as “related to Voloshin.” (OFC), which was purchased by the AVVA concern in September 1997.

Also in 1995-1997, Voloshin was also the president of the AK&M news agency.

In November 1997, A. Voloshin became an assistant Valentina Yumasheva- Head of the Presidential Administration of the Russian Federation Boris Yeltsin). During this period, Voloshin took part in writing the economic program of the general supported by Berezovsky Alexandra Lebed, who was a candidate in the elections for governor of the Krasnoyarsk Territory and took this post in May 1998.

In September 1998, shortly after the August default and resignation of the government of Sergei Kiriyenko, Alexander Voloshin was appointed deputy head of the presidential administration for economic issues.

In this position, Voloshin immediately entered into confrontation with the new Prime Minister of the Russian Government Evgeny PrimakovHe regularly wrote memos to Yeltsin, in which he analyzed in detail the activities of the Cabinet of Ministers, assessing them mainly negatively (the position of Primakov, who headed the “coalition” government, which included representatives of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation, was rejected by most of the presidential administration headed by Yumashev).

The confrontation between Voloshin and Primakov intensified in 1999 during the approval of the state budget and during the preparation of the economic part of the president’s message to the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation.

In December 1998, Yeltsin removed Yumashev from the post of head of his administration (but kept him in the position of adviser), and in his place appointed the former secretary of the Security Council of the Russian Federation Nikolai Bordyuzha. In just over three months of his work in his new position, contradictions between branches and individual authorities, as well as between key figures of the Russian establishment heated up to the limit and resulted in open war, in which Voloshin took a direct part.

Conflict between Primakov and patron of Alexander Voloshin Berezovsky concentrated on the figure of the Prosecutor General Yuri Skuratov, which at the beginning February 1999, after a conversation with Bordyuzha, I had to resign. Yeltsin granted the Prosecutor General's request, but members of the Federation Council, who were supposed to approve this resignation, showed unexpected obstinacy and demanded a public explanation from Skuratov.

Skuratov agreed to speak before senators in mid-March, and although the Kremlin considered the issue of his resignation resolved, rumors arose that the Federation Council might not approve it. On the eve of Skuratov’s speech to senators, the federal channel RTR showed a scandalous film in which “a man similar to the prosecutor general” was having fun in the company of women of easy virtue. Subsequently, it turned out that Bordyuzha ordered the broadcast of the recording - in this way he hoped to discredit Skuratov in the eyes of the Federation Council and the public. However, Skuratov nevertheless spoke before the senators and stated that he resigned under pressure from those who managed to “drive a wedge between the Prosecutor General and President Boris Yeltsin” (Berezovsky was named among them).

Senators by a majority vote rejected the Prosecutor General's resignation, which observers regarded as a major defeat for Yeltsin in his confrontation with the left side of the government, the State Duma (where the issue of impeachment of the president was being decided at that time) and the Federation Council.

Immediately after this, on March 19, 1999, Yeltsin fired Bordyuzha as head of his administration and appointed Alexander Voloshin in his place.

Observers regarded this, on the one hand, as President's open challenge to Primakov(whom Yeltsin had previously carelessly named as his successor), and on the other hand, as evidence "staff shortage"in the Kremlin, as at first the media called Voloshin the weakest figure of all those who held this post before him. Voloshin faced three main tasks at this stage: weakening Primakov’s position, opposing the plans of the communists in the Duma to impeach the president, and eliminating Skuratov, who, having secured the support of the Federation Council, openly blackmailed the Kremlin with the presence of materials compromising Yeltsin’s inner circle. Ultimately, all three tasks were completed, but not openly, and by methods of behind-the-scenes politics(Bribe? - V.Sh.).

Just Voloshin’s first public speech (in April 1999, when he, speaking on behalf of the president in the Federation Council, again tried to convince the senators to dismiss Skuratov) became his most notorious failure in his new position: The media openly called out his answers to questions from the audience "helpless", and the senators once again challenged the president, leaving Skuratov in office.

Observers expected Voloshin's immediate resignation, but Yeltsin retained his position, and Alexander Voloshin subsequently proved that he knew how to achieve his goals.

In April, Skuratov was removed from his duties in connection with a criminal case brought against him; in May, the government, along with Primakov, was dismissed, and in the same month, the issue of impeachment of Yeltsin, although put to a vote in the Duma, did not receive the required number votes. After this, Voloshin, who carried out behind-the-scenes preparations for these events, was talked about as a strong figure who is close to the presidential “family” and enjoys its trust.

In the summer of 1999, Alexander Voloshin became a participant in the intrigues that unfolded among officials and oligarchs close to Yeltsin, who had previously worked together to eliminate Primakova.

In the dispute over who will take over the post of Prime Minister, Voloshin supported the head of RAO UES of Russia Anatoly Chubais, who, contrary to the wishes of Berezovsky and Roman Abramovich, who promoted the former Minister of Railways Nikolai Aksenenko, insisted on the candidacy Sergei Stepashin.

Voloshin’s personnel decisions also infringed on the interests of Vladimir Gusinsky, who in response, through the Media-Most holding company he owned, launched information war against the Kremlin. After Stepashin’s unsuccessful attempt to reconcile Gusinsky and Voloshin (July 1999) the latter initiated tax audits of Media-Most and an investigation into the criminal case against Gusinsky. A year later, in the summer of 2000, Gusinsky suffered a complete defeat in this confrontation and was forced to sell the holding to the state concern Gazprom at a loss and emigrate to Spain.

Subsequently, he was re-elected to this post several times.

In the summer of 1999, the Kremlin’s new task, after the dismissal of Primakov and Skuratov, was to weaken the Fatherland - All Russia electoral bloc, headed by Moscow Mayor Yuri Luzhkov and Primakov (the Fatherland movement was formed in the fall of 1998, and All Russia, or " bloc of governors" - at the height of the struggle between the Kremlin and the Federation Council over Skuratov).

The OVR bloc claimed victory in the parliamentary elections in December 1999, and its leaders claimed the post of President of Russia (the next presidential elections were scheduled for March 2000).

In this situation, the presidential administration and Boris Yeltsin himself tried to prevent the unification of the two movements or at least introduce Stepashin into the OVR.

In early August, after both failed, Yeltsin began looking for those responsible.

The President wanted to dismiss Stepashin from the post of Prime Minister, but he blamed Voloshin for the failure as having started a war with Media-Most at the wrong time. As a result, the president had to choose between them, and he chose to leave Voloshin in office and dismiss Stepashin. In his place was appointed Director of the FSB and Secretary of the Security Council of the Russian Federation Vladimir Putin, whom Yeltsin, like Primakov and Stepashin in his time, announced as his successor to the presidency ( According to some reports, Voloshin tried to offer Yeltsin director Nikita Mikhalkov instead of Putin).

That same fall, Alexander Voloshin took part in the creation of the “Unity” gubernatorial bloc, capable of resisting the Primakov-Luzhkov OVR bloc. This attempt was successful: in the parliamentary elections held in December 1999, Unity managed to get ahead of the OVR: it took second place after the Communist Party of the Russian Federation. TO end of the year, the media, which in the spring called Voloshin the weakest figure in the presidential administration, noted that in just six months he achieved in the Kremlin enormous influence, becoming together with Yumashev and Yeltsin's daughter Tatiana Dyachenk about a member of a kind of imperious triumvirate. Stubborn, tough and efficient, A. Voloshin, according to analysts, played the role of a conductor of decisions in this “power triangle”.

On December 31, 1999, after Boris Yeltsin’s voluntary resignation as head of state, Vladimir Putin was appointed acting president., and Voloshin managed to retain his position as head of the presidential administration and acted as an adviser to Putin during his election campaign.

After Putin became the new legally elected president, Voloshin also retained his post. Assessing the role of Alexander Voloshin and other members of the “Yeltsin team” who retained their posts in the Kremlin during that period, the media wrote, that the new president could not refuse it because he simply did not have another, equally effective management.

At the same time, Putin brought with him to the Kremlin completely new of people. After Marshal Igor Sergeev was replaced as Minister of Defense in March 2001 Sergey Ivanov, observers started talking about conflict between representatives of Yeltsin’s former entourage, led by Voloshin, and immigrants from St. Petersburg, who came to power together with Putin.

Despite the strength of the St. Petersburg people, Alexander Voloshin for a long time continued to be classified as one of the small group of officials who were especially close to the president and were not afraid to enter into an argument with him

.Only the arrest of the head of the Yukos company Mikhail Khodorkovsky October 25, 2003 led to a political crisis in the Kremlin, which ended Voloshin's resignation.

For several years after his resignation from the post of head of the presidential administration, Alexander Voloshin, who retained the position of chairman of the board of directors of RAO UES, did not appear in public with official statements.

Only in May 2006 did he speak at the Russian-German Forum in Berlin. His speech aroused great interest among foreign partners, which, according to the Russian media, emphasized that A. Voloshin remains one of the authoritative and influential figures of the Russian political elite - that part of it that opposes President Putin’s security entourage.

In November 2006, Alexander Voloshin visited the USA. According to American experts, he met with senior White House and CIA officials to discuss with them the candidacy of a successor to the Russian president.

Voloshin himself stated that his visit had nothing to do with the Kremlin.

However, sources reported that Voloshin expressed the opinion that there was a possibility of being nominated as a successor Dmitry Medvedev or Sergei Ivanov, and the one who is not “appointed” as president will become a candidate for the post of prime minister.

Problems of Russian-American relations were also discussed at the meeting with Alexander Voloshin. According to analysts, Voloshin’s visit to the United States was evidence that these relations are in a deep crisis, excluding working contacts and exchange of information at the level of employees of the presidential administrations of both countries.

Voloshin, in the eyes of the Americans, remained a person close to the current Putin administration.

Alexander Voloshin is an active state adviser of the Russian Federation, 1st class, in 2000 he was awarded a personalized weapon - a Taurus revolver.

Alexander Voloshin is married for the second time to Galina Teimurazova. In June 2005, their daughter was born. Voloshin’s first wife, Natalia Belyaeva, according to 1999 data, lived abroad. From this marriage, Voloshin has a son, Ilya, born in 1976. Ilya Voloshin was educated in London, in 1996 he worked as a securities trader at Eurotrust Bank, then at the AK&M news agency founded by his father. In 2005, the press wrote that Ilya Voloshin holds the post of vice president of Converse Bank. (Source - Lenta.Ru).

Chairman of the Boards of Directors of OJSC Uralkali and OJSC First Freight Company

Chairman of the Boards of Directors of OJSC Uralkali (since September 2010), OJSC First Freight Company (since February 2012). Previously - Chairman of the Board of Directors of RAO UES of Russia (1999-2008) and MMC Norilsk Nickel (from 2008 to 2010 and from April to June 2011), Head of the Russian Presidential Administration under Vladimir Putin (2000-2003 ) and Boris Yeltsin (1999), deputy (1998-1999) and assistant (1997-1998) head of the presidential administration, previously held positions in various commercial structures associated with entrepreneur Boris Berezovsky.

Alexander Stalyevich Voloshin was born on March 3, 1956 in Moscow. In 1978 he graduated from the Moscow Institute of Transport Engineers, until 1986 he worked in the railway transport system - according to some sources, in the locomotive depot of the Moscow-Sortirovochnaya Moscow Railway, according to others - in the laboratory for the scientific organization of labor. During these years he was engaged in Komsomol work.

In 1986, Voloshin graduated from the All-Union Academy of Foreign Trade and came to work at the All-Russian Research Institute of Economic Markets of Russia, rising to the rank of deputy head of the department. According to some reports, during this period he began to provide information assistance to various organizations in the export of automotive products on a commercial basis. At the same time, he met entrepreneur Boris Berezovsky, who at that time held the post of head of the AVVA automobile alliance. Subsequently, Voloshin became his close business partner and acted as the entrepreneur’s personal stock agent.

In 1992-1993, Voloshin was vice-president of JSC "Analysis, Consulting and Marketing". In 1993, he headed four investment firms - subsidiaries of the Logovaz company, owned by Berezovsky. In 1995, he became the head of the company for managing the assets of pension funds "Finko-Investment" and founded the consulting firm "ASMK" CJSC. Also in 1993-1996, he served as president of the ESTA Corp company, which in 1994 acted as an intermediary in the sale of shares of Berezovsky's AVVA concern to the Chara bank and acquired domestic foreign currency government loan bonds from the Credit-Moscow joint-stock bank - transactions that in the press of that time they were called dubious.

In 1995, Voloshin was vice president, and in 1996-1997, president of the joint stock company Federal Stock Corporation (FFC), which acted as the general agent of the Russian Federal Property Fund (RFFI) for conducting specialized cash auctions. According to some reports, FFK lobbied for the interests of Berezovsky and Roman Abramovich during the privatization of the Sibneft oil company. CJSC United Stock Corporation Ltd. was mentioned in the media as “related to Voloshin.” (OFC), which was purchased by the AVVA concern in September 1997. Also in 1995-1997, Voloshin was also the president of the AK&M news agency.

In November 1997, Voloshin became an assistant to Valentin Yumashev, the head of the administration of Russian President Boris Yeltsin. During this period, Voloshin took part in writing the economic program of General Alexander Lebed, supported by Berezovsky, who was a candidate in the elections for governor of the Krasnoyarsk Territory and took this post in May 1998.

In September 1998, shortly after the August default and resignation of the government of Sergei Kiriyenko, Voloshin was appointed deputy head of the presidential administration for economic issues. In this position, Voloshin immediately entered into confrontation with the new Prime Minister of the Russian Government, Yevgeny Primakov - he regularly wrote memos to Yeltsin, in which he analyzed in detail the activities of the Cabinet of Ministers, assessing them mainly negatively (the position of Primakov, who headed the “coalition” government, which included representatives of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation, caused rejection by most of the presidential administration led by Yumashev). The confrontation between Voloshin and Primakov intensified in 1999 during the approval of the state budget and during the preparation of the economic part of the president’s message to the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation.

In December 1998, Yeltsin removed Yumashev from the post of head of his administration (but kept him in the position of adviser), and in his place appointed former Secretary of the Security Council of the Russian Federation Nikolai Bordyuzha. In just over three months of his work in his new position, contradictions between branches and individual authorities, as well as between key figures of the Russian establishment, escalated to the limit and resulted in an open war, in which Voloshin took a direct part. The conflict between Primakov and Voloshin’s patron Berezovsky centered on the figure of Prosecutor General Yuri Skuratov, who in early February 1999, after a conversation with Bordyuzha, had to resign. Yeltsin granted the Prosecutor General's request, but members of the Federation Council, who were supposed to approve this resignation, showed unexpected obstinacy and demanded a public explanation from Skuratov. Skuratov agreed to speak before senators in mid-March, and although the Kremlin considered the issue of his resignation resolved, rumors arose that the Federation Council might not approve it. On the eve of Skuratov’s speech to senators, the federal channel RTR showed a scandalous film in which “a man similar to the prosecutor general” was having fun in the company of women of easy virtue. Subsequently, it turned out that Bordyuzha ordered the broadcast of the recording - in this way he hoped to discredit Skuratov in the eyes of the Federation Council and the public. However, Skuratov nevertheless spoke before the senators and stated that he resigned under pressure from those who managed to “drive a wedge between the Prosecutor General and President Boris Yeltsin” (Berezovsky was named among them). Senators by a majority vote rejected the Prosecutor General's resignation, which observers regarded as a major defeat for Yeltsin in his confrontation with the left side of the government, the State Duma (where the issue of impeachment of the president was being decided at that time) and the Federation Council.

Immediately after this, on March 19, 1999, Yeltsin fired Bordyuzha from the post of head of his administration and appointed Voloshin in his place. Observers regarded this, on the one hand, as an open challenge from the president to Primakov (whom Yeltsin had previously carelessly named as his successor), and on the other, as evidence of a “personnel shortage” in the Kremlin, since at first the media called Voloshin the weakest figure of all those who occupied this post before it. Voloshin faced three main tasks at this stage: weakening Primakov’s position, opposing the plans of the communists in the Duma to impeach the president, and eliminating Skuratov, who, having secured the support of the Federation Council, openly blackmailed the Kremlin with the presence of materials compromising Yeltsin’s inner circle. Ultimately, all three tasks were completed, but not openly, but through behind-the-scenes politics. Voloshin’s very first public speech (in April 1999, when he, speaking on behalf of the president in the Federation Council, again tried to convince the senators to dismiss Skuratov) became his most notorious failure in his new position: the media openly called his answers to questions from the hall was “helpless,” and the senators once again challenged the president, leaving Skuratov in office. Observers expected Voloshin to resign immediately, but Yeltsin retained his position, and Voloshin subsequently proved that he knew how to achieve his goals. In April, Skuratov was removed from his duties in connection with a criminal case brought against him; in May, the government, along with Primakov, was dismissed, and in the same month, the issue of impeachment of Yeltsin, although put to a vote in the Duma, did not receive the required number votes. After this, Voloshin, who carried out the behind-the-scenes preparations for these events, was talked about as a strong figure who was close to the presidential “family” and enjoyed its trust.

In the summer of 1999, Voloshin became a participant in the intrigues that unfolded among officials and oligarchs close to Yeltsin, who had previously worked together to eliminate Primakov. In the dispute over who would take the post of Prime Minister, Voloshin supported the head of RAO UES of Russia Anatoly Chubais, who, contrary to the wishes of Berezovsky and Roman Abramovich, who promoted the former Minister of Railways Nikolai Aksenenko, insisted on the candidacy of Sergei Stepashin. Voloshin's personnel decisions also infringed on the interests of Vladimir Gusinsky, who in response, through his Media-Most holding, launched an information war against the Kremlin. After Stepashin’s unsuccessful attempt to reconcile Gusinsky and Voloshin (July 1999), the latter initiated tax audits of Media-Most and a criminal investigation against Gusinsky. A year later, in the summer of 2000, Gusinsky suffered a complete defeat in this confrontation and was forced to sell the holding to the state concern Gazprom at a loss and emigrate to Spain.

In the summer of 1999, the Kremlin’s new task, after the dismissal of Primakov and Skuratov, was to weaken the Fatherland - All Russia electoral bloc, headed by Moscow Mayor Yuri Luzhkov and Primakov (the Fatherland movement was formed in the fall of 1998, and All Russia, or " bloc of governors" - at the height of the struggle between the Kremlin and the Federation Council over Skuratov). The OVR bloc claimed victory in the parliamentary elections in December 1999, and its leaders claimed the post of President of Russia (the next presidential elections were scheduled for March 2000). In this situation, the presidential administration and Yeltsin himself tried to prevent the unification of the two movements or at least introduce Stepashin into the OVR. In early August, after both failed, Yeltsin began looking for those responsible. The president wanted to dismiss Stepashin from the post of prime minister, but he blamed Voloshin for the failure as having started a war with Media-Most at the wrong time. As a result, the president had to choose between them, and he chose to leave Voloshin in office and dismiss Stepashin. In his place was appointed Director of the FSB and Secretary of the Security Council of the Russian Federation Vladimir Putin, whom Yeltsin, like Primakov and Stepashin, announced as his successor to the presidency (according to some reports, Voloshin tried to offer Yeltsin director Nikita Mikhalkov instead of Putin).

That same fall, Voloshin took part in the creation of the “Unity” gubernatorial bloc, capable of resisting the Primakov-Luzhkov OVR bloc. This attempt turned out to be successful: in the parliamentary elections held in December 1999, Unity managed to get ahead of the OVR: it took second place after the Communist Party of the Russian Federation. By the end of the year, the media, which in the spring had called Voloshin the weakest figure in the presidential administration, noted that in just six months he had achieved enormous influence in the Kremlin, becoming, together with Yumashev and Yeltsin’s daughter Tatyana Dyachenko, a member of a kind of power triumvirate. Stubborn, tough and efficient, Voloshin, according to analysts, played the role of a conductor of decisions in this “power triangle.”

On December 31, 1999, after Yeltsin’s voluntary resignation as head of state, Putin was appointed acting president, and Voloshin managed to retain his position as head of the presidential administration and acted as an adviser to Putin during his election campaign. After Putin became the new legally elected president, Voloshin also retained his post. Assessing the role of Voloshin and other members of the “Yeltsin team” who retained their posts in the Kremlin during that period, the media wrote that the new president could not refuse it because he simply did not have another, equally effective management. At the same time, Putin brought completely new people with him to the Kremlin. After Marshal Igor Sergeev was replaced as Minister of Defense in March 2001 by Sergei Ivanov, observers began talking about a conflict between representatives of Yeltsin’s former entourage, led by Voloshin, and people from St. Petersburg who came to power with Putin.

Despite the strength of the St. Petersburg people, Voloshin for a long time continued to be classified as one of the small group of officials who were especially close to the president and were not afraid to enter into an argument with him. Only the arrest of the head of the Yukos company, Mikhail Khodorkovsky, on October 25, 2003, led to a political crisis in the Kremlin, which ended with the resignation of Voloshin. On October 29, 2003, by decree of the Russian President, Voloshin was relieved of his post as head of the presidential administration, and Dmitry Medvedev was appointed in his place.

For several years after his resignation from the post of head of the presidential administration, Voloshin, who retained the position of chairman of the board of directors of RAO UES, did not appear in public with official statements. Only in May 2006 did he speak at the Russian-German Forum in Berlin. His speech aroused great interest among foreign partners, which, according to the Russian media, emphasized that Voloshin remains one of the authoritative and influential figures of the Russian political elite - that part of it that opposes President Putin’s security entourage.

In November 2006, Voloshin visited the United States. According to analysts, Voloshin’s visit, during which, according to some sources, the candidacy of the future president of Russia was discussed, clearly demonstrated that Voloshin, in the eyes of the Americans, remained a person close to the current Putin administration.

In August 2006, the management of RAO UES of Russia announced the imminent completion of the reorganization of RAO. As planned, on July 1, 2008, RAO UES of Russia ceased to exist as a legal entity. His successors remained in the industry, but assumptions that Voloshin, after the dissolution of RAO UES, would remain on the boards of directors of the successor companies were not confirmed. Thus, in the summer of 2008, Voloshin “completely parted with the energy sector.”

In November 2008, Interros nominated Voloshin to the new board of directors of MMC Norilsk Nickel as an independent director. In December of the same year, Voloshin was elected chairman of the board of directors of Norilsk Nickel, and in the summer of 2009 it became known that he combines leadership of the board of directors with work at the company Specialized Asset Management (SAM), which manages “funds that invest outside the energy sector.” In June 2010, he gave up his position as chairman of the board of directors of Norilsk Nickel to the first deputy chairman of the board of VTB, Vasily Titov.

In July 2010, President Medvedev signed a decree on the working group to create the International Financial Center (IFC) and appointed Voloshin as its leader. In August 2010, Voloshin became a member of the board of directors of Yandex, and in September of the same year he was elected chairman of the board of directors of OJSC Uralkali.

In April 2011, Voloshin again headed the board of directors of Norilsk Nickel, but in June of the same year he left this post, remaining an ordinary member of the board. In February 2011, he became chairman of the board of directors of OJSC First Freight Company.

Voloshin is an active state adviser of the Russian Federation, 1st class, and in 2000 was awarded a personalized weapon - a Taurus revolver.

Voloshin is married for the second time to Galina Teimurazova. In June 2005, their daughter was born. Voloshin’s first wife, Natalia Belyaeva, according to 1999 data, lived abroad. From this marriage, Voloshin has a son, Ilya, born in 1976. Ilya Voloshin was educated in London, in 1996 he worked as a securities trader at Eurotrust Bank, then at the AK&M news agency founded by his father. In 2005, the press wrote that Ilya Voloshin holds the post of vice president of Converse Bank.

Alexander Stalyevich Voloshin is the head of the supervisory board of First Freight Company JSC, the head of the group for organizing a global financial center in the capital, the ex-head of the Kremlin administration, who has repeatedly proven his efficiency and economic literacy.

He headed the collective management bodies of MMC Norilsk Nickel, RAO UES, and served as an ordinary member of the supervisory boards of a number of commercial structures, including IDGC Holding, Uralkali, System Operator, Federal Grid Company, Yandex".

The former high-ranking official was the author of the idea of ​​so-called “managed democracy” in Russia, when the political regime combines democratic and authoritarian institutions to solve emerging problems. In 2002, in his address to his compatriots, “Managed Democracy” – a direct road to dictatorship and fascism,” he defined Russian political realities as the systematic destruction of freedom, the creation of a police regime and a return to totalitarianism.

Childhood and family of Alexander Voloshin

Alexander was born on March 3, 1956 in the Russian capital. Soon his parents, Stal Isaakovich and Inna Lvovna, moved to Izhevsk, where they began teaching foreign languages ​​at a pedagogical institute. According to journalists, they had to leave because of the campaign against cosmopolitanism carried out in those years, which was actually anti-Semitic.


In 1961, his father died at the age of 36. Mom and her son returned to Belokamennaya and taught at the Diplomatic Academy of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The young man, having received secondary education, became a student at the Institute of Transport Engineers, and 5 years later received a diploma in electrical engineering. He was not afraid to take risks and go beyond existing stereotypes, despite the fact that he grew up and was brought up in a decent environment. For example, I once bet that I could ride the subway barefoot, and I won the bet. Although the consequences of such an act in those years could have been very serious if one of the vigilant citizens had called the police.

Career of Alexander Voloshin

The future politician began his career in 1978 at the Moscow-Sortirovochnaya locomotive repair and maintenance depot. At this enterprise, he held various positions - from a diesel locomotive driver to a senior official in the primary organization of the Komsomol.


From 1983 to 1986 Alexander Stalyevich was a student at the Academy of Foreign Trade, and later worked in senior positions at a market research institute. In 1993, he took the post of deputy president of the Analysis, Consulting and Marketing enterprise, in 1995 he headed the financial and credit organization ESTA Corp., and in 1996 - the Federal Stock Corporation.


Successfully moving up the career ladder, at the end of 1997 Voloshin joined the administration of the head of state, first as an assistant to its head, a year later - as his deputy, and since 1999 - head of the Presidential Administration and member of the Security Council.


In 2003, he was relieved of his post as the top Kremlin official. His resignation in government circles was called by some as an ordinary personnel renewal, by others as a major mistake, noting that with the departure of such brilliant managers who were capable of solving the most complex problems and who created democracy in the country, “siloviki” come in, seeking to revive the totalitarian regime.

Speech by Alexander Voloshin at the Gaidar Forum

Having left big politics, the ex-head of the Presidential Administration continued to serve as chairman of the collective management body “UES of Russia” until 2008; in 2008-2010. he was elected to a similar post at Norilsk Nickel, 2010-2014. - at Uralkali.

Personal life of Alexander Voloshin

Alexander Voloshin got married for the first time when he was an 18-year-old student. His wife's name was Natalia Belyaeva. They lived modestly, renting a room in a communal apartment. When the young couple turned 20 years old, their first-born son Ilya was born. He was educated in the capital of Foggy Albion and works as deputy head of Converse Bank. The ex-wife of Alexander Stalyevich also lives abroad. Documents have appeared on the global network confirming that in his youth their son was detained for credit card fraud.


Now the former head of the presidential administration is married to Galina Teimurazova. The couple has three children: two sons, born in 1995 and 2001, and a daughter, born in 2005.

In 2000, Vyacheslav Soltaganov, the head of the Federal Tax Service, presented the head of the Administration of the Russian Federation with a personalized weapon - the Taurus traumatic revolver - as an honorary award.

Colleagues in the Kremlin noted that the ex-official was a master of behind-the-scenes intrigue, unspoken politics, had an iron will, and was distinguished by perseverance and hard work.

Alexander Voloshin today

Since 2010, the ex-official has been an independent director in a number of leading domestic enterprises and startups. He was a member of the supervisory board of Yandex, in 2012 he became the head of the management of the First Freight Company, and became a member of the expert commission on the work of the Open Government. For proposals on the functioning of this doctrine of public administration, Alexander Stalyevich received gratitude from Vladimir Putin.

Conversation with Alexander Voloshin

In 2016, a former high-ranking civil servant invested personal funds in the medical genetics company Genotek and became a member of its management. He is a partner of the venture fund Genome Ventures, which invests capital in medical projects and the online environment, including the consultation resource “Pediatrician 24/7”, the psychometric assessment service GetMyWay, the service for veterinarians Pet-Doctor, and the product for creating IT products Geno6. In one of his interviews, Alexander Stalyevich expressed the conviction that modern advances in genetics open up enormous opportunities and have brilliant prospects for protecting health and improving living standards. In the same year, for his many years of work for the benefit of the state, he was awarded the Order of Merit for the Fatherland.

Despite the existing difficulties in the economy, he continues to work in organizing the international Moscow financial center. Among the already implemented results of work in this area are the integration of exchanges, the introduction of clearing, and other progressive trading rules.

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