Sergei Nikolaevich Baburin was born on January 31, 1959 in the city of Semipalatinsk (Kazakh SSR) into the family of the Baburins Nikolai Naumovich and Valentina Nikolaevna. Sergei's father was a teacher, and his mother was a doctor. Maternal ancestors were from the village of Motol, Ivanovo district, Brest region. Sergei has a brother Igor.

Sergei spent his childhood in his father’s hometown - Tara, Omsk region. From childhood, Sergei was distinguished by his versatility of interests and desire to learn and learn. In addition to regular school, he studied at art school, and from his school years he began working as a concrete carpenter at a local enterprise. Many of his teachers and peers characterized young Baburin as a leader, a person who could lead people with him.

Member of the CPSU since 1981. Studied at Omsk State University. At the beginning of his studies there, he wrote a letter to the General Secretary of the CPSU Central Committee L. Brezhnev, in which he argued about the need to rehabilitate Nikolai Bukharin, Grigory Zinoviev and Grigory Sokolnikov.

During his student years, he met his future wife Tatyana Nikolaevna. Soon Sergei and Tatyana got married.

He was called up for military service. After serving on conscription, he found himself as part of a limited contingent of Soviet troops in Afghanistan, where he took part in the hostilities of the Soviet Army. During his service in Afghanistan, Baburin, the only one from his company, was never wounded and safely went through all the hardships of combat. At the end of his service, Sergei received the “Internationalist Warrior” medal from the grateful Afghan people and the insignia “For Merit in the Border Service.”

Upon completion of his service, Sergei immediately went to Leningrad to study in graduate school. At the same time, Sergei Nikolaevich reunites with his wife and their first child is born.

Political activity

In 1990-1993 - people's deputy of the RSFSR, member of the Supreme Council of the Russian Federation, member of the Constitutional Commission, chairman of the subcommittee on problems of Councils of People's Deputies and local self-government of the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR Committee on Legislation, member of the Commission for the Settlement of Interethnic Conflicts in the North Caucasus. Since September 1993 - Chairman of the Committee of the Supreme Council of the Russian Federation on judicial reform and issues of law enforcement agencies.

In 1993-2000 - deputy of the State Duma of the Federal Assembly (State Duma of the Federal Assembly) of the Russian Federation of the first and second convocations. From 1994 to 1995 – member of the Committee on Affairs of Public Associations and Religious Organizations. In 1996-2000, he was deputy chairman of the State Duma, co-chairman of the parliamentary group “People's Power”, deputy and deputy chairman of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Union of Belarus and Russia, chairman of the Commission on the formation of the Union State of Belarus and Russia.

In 2003-2007, he was a deputy of the State Duma of the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation of the fourth convocation in the federal electoral district from the Rodina (People's Patriotic Union) electoral bloc. In 2004, he was elected deputy chairman of the State Duma of the fourth convocation. Member of the Committee of the State Duma of the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation

fourth convocation on civil, criminal, arbitration and procedural legislation.

Sergei Baburin is a well-known public figure. Since 1991, he was the chairman of the Coordination Council of the movement, and later of the political party “Russian People's Union”.

Baburin program

The program of presidential candidate Sergei Baburin is probably the most patriotic of the programs of all the contenders for the highest government post in the country. He intends to revive the country, relying on the best of the previous experience of its development - both pre-revolutionary and Soviet.

Sergei Baburin is the leader of the national conservative political party "Russian All-People's Union", which nominated him as a presidential candidate. The party proclaims as its goal the national revival of Russia based on the unity of the Russian, Ukrainian and Belarusian peoples, Orthodoxy, and great power.

“Our strategic goal is to build a harmonious and prosperous society of social justice in Russia, combining the best features of the organization of public and state life of the pre-Soviet, Soviet and modern stages of national history,” the candidate’s patriotic program says.

He intends to achieve this goal by transitioning to a fundamentally new model of socio-economic development, ensuring economic progress, the well-being of the people and the independence of the country.

Candidate Baburin considers it necessary to modernize the Russian political system based on “traditional forms of Russian and Soviet democracy with modern standards of democratic procedures.” He sees an equally important task as the spiritual and moral cleansing of society as an indispensable condition for the consolidation of the people, their mobilization to solve the most important domestic and foreign policy problems facing modern Russia.

Rector of the Russian State Trade and Economic University.

Born on January 31, 1959 in the city of Semipalatinsk. He grew up in the north of the Omsk region, in the small ancient city of Tara, and graduated from high school there in 1976. He began his career as a carpenter and concrete worker at Sibelevatorstroy. In 1981 he graduated from the Faculty of Law of Omsk State University and was retained as a teacher.

In 1981-1983 - in the Armed Forces of the USSR, for the last year he served in units of a limited contingent of Soviet troops in Afghanistan, has awards.

After the army he returned to teaching at the university, then entered graduate school at Leningrad State University, and in 1986 defended his Ph.D. thesis. He worked at Omsk State University, holding the positions of associate professor and deputy dean of the Faculty of Law. In 1988, he was elected dean of the Faculty of Law on an alternative basis.

Member of the CPSU from 1981 until its ban. One of the founders of the Omsk Memorial Society in 1988, but back in 1977, as a first-year student, he wrote a letter to L.I. Brezhnev about the need to tell the truth about N. Bukharin, A. Rykov, G. Zinoviev, G. Sokolnikov and other “enemies of the people”, and, if necessary, to rehabilitate them. In 1989, the teams of three Omsk universities and several enterprises nominated him as a candidate for People's Deputies of the USSR, but through the efforts of the Omsk Regional Committee of the CPSU at the district election meeting he was not allowed to participate in the elections.

From 1990 to 1993 - People's Deputy of the RSFSR, member of the Supreme Council of the Russian Federation, member of the Constitutional Commission, chairman of the subcommittee on problems of Councils of People's Deputies and local self-government of the Committee of the Supreme Council of the RSFSR on Legislation, member of the Commission for the Settlement of Interethnic Conflicts in the North Caucasus. In October 1993 - Chairman of the Committee of the Supreme Council of the Russian Federation on judicial reform and issues of law enforcement agencies.

In 1990, he voted for the “500 Days” Program, considering the transition to a market inevitable, but sought its gradual implementation, with the transformation, and not the destruction, of all sectors of the economy. At the Second Congress of People's Deputies of the RSFSR (autumn 1990) he voted for private property in Russia. He advocated a diverse economy, a multi-party system, ideological and political freedoms, but with a strong state and respect for the past. For the revival of national cultures, but within the framework of a single people. He defended the preservation and renewal of the USSR. In the fall of 1990, one of the organizers of the first non-communist opposition to B. Yeltsin - the "Russia" faction; in 1990-1993. - leader of the faction. In 1992 - one of the founders and leaders of the Russian Unity parliamentary bloc. In the summer of 1991, on the initiative of “Democratic Russia”, the first campaign in modern Russian history to recall S.N. Baburin from deputies was organized in the city of Omsk, which ended in failure. In July 1991, he was nominated as a candidate for the post of Chairman of the Supreme Council of the RSFSR, and was the main rival of R. Khasbulatov. Having rejected B. Yeltsin’s offer to become First Deputy Chairman, he was ahead of Khasbulatov in all rounds of voting until the autumn stage of the congress.

He was the only member of the Supreme Council of Russia who spoke on December 12, 1991 at the parliamentary session against the ratification of the “Belovezhskaya” agreements. Voted against their ratification.

Participated in the settlement of the Transnistrian, Abkhaz-Georgian, Ingush-Ossetian armed conflicts. He was the organizer of an all-Russian campaign to protect the Russian Kuril Islands, advocated the return of Crimea to Russia, and for the Russian status of Sevastopol.

Since December 1991, Chairman of the Coordination Council of the Russian All-People's Union (ROS) movement, since 1994 - Chairman of the Russian All-People's Union as a political party. Co-chairman of the National Salvation Front from its creation until July 1993. In September 1993, he condemned B. Yeltsin’s coup d’etat, remained until the last day in the besieged House of Soviets, and was subjected to beatings and short-term arrest during the defeat of parliament.

1993-2000 - Deputy of the State Duma of the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation of the first and second convocations. 1994-1995 - Member of the Committee for Public Associations and Religious Organizations.

1996-2000 - Deputy Chairman of the State Duma, co-chairman of the parliamentary group "People's Power", deputy and deputy chairman of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Union of Belarus and Russia, chairman of the Commission on the formation of the Union State of Belarus and Russia.

Since 1996, he sought the resignation of the government of V. Chernomyrdin. In 1999, he voted for the impeachment of Russian President Boris Yeltsin on all five charges.

Supervising issues of interparliamentary relations between Russia and the CIS member states, countries of Central and Southern Europe, he paid special attention to the revival of fraternal relations between Russia and the Balkan states. Participated in the settlement of the Bosnian and Kosovo conflicts. Honorary citizen of the Zemun community in Belgrade, awarded the Yugoslav Order.

Specialist in the field of theory and history of state and law, state and municipal law, political and legal doctrines, political science. Author of 5 books and more than 160 other scientific publications.

Doctor of Law (1998). Since 1999 - Professor of the Department of Law Faculty of Omsk State University, Director (since 2000 - President) of the Institute of National Reform Strategy (Moscow), at the same time from May 2001 to August 2002 - Deputy Director of the Institute of Socio-Political research of the Russian Academy of Sciences. In 2000-2001 - Head of the Department of Legal and Humanitarian Problems of National Security at the Institute of Human Rights of Moscow State University of Civil Engineering, since 2001 - Professor of the Department of Theory and History of State and Law of Moscow State University of Culture.

At the same time, since May 2000, he has been a lawyer, and since August 2001, the chairman of the presidium of the Interregional College of Lawyers for Assistance to Entrepreneurs and Citizens, one of the largest lawyer associations in Russia. Initiator of signing an agreement between the board and the Russian Ministry of Economic Development on cooperation in the field of legal support and support for small and medium-sized businesses.

Since August 2002 - Rector of the Russian State Trade and Economic University.

Full or honorary member of seven academies, vice-president of the Academy of Social Sciences and Humanities.

Sergei Nikolaevich Baburin was born in the city of Semipalatinsk, Kazakh SSR on January 31, 1959 in an ordinary Soviet family of middle income. The father of the future politician Nikolai Naumovich was a school teacher by profession, his mother Valentina Nikolaevna worked as a surgeon. The family raised two sons - Sergei Baburin's brother Igor graduated from school as a doctor, now he is the head of one of the departments of the St. Petersburg Psychoneurological Research Institute named after. V. Bekhtereva.

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Sergei Baburin in his youth

CHILDHOOD AND EDUCATION

Sergei Nikolaevich's childhood was spent in his father's hometown - in Tara (Omsk region). He grew up as an inquisitive boy, his leadership qualities were evident from an early age. He studied well at school, additionally studied art, and also worked part-time as a concrete carpenter.

After school, Sergei Baburin entered Omsk State University and received a law degree in 1981. At the same time, he joined the CPSU, and after some time he was drafted into the army, during which he took part in the fighting in Afghanistan and earned a medal.

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Sergei Baburin in Afghanistan

LABOR ACTIVITY

After serving in the army, Sergei Nikolaevich entered graduate school in Leningrad. In 1987, he defended his Ph.D. thesis and moved again to Omsk, where he was offered the position of deputy dean at the law faculty of his home university, and a year later he became the youngest dean in the entire state.

Sergei Baburin spent 10 years writing his doctoral dissertation, defending it in 1998. The scientist researched the topic of territorial, geopolitical and legal problems of the country.

POLITICAL ACTIVITY

Sergei Baburin was not afraid to openly express his political views even as a student. It was then that he wrote and sent a letter to Leonid Brezhnev, in which he explained the reasons for the rehabilitation of Zinoviev, Sokolnikov and Bukharin, but there was no response from the authorities.

In 1988, Sergei Nikolaevich took to heart an article published by the publication “Soviet Russia” entitled “I don’t want to give up principles”: he categorically disagreed with the ideas expressed in it, so he wrote and sent a refutation to the editor, which demonstrated the liberal views he had formed views on the political situation in the country.

A year later, Sergei Baburin ran for people's deputies, but was elected from the Omsk district only after another year. The politician became the head of the parliamentary opposition to Boris Yeltsin and turned out to be the only deputy who was not afraid to speak out at the parliamentary session on December 12, 1991 against the destruction of the USSR. In the fall of 1993, Sergei Nikolaevich openly condemned the actions of Boris Yeltsin, but did not leave the House of Soviets until the last day, so it was a miracle that he was not shot.

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Sergei Baburin in the State Duma

After this, Sergei Baburin decided to leave politics for some time, for which he returned to the Omsk capital and got a job at a university, but after two months he again took up political affairs. In 1993, Sergei Nikolaevich was elected to the State Duma of the first convocation, where he formed the deputy opposition group “Russian Way”.

In 1995, Sergei Baburin was elected deputy chairman of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Union of Belarus and Russia.

The politician actively took part in the resolution of international conflicts, dealt with issues of recognition of the independence of Transnistria, South Ossetia and Abkhazia, for which he received many recognitions and awards.

Since the beginning of the new millennium, Sergei Nikolaevich began to combine activities in politics and science, simultaneously heading the Narodnaya Volya party and the Russian Trade and Economic State University.

In 2015, Sergei Baburin became president of the International Slavic Academy of Education, Science, Art and Culture. He is also the editor-in-chief of the periodical "Slavs" and heads the political bloc "Russian Public Union". The politician has the titles of Colonel of Justice and Honored Scientist of the Russian Federation.

On September 18, 2016, the Communist Party of the Russian Federation nominated Sergei Nikolaevich in the parliamentary elections in a single-mandate district in the Tushinsky district of Moscow - then the politician took 4th place, but was never elected as a deputy.

In May 2017, Sergei Nikolaevich became chairman of the International Slavic Council of Committees of 9 countries.

On December 22, 2017, the congress of the political bloc "Russian All-People's Union" held in the capital unanimously nominated Sergei Baburin as a candidate for the post of head of state of the Russian Federation in the 2018 elections. On December 24, the politician submitted the necessary documentation to the CEC. At this point he made the following statement: “For a quarter of a century now I have been saving my fatherland, so I can safely say that my profession is called a rescuer. I have been a participant in almost all the conflicts that have occurred since 1991.”

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Russian presidential candidate Sergei Baburin

AWARDS

– Order of “Parental Glory”
– Medal “For the liberation of Sevastopol and Crimea”
– Order of the Belarusian Human Rights Church of Kirill of Turov, II class.
– Order of Prince Daniel of Moscow III Art.
– Knight of the Imperial Order of Nicholas the Wonderworker III, II and I degrees.
– Knight of the Imperial Order of St. Anne, II class.
– Medal “In Memory of the 850th Anniversary of Moscow”
– Honored Lawyer of North Ossetia - Alania
– Honored Scientist of the Russian Federation
– Order “For Personal Courage” (Moldavian Republic)
– Orders of Friendship (Transnistrian Moldavian Republic and South Ossetia)
– Honorary citizen of Serbia and Abkhazia
– Order of “Honor and Glory” III and II Art. (Abkhazia)
– Order of Merit, 1st and 2nd class. (Transnistrian Moldavian Republic)
– Philippine Congressional Achievement Medal
– Knight of the Order of Friendship

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Sergei Baburin with his family

PERSONAL LIFE

Sergei Baburin met his future wife Tatyana while studying at the university. After the wedding, the newlyweds were expected to be separated, as the husband went to serve in the army. After the reunion, the couple moved to Leningrad, and in 1984 their first son, Konstantin, was born. Soon three more boys were born into the family - Evgeniy, Yaroslav and Vladimir.

... Whenever you see the clean-shaven face of our professional patriot Baburin (as, for example, this weekend behind the pacified Abkhazians Khadzhimba and Bagapsh in Sukhumi), for some reason you involuntarily remember the thin and intelligent face of the same Sergei Nikolaevich with an intellectual beard. On the cover of the still democratic magazine "Capital" in the early 90s. You understand: the type of occupation leaves an indelible mark on one’s appearance, and that the politics of the domestic spill took away from us, perhaps, the most brilliant speaker-lawyer among our native parliamentarians, and in return gave us simply a Russian imperialist. There are so many! And the further you go, the more humorous the song about the barber from the film “Mary Poppins, Goodbye!” seems out of place in the campaign of such evil-faced VIPs as the Vice Speaker of the State Duma of the Russian Federation from the Rodina faction.

Sovereignty face-to-face

Being in Paris, any more or less politicized Russian involuntarily shudders at the local name of the Georges Pompidou Museum of Contemporary Art - the very one that was built in the 70s with communications (guts) outwards - Beaubourg... Via del Babuino, one of the central ones in Rome - also hurts the ear... But all this together is just a residual phenomenon of the loud glory with which the dean of the Faculty of Law of Omsk University, Sergei Baburin, who was elected as a people’s deputy of the RSFSR with the support of the “Democratic Russia” movement, covered himself in perestroika Moscow.

It was he who rammed from his seat and from the microphone the presidium of the initially partocratic Congress in order to push through the candidacy of “democrat” Boris Yeltsin for the chairmanship of the Supreme Council of the Republic, and then, together with him as speaker, to convince the hesitant majority of his colleagues to accept the Declaration of State Sovereignty of June 12, 1990. Now every summer this high-profile date is celebrated in the country, like the 4th of July for the Americans or the 14th of July for the French - the birthday of the state.

And Sergei Nikolaevich himself, it turns out, simply wanted equal rights for his Motherland in the Soviet Union, which, as he then believed, the leadership of the USSR deliberately turned into a “milch shelter” for its younger brothers and sisters. By the way, a common delusion, not to say even insanity, based on one’s own poverty, is quite fashionable in a state of developed socialism. Today, when the Omsk region has become, under Governor Leonid Polezhaev, the base region of the oligarchic Sibneft, the illusions have finally been dispelled: no BABurinotherapy helped - the people even on the streets of the capital city there are going wild, and active business people are wandering for wealth throughout Siberia. They go to work, say, in neighboring Khanty-Mansiysk.

Under-speaker communist

A tribune no worse than Anatoly Sobchak from a similar union Congress, the lawyer Baburin from Omsk seemed to be a ready “right hand” for the democrat Yeltsin, but it seems that the jingoistic bias played a cruel joke on him. A member of the CPSU since 1981, Sergei Nikolaevich first voted for the “500 days” program of transition to the market, and then with his comrades he addressed the plenum of the Central Committee with a call to abandon communist ideology and transform into a party of national revival.

It was in the month of the election of the first president of the republic, when Boris Nikolaevich vacated his seat in the Supreme Council - and Sergei Nikolaevich seemed to have every chance of becoming speaker. But his homespun “Russian Platform in the CPSU,” although it was not even published in the newspaper of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Socialist Republic “Soviet Russia,” has served the communist Baburin a disservice in the eyes of the de-partisan Yeltsin for a year already. At the July V Congress of People's Deputies of Russia, he, of course, beat first deputy chairman of the Supreme Council Ruslan Khasbulatov by several votes, but, having been openly supported for speaker by the Communists of Russia faction, it seems that he has finally lost his chances of becoming the successor to the newly elected president in parliament.

Both under-speakers soon met the events of August 19-21, 1991 in Moscow, although one was in the acting chair. the owner of the House of Soviets on Krasnopresnenskaya embankment, and the second in the role of the informal head of the White House opposition. Strange, but both left the CPSU on the same day, but Khasbulatov as a sign of protest against the State Emergency Committee and the inaction of the leadership of the Central Committee to protect its General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev and the constitutional system from the putschists, and Baburin, “because the party leadership betrayed it.” Who do you think more communist deputies voted for in the same October, when the decisive round of elections for the speaker of the Supreme Council took place? Yes, for Ruslan Imranovich, of course! And then Sergei Nikolaevich was still in a pitiful minority during the ratification of the Belovezh Accords, which killed the USSR, in December.

This is how the respectable politician Baburin became marginalized.

RUSSIAN satellite

The nominal faction that the non-communist and over-democrat Sergei Nikolaevich put together in the Supreme Council was simply and simply called “Russia”. Baburin dreamed of a solid political center - which, undoubtedly, testifies to his banal egocentrism as a person, but our Motherland (still without quotes) - a country of extremes and the master was relegated to the far right flank in the terry anti-Yeltsin Nazi coalition “Russian Unity”. Omsk democrats, who decided to recall their former creation from Olympus, immediately from the deans of the Law Faculty of OSU and people's deputies of the Russian Federation, however, could not cope with his charisma.

Sergei Baburin retained both positions, moreover, he gave birth to the association “Russian All-People’s Union”, from which over time grew something left-democratic-patriotic called “Power to the People”, which almost broke the five percent barrier to the State Duma in 1995. 12 majoritarian deputies who found themselves in Okhotny Ryad formed their own group “People's Power”, led by the union ex-Prime Minister Nikolai Ryzhkov, a few more people were given to them by the communists and the satellite faction of the parliamentary majority of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation was ready. Our hero drove into the prestigious office of the vice-speaker and there... he became violent.

He is seen either at the headquarters of Gennady Zyuganov’s presidential campaign, or in the Duma’s new “Anti-NATO” formation, or in the Parliamentary Assembly of SoBeRus with Father Alexander Lukashenko, or on any burning frontiers of our once Great Empire, or in Iraq with Saddam Hussein, or in the Kuril Islands against the Japanese. , then in Belgrade with Slobodan Milosevic during the bombing of Yugoslavia - everywhere, but not in his district in Omsk. The logical result: only third place in 1999 and the final move-escape to Moscow as a former State Duma deputy.

"Motherland", oh, "Motherland"!

Suddenly, the nostalgia for the Soviet Union as an organic state for the Russian nation, which emerged in the ex-Yeltsinist, forced Baburin to transform not only internally, but also externally. Sergei Nikolaevich shaved off his “democratic” beard and began to achieve a portrait resemblance to Joseph Vissarionovich... Stalin! Having once tried on the Generalissimo's boots, it is very difficult to stop in time.

Infringed ambition led Sergei Baburin with the next nominal party “Narodnaya Volya” to the bloc with Sergei Glazyev - it was his nationalist ideology and personal friendship with the “unshakable” Jean-Marie Le Pen in France that scared away the too rosy-minded socialists from the leader of the “new left”. democrats like Vyacheslav Igrunov from the SLON party. “Motherland” (a political hit of the autumn 2003 season), of course, returned our hero’s parliamentary mandate, albeit a list one, but in return it also acquired a person-problem. As soon as the vice-speaker of the first months of the new Duma, Dmitry Rogozin, sat down his comrade in the chair of the faction leader, someone was found who was ready to replace him - either in the leadership of the lower house or at the head of their now common party. The deputy chairman of the State Duma from Rodina is really ready to build out of nothing in the country an organization revanchist in spirit and form for the most radical plebs.

Suffice it to recall that among the founders of the National Revival Party “People's Will”, in addition to the purely Baburin ROS and the completely sane “Union of Realists” with the ideas of democratic socialism, there was also the chairman of the “Spas” movement, Vladimir Davidenko. The same one who, with an unwavering hand, included RNU leader (!) Alexander Barkashov in his “top three” of the 1999 list. It is obvious that the brakes on the once respectable politician, despite the newly acquired status of vice-speaker of the State Duma of the Russian Federation (by the way, exactly the same as that of the LDPR leader Vladimir Zhirinovsky), are even worse than those on international law. The participation in the Abkhaz expedition by Deputy Prosecutor General of Russia Vladimir Kolesnikov, in fact - alas - is punitive, whatever one may say, it smells bad. It smacks of the same folk urine therapy that women in Russian villages treat everything without a prescription. With a clear result.

Should we look for hidden vices?

Pavel Grishin

Here he is - Sergei Baburin. Politician, intellectual, good person... Well, this happens in life: an idea professed by someone seems to be alien to you (as a liberal), but you see: its bearer is a deeply decent person and you think: maybe I’m on to something? I don’t understand this life? Baburin is a man of mystery. Well, for example, a man who doesn’t drink, is an excellent family man. Suspicious? Certainly. You should look for hidden vices. And there is this one: patriot! Patriotism, as is commonly believed, is the last refuge of scoundrels. One of the aphorists said this, everyone quotes him (including the author of this text). But this is how it sometimes works out: the working day at the editorial office ends (the number is signed) and the internal policy department uncorks a bottle of vodka. And a disk with songs performed by... Sergei Baburin is inserted into the computer: “Farewell, beloved city, we’re leaving for the sea tomorrow...” Now everyone is singing. Especially politics during the election campaign. The same - Zhirinovsky: no hearing, no voice. Utesov also said: “You have to sing with your heart.” This is Baburin: his voice sounds convincing only from the rostrum of the State Duma. But the heart responds and... you believe: Sergei Nikolaevich “went to sea” more than once.

Sergei Baburin has a nationalist party: "People's Will". He is surrounded by people with varying degrees of intelligence and political correctness. Nikolai Pavlov, for example, is his closest ally. If you try to talk about him with Sergei Nikolaevich, there will be a smile on Baburina’s face: well, yes, Pavlov, they are a little turned towards Russian nationalism, but you need to work with him, otherwise he’s a normal guy. The main doctrine of friend and comrade Pavlov: Russian people should give birth more, condoms are an invention of the enemies of Russia. Baburin partly agrees with this: four sons!

And here is Alksnis - the “black colonel”. What did you do in the era of general shortages and your political timelessness? I bound books, repaired TVs for friends. Today he is a State Duma deputy. “Take this guy to the mountains, take a risk...” - this is about Sergei Nikolaevich’s current associates.

Baburin today is vice speaker of the State Duma. True, he missed one Duma term: the oligarchs threw him away by paying for a competitor’s election campaign and not allowing him to be elected to the State Duma. He was appointed rector of the Russian State Trade and Economic University. The students didn’t really cry, but they were surprised. The rector is strange. He welcomed all kinds of political views of students (both liberal and not so liberal), but did not forgive, as he himself said in a conversation with a RK correspondent, the apoliticality of young people: if you are not interested in the fate of Russia, then maybe you made a mistake in choosing a profession? Not that he was immediately expelled for showing apoliticality, but his attitude towards this was taken into account.

Tell me who your friend is and I will tell you... how decent a person you are. Baburin's friends are Le Pen. A red rag for liberals. He spoke at his university. “Patriots” of Russia are usually classified as anti-Western. Is Le Pen's friend Baburin anti-Western?

A year ago, Sergei Baburin practically announced that he was becoming not a Russian, but a patriot of Russia. He warned Estonia about the negative consequences of its entry into the European Union. The culture of a republic that is European in spirit, according to Baburin, in this case will become subject to alien influence due to the masses of non-European guest workers and immigrants pouring into Estonia. But it’s not Russian tanks that can threaten Europe now?!

Baburin is a shot sparrow. He defended his doctoral dissertation and wore a faded Panama hat in Afghanistan. He was beaten (literally) by special forces during the storming of the White House in ’93. Sergei Nikolaevich has stylistic differences with the current bourgeois regime, just as Senyavsky did when he was in the USSR. For example, I came to the next May Day demonstration. Zyuganov: as usual: a red greasy tie, a cap and a bow. His grandmothers are demanding last year's Soviet snow from the authorities. And only Sergei Baburin - in a denim suit, with his boys and... with security. Under the denim jacket is a freshly laundered white shirt with a tie. “You look democratic, Sergei Nikolaevich.” - "Trying".

Tell me who your enemy is and I will tell you... The irrepressible Alexey Podberezkin, who not so long ago associated himself with the spiritual heritage of Russia. He pretended to be an Orthodox figure, but when the author of these lines asked him: “Are you a churchgoer?”, he asked again: “What does this mean?” Well, what does Podberezkin actually have to do with this? He published the Socialist Manifesto. And he received a patriotic beating from Baburin for this. The fact that the liberal-democratic Union of Right Forces is called “right” is nonsense. The truly right-wing forces in Russia have an unpopular reputation. But conservatives with a human face (the face of Baburin) are still only gaining strength.

Sergei Baburin is a 2018 Russian presidential candidate, known for his career as an active member of the opposition to Yeltsin in the early 90s, a deputy of several Russian parliamentary organizations before and after 1993, a major scientist in the field of state and law, as well as a public figure. The candidate received a prison sentence after the events of the 1993 coup, and the scandal around RGTEU is still widely heard, when Baburin managed to initiate and stop student unrest during the unjustified closure of the university.

Biography

The biography of Sergei Baburin includes a stage of scientific and teaching work as deputy dean and dean of Omsk University, service in Afghanistan with awards, active participation in the political life of the Russian Federation since the beginning of perestroika, interspersed with stages of scientific and teaching activity.

The candidate's date of birth is January (31st) 1959. The politician's father was a teacher, and his mother worked as a surgeon.

The 2018 election candidate received his higher education at the state university in Omsk, where he soon began working; during his studies there he met his future wife Tatyana. Upon completion of the university, he was drafted into the army and spent a year of service in Afghanistan.

At the end of his service, the twice awarded Baburin decided to receive a scientific degree in Leningrad, where he was able to improve his personal life, reuniting with Tatyana. In the marriage, Baburin had four children.

Baburin’s career as a politician began in 1989, when he was nominated for people’s deputies of the Soviet Union; according to the politician himself, he took his career seriously in the field of political and social activities since 1993, when he received a real prison sentence during struggle for power and attempts to stop Yeltsin’s “collapse” of the USSR.

Baburin's nationality is determined by his ancestors - there are both Russian and Tatar roots of the family.

Political activity

The first time Baburin was actually able to be elected as a people's deputy of the RSFSR was in 1990, and in 1991 he took the chairman's post in the Supreme Council of the state. At the end of 1991, he initiated the creation of an association called the Russian All-People's Union, a conservative national-patriotic movement.

During the dispersal of the Armed Forces, he spoke out against Yeltsin by force, was convicted, and for some time afterward he was engaged in scientific activities as a dean.
Sergei Baburin is one of the most authoritative Russian politicians of the 90s, he was elected as a deputy of the State Duma of the first, second and fourth convocations, served as deputy chairman of the State Duma of the 2nd and 4th convocations, and was a member of the State Duma committee dedicated to a number of important legal issues on legislation in the Russian Federation.

Baburin also heads the political party “Russian All-People’s Union”, and from 2002 to 2012 he was the rector of the Russian State Technical University, the closure of which due to declared ineffectiveness was accompanied by student unrest, the cessation of which Baburin contributed to.

Candidate's ambitions

As a candidate for the 2018 elections, Sergei Baburin advocates the modernization of society, reform of the existing political system and changes to the constitution. includes points about the need to resign the “neoliberal” government of Medvedev, the development of social responsibility of the state and control of migration.