Yegor Ligachev
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Yegor Kuzmich Ligachev (Его́р Кузьми́ч Лигачёв) (born
November 29,
1920) was a
Soviet politician. Originally a protege of
Mikhail Gorbachev, Ligachev became a potential challenger to his leadership.
Ligachev had been first secretary of the party in
Tomsk,
Siberia when he was discovered by
Yuri Andropov and brought to
Moscow to become head of the
Central Committee's Department for Organizational Party Work. He was promoted to the position of Central Committee secretary and, as such, helped organize a pro-Gorbachev faction within the party in the hopes of putting Gorbachev in a position to succeed Andropov. The faction was not strong enough to elect Gorbachev when Andropov died, however, and
Konstantin Chernenko was chosen as a compromise, stop-gap candidate.
Once Gorbachev became
General Secretary of the
Communist Party in
1985 he promoted Ligachev to be his second in command. However, once Gorbachev began to institute his
glasnost and
perestroika reform programs, Ligachev gradually became an opponent of Gorbachev's by
1988 and leader of the Kremlin's conservative faction.
In
1990 Ligachev criticized Gorbachev for establishing a Soviet Presidency as a means of circumventing the party and also argued that glasnost had gone too far and that press freedoms should be curtailed. The conflict between the two men culminated at a party congress held in July where Ligachev stood against Gorbachev for the general secretaryship as the "
Leninist" candidate. On losing the election (the first to be contested since
Stalin's time) Ligachev left the party leadership and went into retirement.
Since the
collapse of the Soviet Union in
1991, Ligachev has been elected three times to the Russian
Duma as a member for the
Communist Party of the Russian Federation and is currently the Russian equivalent of the
Father of the House.
Inside Gorbachev's Kremlin: The Memoirs of Yegor Ligachev. Pantheon Books:1993 (ISBN 0679413928)