Goryacheva Svetlana Petrovna Federation Council. Goryacheva Svetlana Petrovna: biography, career, personal life

Svetlana Petrovna Goryacheva (nee Bezdetko) was born on June 3, 1947 in the village of Risovoye, Anuchinsky District, Primorsky Territory, to the family of a serviceman.

After school, Goryacheva was going to enter the university, but she did not manage to do it right away. According to her own recollections, she entered the university the third time, after she received seniority. In 1965-1966, Goryacheva worked in the city of Arseniev as an accountant, an auxiliary worker at the Daubikhinsky mechanized forestry. In 1967, she got a job as a cashier, then as a graphic designer for the Kosmos cinema, and after that she became an assembler-riveter at the Progress Arseniev machine-building plant.

In 1974, Goryacheva graduated from the Far Eastern State University with a degree in law. After graduation, she began working as a consultant in the Department of Justice of the Primorsky Regional Executive Committee. In 1976, Goryacheva was appointed prosecutor of the General Supervision Department of the Primorsky Territory Prosecutor's Office, and in 1986 - prosecutor of the Primorsky Environmental Interdistrict Prosecutor's Office.

In 1987, Goryacheva joined the ranks of the CPSU.

In 1990, Goryacheva was elected a People's Deputy of the RSFSR and joined the Rossiya parliamentary faction. At the first congress of people's deputies of the RSFSR, she was elected deputy chairman of the Supreme Soviet of the republic.

In 1991, Goryacheva became one of the authors of the "Political Statement" by six members of the Presidium of the Russian Parliament, who, on the eve of the Third Congress, spoke out against the former chairman of the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR, Boris Yeltsin, who had been elected president of Russia shortly before, and his "volitional decisions, sometimes bypassing parliament." Goryacheva called that statement her duty to the people and noted: "This act, perhaps not now, but later, but still they will put me in credit." According to Goryacheva, major decisions presidium were adopted without the participation of the authors of the "Political Statement". In October 1991, she resigned from the post of Deputy Chairman of the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR and refused the proposed position of Deputy Chairman of the Committee on Ecology.

Goryacheva returned to Primorye and continued to work in the prosecutor's office. In 1991-1995, she served as Deputy Prosecutor of Vladivostok.

In 1992, Goryacheva became a member of the political council of the National Salvation Front (FNS). At the II Extraordinary Congress of Communists of Russia, held in February 1993, at which the Communist Party of the RSFSR was restored under the name of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation (CPRF), Goryacheva was elected a member of the central executive committee of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation.

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In October 1993, Goryacheva was in the White House, where she was baptized, becoming Orthodox. Later, in 2001, she stated in an interview that she considers the biggest mistake of the communists to be "excommunicating the people from Orthodoxy", since "this was the root of many troubles in Russia."

In the same 1993, Goryacheva took part in the elections to the State Duma of the Russian Federation as one of the leaders of the opposition electoral association "Russian National Union". As a result, this association did not even make it to the final list approved by the Central Election Commission of Russia, and took part in the parliamentary elections.

At the III Congress of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation in 1995, Goryacheva was again elected to the presidium of the central committee of the party. In the same year, she entered the top three of the all-federal list of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation in the parliamentary elections, but became a deputy of the State Duma of the second convocation, winning the elections in the single-mandate Ussuri constituency No. 51. In Parliament, Goryacheva took the post of Deputy Chairman of the State Duma of the Russian Federation Gennady Seleznev.

In December 1999, in the same Ussuriysk single-mandate constituency, Goryacheva was again elected to the State Duma. In the Duma of the third convocation, she was elected chairman of the parliamentary committee on women, families and youth.

In 2002, Goryacheva was expelled from the Communist Party. After the Unity and OVR factions, the Regions of Russia and the People's Deputy groups removed a number of communist committee leaders from their positions, the plenum of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation recommended that party members not hold leadership positions in the Duma. However, Goryacheva, as well as speaker Seleznev and the head of the committee on culture and tourism, Nikolai Gubenko, did not obey the order, for which they were expelled from the ranks of the Communist Party. Goryacheva herself, commenting on what happened, said: "This is the beginning of the end of the party." She later noted that with a secret ballot, the decision to expel her would not have been possible. Goryacheva's authority in Primorye was so high that immediately after she was expelled, she received an offer from the local organization of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation to rejoin the party. However, Goryacheva disagreed, noting that it is not clear why a party is needed for which "the vote of the voters means nothing."

The media noted that, despite the scandal, Goryacheva remained one of the most popular politicians in Primorye, who "can be elected in his constituency as many times as he wants." Indeed, in 2003, Goryacheva again won the elections to the State Duma in her single-mandate constituency, but already as an independent candidate. In parliament, she did not join any factions and worked as part of the committee on the regulations and organization of the work of the State Duma.

Already in September 2006, more than a year before the elections to the State Duma of the fifth convocation, the question was discussed on which party list Goryachev would run. This time, single-mandate constituencies were eliminated and it was possible to be elected only on party lists. According to some reports, Goryacheva was offered to go to the Duma on the list of the Communist Party, but she rejected the proposal of the Communists. There were versions that Goryacheva was considering the proposals of the Liberal Democratic Party and " United Russia", and some analysts suggested that she would choose the list of "Fair Russia". In December 2006, the leader of the Rodina - Narodnaya Volya - Socialist faction united party Russia" Sergey Baburin reported that Goryacheva intended to join their faction. In January 2007, some publications called her a member of the Baburin faction, others continued to call her an independent deputy (as she was listed on the official website of the State Duma of the Russian Federation).

In July 2007, Vedomosti wrote that Goryacheva would head the regional list of the Just Russia party in Primorye. However, the predictions did not come true. On September 23, 2007, when the Just Russia congress approved the lists of candidates for the elections to the State Duma, it became known that Goryacheva, together with deputy Sergei Shargunov and speaker of the Federation Council Sergei Mironov, became part of the first pre-election troika of the party's federal list.

On December 2, 2007, parliamentary elections were held in Russia, in which A Just Russia received 7.74 percent of the vote. Thus, the party managed to overcome the electoral barrier, and Goryacheva once again became a deputy of the State Duma of the Russian Federation. In parliament, she took the post of one of the deputy heads of the Just Russia faction, Nikolai Levichev.

Goryacheva called gardening her hobby.

Goryacheva is married. Her son Yaroslav is also a lawyer, a graduate of the law faculty of Moscow State University. It was reported that in 2001 he studied at the Financial Academy.

Deputy of the State Duma of the sixth convocation, deputy head of the Just Russia faction, secretary of the Central Council of the Just Russia party

Member of the State Duma of the sixth convocation, deputy head of the Just Russia faction, secretary of the Central Council of the Just Russia party. In the past, she was a State Duma deputy of the second, third, fourth and fifth convocations, a member of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation (was expelled from the party in 2002). Previously - Deputy Prosecutor of Vladivostok (1991-1995); People's Deputy of the RSFSR and Deputy Chairman of the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR (1990-1991).

Svetlana Petrovna Goryacheva (nee Bezdetko) was born on June 3, 1947 in the village of Risovoye, Anuchinsky District, Primorsky Territory, to the family of a serviceman.

After school, Goryacheva was going to enter the university, but she did not manage to do it right away. According to her own recollections, she entered the university the third time, after she received seniority. In 1965-1966, Goryacheva worked in the city of Arseniev as an accountant, an auxiliary worker at the Daubikhinsky mechanized forestry. In 1967, she got a job as a cashier, then as a graphic designer for the Kosmos cinema, and after that she became an assembler-riveter at the Progress Arseniev Machine-Building Plant,.

In 1974, Goryacheva graduated from the Far Eastern State University with a degree in law,. After graduation, she began working as a consultant in the Department of Justice of the Primorsky Regional Executive Committee. In 1976, Goryacheva was appointed prosecutor of the General Supervision Department of the Prosecutor's Office of the Primorsky Territory, and in 1986, the prosecutor of the Primorsky Environmental Interdistrict Prosecutor's Office.

In 1987, Goryacheva joined the ranks of the CPSU.

In 1990, Goryacheva was elected a People's Deputy of the RSFSR and joined the Rossiya parliamentary faction. At the first congress of people's deputies of the RSFSR, she was elected deputy chairman of the republic's Supreme Soviet.

In 1991, Goryacheva became one of the authors of the "Political Statement" of six members of the Presidium of the Russian Parliament, on the eve of the III Congress, who spoke out against the former chairman of the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR Boris Yeltsin, who had been elected president of Russia shortly before, and his "volitional decisions, sometimes bypassing parliament." Goryacheva called that statement her duty to the people and remarked: "This act, perhaps not now, but later, but still they will put me in credit." According to Goryacheva, the most important decisions of the presidium were made without the participation of the authors of the Political Statement. In October 1991, she resigned from her post as Deputy Chairman of the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR and turned down an offered position as Deputy Chairman of the Ecology Committee.

Goryacheva returned to Primorye and continued her work in the prosecutor's office. In 1991-1995, she served as Deputy Prosecutor of Vladivostok.

In 1992, Goryacheva became a member of the political council of the National Salvation Front (FTS),. At the II Extraordinary Congress of the Communists of Russia, held in February 1993, at which the Communist Party of the RSFSR was restored under the name of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation (CPRF), Goryacheva was elected a member of the central executive committee of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation.

In October 1993, Goryacheva was in the White House, where she was baptized, becoming Orthodox,. Later, in 2001, she stated in an interview that she considers the biggest mistake of the communists to be "excommunicating the people from Orthodoxy", since "this was the root of many troubles in Russia."

In the same 1993, Goryacheva took part in the elections to the State Duma of the Russian Federation as one of the leaders of the opposition electoral association "Russian National Union". As a result, this association did not even make it to the final list approved by the Central Election Commission of Russia, and took part in the parliamentary elections.

At the III Congress of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation in 1995, Goryacheva was again elected to the presidium of the party's central committee. In the same year, she entered the top three of the all-federal list of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation in the parliamentary elections, but became a deputy of the State Duma of the second convocation, winning the elections in the single-mandate Ussuri constituency No. 51,. In parliament, Goryacheva took the post of Deputy Chairman of the State Duma of the Russian Federation Gennady Seleznev.

In December 1999, in the same Ussuriysk single-mandate constituency, Goryacheva was again elected to the State Duma,. In the Duma of the third convocation, she was elected chairman of the parliamentary committee on women, family and youth affairs.

In 2002, Goryacheva was expelled from the Communist Party. After the Unity and OVR factions, the Regions of Russia and the People's Deputy groups removed a number of communist committee leaders from their positions, the plenum of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation recommended that party members not hold leadership positions in the Duma. However, Goryacheva, as well as speaker Seleznev and the head of the committee on culture and tourism, Nikolai Gubenko, did not obey the order, for which they were expelled from the ranks of the Communist Party. Goryacheva herself, commenting on what happened, said: "This is the beginning of the end of the party." She later noted that with a secret ballot, the decision to expel her would not have been possible. Goryacheva's authority in Primorye was so high that immediately after she was expelled, she received an offer from the local organization of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation to rejoin the party. However, Goryacheva did not agree, noting that it was not clear why a party was needed for which "the vote of the voters does not mean anything," .

The media noted that, despite the scandal, Goryacheva remained one of the most popular politicians in Primorye, who "can be elected in his district as many times as he wants." Indeed, in 2003, Goryacheva again won the elections to the State Duma in her single-mandate constituency, but already as an independent candidate. In parliament, she did not join any factions and worked as part of the committee on the regulations and organization of the work of the State Duma,.

Already in September 2006, more than a year before the elections to the State Duma of the fifth convocation, the question was discussed on which party list Goryachev would run. This time, single-mandate constituencies were eliminated and it was possible to be elected only on party lists. According to some reports, Goryacheva was offered to go to the Duma on the list of the Communist Party, but she rejected the proposal of the Communists. There have been versions that Goryacheva is considering the proposals of the Liberal Democratic Party and United Russia, and some analysts have suggested that she will choose the list of A Just Russia. In December 2006, the leader of the Rodina-Narodnaya Volya-Socialist United Party of Russia faction, Sergei Baburin, announced that Goryacheva intended to join their faction. In January 2007, some publications called her a member of the Baburin faction, others continued to call her an independent deputy (as she was listed on the official website of the State Duma of the Russian Federation).

In July 2007, Vedomosti wrote that Goryacheva would head the regional list of the Just Russia party in Primorye. However, the predictions did not come true. On September 23, 2007, when the Just Russia congress approved the lists of candidates for the elections to the State Duma, it became known that Goryacheva, together with deputy Sergei Shargunov and speaker of the Federation Council Sergei Mironov, became part of the first pre-election troika of the party's federal list,.

On December 2, 2007, parliamentary elections were held in Russia, in which A Just Russia received 7.74 percent of the vote. Thus, the party managed to overcome the electoral barrier, and Goryacheva once again became a deputy of the State Duma of the Russian Federation. In parliament, she took the post of one of the deputy heads of the Just Russia faction, Nikolai Levichev.

In April 2008, the third congress of the Just Russia party took place. At it, the delegates approved the new Party Charter and elected a new leadership. Goryacheva was elected one of the nine secretaries of the Central Council of the party, and the congress again elected Mironov the leader of A Just Russia (voting for the chairman was uncontested),,.

In the parliamentary elections held on December 4, 2011, Goryacheva headed the regional list of A Just Russia in Primorsky Krai and was once again elected to the State Duma,. On December 19, at the first meeting of the Just Russia faction in the Duma of the sixth convocation, Goryacheva was elected deputy head of the faction Sergei Mironov.

Goryacheva called gardening her hobby.

Used materials

The first meeting of the Just Russia faction in the State Duma of the sixth convocation took place. - Official site of "Just Russia", 19.12.2011

New faces on Okhotny Ryad. - Moscow's comsomolets, 07.12.2011. - № 25816

Federal list of candidates, candidates for deputies of the State Duma Federal Assembly Russian Federation of the sixth convocation, nominated by the political party "Political Party Just Russia". - Central Election Commission of the Russian Federation, 17.10.2011

Alla Barakhova, Yuri Chernega. Kremlin opposition. - Kommersant, 26.04.2008. - №72(3889)

Mironov was re-elected chairman of A Just Russia. - RIA News, 25.04.2008

List of registered deputies of the State Duma of the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation of the fifth convocation. - Russian newspaper , 19.12.2007

Nikolai Levichev headed the Just Russia faction in the State Duma. - Fair Russia (spravedlivo.ru), 18.12.2007

The results of the elections of deputies of the State Duma of the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation of the fifth convocation. - Official website of the CEC of the Russian Federation (vybory.izbirkom.ru), 08.12.2007

"Biography"

Education

1974 — Far Eastern State University (lawyer)

Activity

"News"

Senators don't want to lose pension supplement

A group of members of the Federation Council (SF), headed by the chairman of the committee on social policy Valery Ryazansky, has developed a bill that allows you to keep the pension supplement for senators whose term of office for technical reasons has not reached five years. This period is determined by the new pension legislation, which comes into force on January 1, 2017. The amendments were discussed on Tuesday at a round table of the Federation Council committee on regulations. Former State Duma deputy Alexander Moskalets said that, having received posts, all parliamentarians want to "remake the rules for themselves." Mr. Ryazansky called his words demagogy.

The penultimate meeting of the autumn session was held in the Federation Council. The senators approved the bill on the budget for the next three years. Parliamentarians succeeded in securing funding for many social articles.

The Federation Council approved the law on support for social non-profit organizations and a number of international agreements. And at the "government hour" Interior Minister Vladimir Kolokoltsev spoke to the senators with a report on the problems of illegal migration.

Metro will continue to be built only in Moscow

In which regions will new railways and roads appear? Why do metros almost never develop in million-plus cities? What happens to electricity tariffs? Arkady Dvorkovich tried to answer the senators' questions.

Svetlana Goryacheva: “The leadership of the Communist Party is leading it to collapse, I have no doubt about it ..”

Svetlana Goryacheva was born in the village of Risovoe, Anuchinsky District, Primorsky Krai. Lawyer, worked as Deputy Prosecutor of the city of Vladivostok. She was elected a People's Deputy of the RSFSR, Deputy Chairman of the Supreme Soviet of the Russian Federation, Deputy Chairman of the State Duma of the Russian Federation of the second convocation. During the execution of the Parliament was in the White House. In the current Duma, Goryacheva heads the Committee on Women, Family and Youth Affairs. She was expelled from the ranks of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation and the faction for "violating party discipline."

The Communist Party of the Russian Federation carried out a "general cleansing" of its ranks

The Plenum of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation, taking place on Saturday in Moscow, decided the fate of Gennady Seleznev. 76 people voted for exclusion from the party of the speaker of the State Duma, 25 opposed. Svetlana Goryacheva and Nikolai Gubenko were also expelled from the party.

Chronicle of murders and attempts on deputies and candidates for deputies (1994-2003)

On June 24, State Duma deputy Svetlana Goryacheva does not rule out that an attempt was made on her life when on June 24 she was taken to car accident on Kutuzovsky Prospekt in Moscow. The reason for the attempt, according to Goryacheva, could be her work on a bill that strengthens the criminal liability for moral corruption, sexual abuse and exploitation of minors.

"Podrubny millionaire" from the Communist Party

Until 2002, the Communists of Primorye had an undisputed charismatic leader - Svetlana Goryacheva. It seemed that it was possible to make nails out of a former employee of the prosecutor's office - so she nailed the "anti-people regime", so she supported the interests of the "common people", so she did not recognize not only other colors, but even other shades of red.

Svetlana Goryacheva against United Russia

During her visit from September 23 to 25, State Duma deputy, secretary of the Central Council of the Just Russia party, Svetlana Goryacheva, subjected the policy of the ruling party and the federal government in general to devastating criticism.

Svetlana Goryacheva sues the traffic police for defamation

On August 15, 2011, a strange “news” appeared on the website of the Traffic Police Department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia for the Primorsky Territory. It was about the fact that, at the request of the deputy of the State Duma S.P. Goryacheva, employees of the Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs checked the information provided by a certain Mr. Cherentaev, the head of a certain public committee for combating corruption. According to the Primorye Traffic Police Department, it was this “appeal” that caused the suspension of the issuance of certificates of conformity of the design vehicle security (SKTS).

Svetlana Goryacheva about A Just Russia and Oleg Shein

The name of State Duma deputy Svetlana Goryacheva is known to everyone for whom the concepts of "mind", "honor" and "conscience" are not empty words.

Svetlana Goryacheva: Discussions are superficial and decisions are made quickly

Deputy head of the A JUST RUSSIA faction in the State Duma, Svetlana Goryacheva, told CITY-FM on Air that the laws are not actually being discussed.

Svetlana Goryacheva: A JUST RUSSIA has significantly strengthened its position in Primorye

Regional branch of the JUST RUSSIA party in Primorye for Last year significantly strengthened its position, acquiring more and more supporters among the inhabitants of the region. This was achieved thanks to systematic meetings with people, the release of a party newspaper, and the consistent defense of the interests of ordinary people at all levels of government. This was stated at a press conference by State Duma deputy from the faction "FAIR RUSSIA" Svetlana Goryacheva, reports corr. RIA PrimaMedia.

Svetlana Goryacheva: Elections in Primorye were fair enough

The elections in Primorye were fair enough, the social electorate has really grown in the region, State Duma deputy Svetlana Goryacheva believes. She told the RIA PrimaMedia correspondent about this by phone from Moscow before the congress of the Just Russia party.

Svetlana Goryacheva will lead the "Socialist-Revolutionaries" to the regional parliament

Svetlana Goryacheva, deputy of the State Duma of the Russian Federation, will lead the candidates from the "Socialist-Revolutionaries" to the regional parliament. Regional Conference Party "Fair Russia" in the second part of its work unanimously approved the lists of candidates for the Primorye Legislative Assembly, RIA PrimaMedia reports with reference to the party's official website.

Svetlana Goryacheva: 90 percent of orphans in Russia sadly end their lives, in fact, just starting it

The State Duma rejected the project federal law 217704-5 “On Amendments to Articles 1 and 8 of the Federal Law “On Additional Guarantees for the Social Protection of Orphans and Children Left Without Parental Care” (in terms of providing orphans and children left without parental care with rooms in social hotels). Svetlana Goryacheva spoke on behalf of the A JUST RUSSIA faction:

Social policy in any state, as you know, is judged by the situation of the elderly and children, and first of all, orphans and children left without parental care. Despite the beautiful political tales of endless successes in all areas, over the past decade the number of orphans in our country, alas, has not decreased, just as the problems with their arrangement, maintenance and adaptation to adult life have not decreased.

The Communist Party of the Russian Federation and "Fair Russia" apply for Svetlana Goryacheva

The Primorsky branch of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation has begun to form a list of candidates for the elections to the State Duma. The plenum of the Vladivostok city committee of the Communist Party nominated six applicants, among them the first secretary of the regional committee of the Communist Party Vladimir Grishukov and State Duma deputy Svetlana Goryacheva. According to local communists, Ms. Goryacheva, expelled from the Communist Party in 2002, will significantly increase the party's chances of winning. Meanwhile, A Just Russia is also proposing to head the regional list of candidates for Svetlana Goryacheva. Ms. Goryacheva herself has not yet decided on her preferences.

A Just Russia is disintegrating: after Babakov, other prominent members may leave the party

According to preliminary data, such prominent party members as Oleg Shein, Elena Drapeko and Svetlana Goryacheva are also planning to leave A Just Russia. According to the Communist Party, they all negotiated their transition to the Communist Party. Nevertheless, Oleg Shein, in an interview with Vedomosti, denied this information, the newspaper could not contact Goryacheva and Drapeko.

First Deputy Chairman of the Federation Council Committee on Regulations and Parliamentary Activities.
Representative from the executive body of state power of Primorsky Krai.

Svetlana Bezdetko was born on June 3, 1947 in the village of Risovy, Primorsky Krai. Labor activity after graduating from school, she began working as an auxiliary worker, then worked as an accountant in the Daubikhinsky mekhleskhoz, an assembler-riveter at the Progress Machine-Building Plant in the city of Arsenyev. Later she got married, changing her surname to Goryacheva.

From 1969 to 1974, Svetlana Petrovna received higher education at the Far Eastern Federal University, majoring in law.

From 1974 to 1986, she worked as a consultant in the Department of Justice of the Executive Committee of the Primorsky Regional Council of People's Deputies, and was appointed to the position of Prosecutor of the General Supervision Department of the Primorsky Territory Prosecutor's Office. Later, she received a promotion to the prosecutor of the Primorsky environmental inter-district prosecutor's office.

Svetlana Goryacheva was elected a people's deputy in March 1990. She was a member of the deputy political party "Russia". Headed the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR. In October 1991, she resigned as chairman.

In September 1993, she opposed the dissolution of the Supreme Council. She took an active part in the X Extraordinary Congress of People's Deputies and rallies in defense of the parliament. Was in the House of Soviets until his assault on October 4.

In the same 1993, she took part in the elections to the State Duma of the Russian Federation as one of the leaders of the opposition electoral association "Russian National Union", but the association in the State Duma did not pass.

In 1995, on December 17, Svetlana Petrovna was elected a deputy of the State Duma of the Russian Federation of the second convocation on the federal list of the electoral association of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation. She was a member of the All-Russian political party "KPRF". She served as Deputy Chairman of the State Duma. She was a member of the political council of the National Salvation Front.

In 2003, she won the elections to the State Duma of the Russian Federation of the fourth convocation from the Ussuri constituency No. 53 of the Primorsky Territory. She was not a member of the registered deputy associations, she was a member of the Committee on the Rules and Organization of the State Duma. She was twice re-elected as a deputy in 2007 and 2011 from the political party A Just Russia.

The government of Primorsky Krai delegated Svetlana Goryacheva to the Federation Council. She has been empowered since September 22, 2014. He holds the position of First Deputy Chairman of the Federation Council Committee on Rules and Organization of Parliamentary Activities.

He is a member of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe. She advocated a ban on the adoption of Russian orphans by US citizens.

Married. She raised her son.

For active legislative activity and many years of conscientious work, Svetlana Petrovna was awarded the Order of Honor; medals "In memory of the 850th anniversary of Moscow" and "For merits in conducting the All-Russian population census."

Birthday June 03, 1947

Russian politician, deputy of the State Duma since 1995

Biography

She was born on June 3, 1947 in the village of Risovy, Anuchinsky District, Primorsky Krai. Maiden name - Bezdetko. Father is a member of the Great Patriotic War All his life he worked as a forester. She was the eldest of five children in her family.

Education

After school, she entered the university the third time. Graduated from the Faculty of Law of the Far East state university in the specialty "Jurisprudence" in 1974.

Labor activity

She began her career in 1965 as an auxiliary worker, later from 1965 to 1966 she was an accountant at the Daubikha Mekhleskhoz (Arsenyev, Primorsky Territory), worked as an assembler-riveter at the Arsenyev Machine-Building Plant Progress. In 1967, she became a cashier and graphic designer for the Kosmos cinema in Arsenyev.

From 1974 to 1976 - consultant of the Department of Justice of the Executive Committee of the Primorsky Regional Council of People's Deputies (Vladivostok). From 1977 to 1986 - prosecutor of the general supervision department of the Primorsky Territory Prosecutor's Office. From 1986 to 1990 - prosecutor of the Primorsky environmental inter-district prosecutor's office. In March 1990, she was elected a people's deputy of the RSFSR, she was a member of the Russia parliamentary faction.

Political activity

She joined the CPSU in 1987.

RSFSR

At the I Congress of People's Deputies of the RSFSR on June 1, 1990, she was elected Deputy Chairman of the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR at the suggestion of its chairman Boris Yeltsin. Since the autumn of 1990, she has been in opposition to Yeltsin and Khasbulatov, along with the Deputy Chairman of the Supreme Council Boris Isaev, the chairmen of both chambers Vladimir Isakov and Ramazan Abdulatipov and their deputies Alexander Veshnyakov and Vitaly Syrovatko. Together with them, she signed a "letter of six", where Yeltsin's work was sharply criticized. On February 21, 1991, she made this statement at a meeting of the Supreme Council, in March 1991, at the III Congress of People's Deputies of the Russian Federation, she opposed the granting of additional powers to Yeltsin. In October 1991, after Ruslan Khasbulatova was elected Chairman of the Supreme Council, she resigned from this post due to disagreement with their policies.

After her resignation from the post of Deputy Chairman, she was a member of the Committee of the Supreme Council of the Russian Federation on Ecology and Rational Use natural resources.

Russia

In September 1993, she opposed the dissolution of the Supreme Council. She took an active part in the X Extraordinary Congress of People's Deputies and rallies in defense of the parliament. She was in the House of Soviets until the storming of it on October 4th. In her own words, on October 4, 1993, she received Orthodox baptism at the White House. According to Yuri Voronin, Deputy Chairman of the Supreme Council, after leaving the White House, she was beaten by riot police along with the rest of the group of deputies, who from October 4 to 5 were in a communal apartment where they were sheltered by the hostess.

In the same 1993, Goryacheva took part in the elections to the State Duma of the Russian Federation as one of the leaders of the opposition electoral association "Russian National Union", but the association in the Duma did not pass.

December 17, 1995 was elected to the State Duma of the Russian Federation of the second convocation on the federal list of the electoral association of the Communist Party, was a member of the Communist Party faction, Deputy Chairman of the State Duma.

On December 19, 1999, she was elected to the State Duma of the Russian Federation of the third convocation on the list of the electoral association of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation, was a member of the Communist Party faction (until May 2002), was the chairman of the Committee on Women, Family and Youth Affairs.

On May 25, 2002, at an extraordinary plenum of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation, she was expelled from the party for refusing to fulfill her demand for the resignation of the chairman of the State Duma Committee, put forward by the leadership of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation after the revision in April 2002 of the package agreement between the factions on the distribution of leadership posts, when the Communist Party and the agro-industrial group lost chair positions in most of the committees they previously chaired.

On December 7, 2003, she was elected to the State Duma of the Russian Federation of the fourth convocation from the Ussuri constituency # 53 (Primorsky Territory), was not a member of registered deputy associations, was a member of the Committee on Regulations and Organization of the State Duma.

On December 2, 2007, she was elected to the State Duma of the Russian Federation of the fifth convocation as part of the federal list of candidates nominated by political party"Fair Russia: Motherland/Pensioners/Life". On December 4, 2011, she was elected to the State Duma of the Russian Federation of the sixth convocation as part of the federal list of candidates put forward by the Political Party "A Just Russia"

She was a member of the political council of the National Salvation Front (1992-1993). In February 1993, at the II (restoration) Congress of the Communist Party, she was elected a member of the Central Executive Committee of the Party, From March 20, 1993 to January 22, 1995 she was a member of the Presidium of the Central Executive Committee of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation, at the IV Congress in April 1997 - a member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation, in May 2002 was expelled from the ranks of the Communist Party.

Awards

  • Medal "In memory of the 850th anniversary of Moscow" (1997)
  • Medal "For Merit in Conducting the All-Russian Population Census" (2002)
  • Commemorative anniversary medal "100 years since the establishment of the State Duma in Russia" (2006)
  • Badge of honor of the State Duma "For merits in the development of parliamentarism"
  • Honorary Diploma of the State Duma
  • Certificate of Honor of the Federation Council

Family and hobbies

Married. Son Yaroslav is a lawyer, a graduate of the law faculty of Moscow State University. Interested in painting.