Presidential Council of the Soviet Union

This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
the Soviet Union
 

The Presidential Council was created in March 1990 to replace the Politburo as the major policymaking body in the USSR. According to article 127 in the Soviet constitution the job of the presidential council was "to implement the basic thrust of USSR's domestic and foreign policy and ensure the country's security". It was abolished on 26 December 1990. Only the writer Valentin Rasputin was a non-party member.

The members were as follows:

Name Occupation
Chingiz Aitmatov A Kyrgyz writer
Vadim Bakatin Minister of Interior
Valery Boldin Head of the Central Committee General Department
Nikolai Gubenko Minister of Culture of the Soviet Union
Albert Kauls Chairman of the Adazhi agromdustnal combine (Latvian)
Vadim Medvedev Secretary for Ideology of Central Committee CPSU
Yury Maslyukov Chairman of the State Planning Committee
Yury Osipian Physicist and Vice Chairman of the USSR Academy of Sciences
Yevgeny Primakov Chairman of the USSR Soviet of the Union
Valentin Rasputin A nationalist writer
Grigory Revenko The head of the president's staff (Ukrainian)
Alexander Yakovlev A senior secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union
Nikolai Ryzhkov Chairman of the Council of Ministers
Stanislav Shatalin Economist
Eduard Shevardnadze Foreign Minister of the Soviet Union (Georgian)
Gennady Yanayev Vice President of the Soviet Union
Venyamin Yarin Chairman of the United Workers Front
Dmitry Yazov Marshal and Minister of Defence of Soviet Union

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