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1[[quoteright:280:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/boris_yeltsin-2_8177.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:280:The man in one of his sober moments (we think).]]
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4->''"Let's not talk about Communism. Communism was just an idea, just pie in the sky."''
5-->-- Comment during a visit to the United States, as quoted in ''The Independent'' (12 September 1989)
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7Boris Nikolayevich Yeltsin (Russian: Бори́с Никола́евич Е́льцин, 1 February 1931 – 23 April 2007) was the first President of [[UsefulNotes/TheNewRussia post-Soviet]] UsefulNotes/{{Russia}}. And [[VodkaDrunkenski one hell of a drunk man]], but we'll get to that part later.
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9He began his career in what is now the city of Yekaterinburg, where he was responsible for the demolition of the Ipatiev House, where UsefulNotes/NicholasII and the rest of the Romanovs were imprisoned and executed. [[note]]When he entered politics, he denounced the Romanov murders as a bloody atrocity.[[/note]]
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11Originally a supporter of UsefulNotes/MikhailGorbachev, he became then one of Gorbachev's most powerful political opponents during and after the Perestroika. He was elected to the newly created post of President of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (SFSR), which was one of the constituent republics of the [[UsefulNotes/SovietRussiaUkraineAndSoOn Soviet Union]]. After the resignation of Gorbachev and the dissolution of the Soviet Union, he kept his job as President, now of the Russian Federation.
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13The man himself vowed to transform Russia's socialist economy into a free market economy, implementing, in order to achieve that, price liberalization, various privatization programs and [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shock_therapy_(economics) shock therapy]]. He reportedly became disillusioned with communism after [[https://www.chron.com/neighborhood/bayarea/news/article/When-Boris-Yeltsin-went-grocery-shopping-in-Clear-5759129.php a 1989 visit to a supermarket in Houston, Texas]].
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15Problem is, this sudden privatization caused a good portion of the Russian wealth to fall into the hands of a small group of oligarchs. As a result of all this, [[FromBadToWorse widespread corruption, inflation, economic collapse, and several political and social problems ensued.]] To understand the damage his policies inflicted on Russia, one only has to look at UsefulNotes/TheRussianCross, when death rates in Russia began to exceed birth rates. While this started only slightly before the Soviet Union collapsed, the rate of morality ''skyrocketed'' under Yeltsin's tenure as Russians endured economic collapse, the loss of basic social services, and rampant crime and alcoholism.
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17In 1993, he dissolved the parliament in order to solve his confrontations with the Supreme Soviet, which then tried to remove him from office. The army sided with Yeltsin, and shelled the Russian White House, causing the death of 187 people. He then scrapped the constitution and introduced one from scratch, with stronger presidential power, which was approved by a referendum.[[note]]54,8% of all voters participated in the referendum and 58% of them supported the new constitution. I.e. only a quarter of Russian people actually voted for the constitution.[[/note]] At the same time, he temporarily banned political opposition and deepened his economic experimentation (which, in hindsight, became almost an economic suicide).
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19A year later, he [[UsefulNotes/TheChechnyaWars ordered the invasion of Chechnya]] in order to restore Moscow's control over that republic. This, in addition to his economical 'achievements' mentioned above, led to his rating falling to 5% by March 1996. In order to win the elections that year, a peace agreement was signed, leaving behind a devastated Chechnya still under separatist control. Yeltsin did manage to win, thanks to non-stop propaganda by government [[PropagandaMachine controlled media]] (and Yeltsin-friendly oligarchs) raising his rating from 5% to 60% in six months.
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21During his second term (which started with a quintuple bypass heart surgery), Russia received the equivalent of 40 billion US dollars from the IMF, which was later allegedly stolen by some people in Yeltsin's circle and placed in foreign banks. However, in 1998, his government defaulted, and the ruble collapsed. All these crises, along with lack of international support (and US opposition) regarding Chechnya, caused him to turn in a surprise resignation on the last day of the last month of 1999. A few months before, he had survived another attempt of impeachment, and fired his prime minister Sergei Stepashin, and appointed UsefulNotes/VladimirPutin, who would succeed him.
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23Besides all these things, he also became known for his notorious alcoholism, which he struggled with ever since his days as a party boss in [[PleaseSelectNewCityName Sverdlovsk/Yekaterinburg]], and which seemed to get [[FromBadToWorse worse and worse]] for all of his presidential career.[[note]](There were even [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Political_decoy#Boris_Yeltsin.2Funknown_.281996.E2.80.932000.29 some theories]] about how he actually [[VodkaDrunkenski drank himself to death]] in 1999 and the Yeltsin that lived until 2006 was a BodyDouble.)[[/note]] Among other incidents, at one point, while visiting Clinton in DC, Yeltsin turned up in his underwear on Pennsylvania Avenue, trying to hail cabs so he could go get a pizza. He often appeared drunk in public. He also had strange behaviours, due to the fact that Kremlin doctors gave him "strong drugs" which were incompatible even with a little drop of alcohol. Ironically, after his resignation, he finally managed to become sober and solved his alcoholism problems.
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25After said resignation, he made almost no public appearances, except for some criticism (made alongside Gorbachev) regarding Putin's initiative to replace the election of regional governors with a system whereby they would be directly appointed by the president and approved by regional legislatures.
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27Yeltsin died of congestive heart failure on 23 April 2007, at the age of 76. He was the first Russian head of state to be buried in a church ceremony in more than a century, 113 years after Emperor Alexander III.
28----
29!!Boris Yeltsin in fiction
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31* The assassination of Yeltsin during the August Coup sets the whole plot of ''Literature/ZhirinovskysRussianEmpire'' in motion.
32* Boris Yeltsin is a potential democratic leader of Sverdlovsk in ''VideoGame/TheNewOrderLastDaysOfEurope'', an AlternateHistoryNaziVictory mod for ''VideoGame/HeartsOfIronIV'', who can reunify the shattered Russia on a liberal and democratic platform. While he implements the similar policies he did in real life, including mass-scale privatization and shock therapy, and keeps some of his alcoholic habits (as evidenced in [[HistoricalInJoke his drinking event]] with a White House aide named UsefulNotes/BillClinton), his ambitions are limited by the Red Army influence in the legislature.
33* His caricature in the French puppet show ''Series/LesGuignolsDeLInfo'' was always drunk, because of course. Also took part in a parody of Advertising/{{Wazzup}}.
34* Music/RadioTapok's song [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UKyM3bofM8M "Black October"]] is about the [[TheCoup "self-coup"]] Yeltsin pulled against the Supreme Soviet in '93.
35* While not mentioned by name, a man who is clearly meant to be Yeltsin appears as a minor character during the "David trilogy" of ''Literature/{{Animorphs}}'', where a number of world leaders are to be meeting. He's completely drunk, but still stares down a rhino and and an elephant. Rachel describes him as "Drunk, but no coward". He orders his guards to let them leave, and then laughs hysterically, apparently finding this the highlight of a boring political meeting.
36* In ''Literature/TheDeathOfRussia'', Yeltsin meeting his end during the 1993 October Coup serves as the PointOfDivergence that helps set the stage for a Second Russian Civil War.
37* In ''Series/TheCrown'', he's presented as a boorish, drunken yob who, whilst exhibiting some fondness for all things royal, is also put out when the Queen chastises him over past Russian atrocities personally involving the Romanovs, her relatives.

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