Boldyrev on the Echo of Moscow program, 25 May 2006
Yury Yurievich Boldyrev (Russian: Юрий Юрьевич Болдырев, romanized: Yuriy Yur'yevich Boldyrev, born May 29, 1960) is a Russian economist and politician, he was a Senator from St. Petersburg from 1993 to 1995, and Deputy Chairman of the Accounts Chamber of Russia from 1995 to 2001. Boldyrev was one of the founders of the Yabloko party, but left in 1995.
Biography
Born in 1960 in Leningrad in family of a military sailor.
From 1989 to 1991, he was a Deputy of the USSR from Moscowsky, district of Leningrad.[2]
From 1990 to February 1992, Boldyrev was member of the Supreme consultative and coordinating Council under the Chairman of the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR, and then under President Boris Yeltsin.[3]
In February 1992, he was advisor to the government of Russia. From March 1992 to March 4, 1993 — Chief State inspector of the RSFSR, the chief of control management of presidential Administration of the Russian Federation.
From December 1993 to December 1995 Yury Boldyrev was Senator from St. Petersburg.
In autumn 1993 he became one of the founders of the Yavlinsky-Boldyrev-Lukin electoral association (then Yabloko party), but on September 1, 1995 he left the party because of conflicts: first under the Central Bank law, then on access transnational capital to Russian natural resources (the Law of the "Production Sharing Agreement").