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- W4510483 abstract "YELTSIN CAMPAIGN HAS 5 SEPARATE STAFFS, UNDER FILATOV (WORKING WITH DEMOCRATS), CHERNOMYRDIN, SHUMEIKO (WITH REGIONS), ILYUSHIN (DIRECTLY WITH PRESIDENT), KORZHAKOV AND SOSKOVETS (INSIDERS); FILATOV, SOSKOVETS ARE RIVALS FOR TOP SPOT, BUT THEY COULD GIVE WAY TO YEGOROV ... Boris Yeltsin's Election Campaign: STAFF MANEUVERS. (By Natalya Arkhangelskaya. Kommersant-Daily, March 5, p. 3. Condensed text:) Saturday's event at the Moscow municipal administration's building, the founding conference of the public movement in support of Boris Yeltsin . . . , was the first attempt to eliminate the confusion that reigns over the gigantic field of operations that is the incumbent President's election campaign. Besides the 10 registered central executive committees of initiative groups that have set themselves the goal of helping to bring Boris Yeltsin to Russia's helm a second time, there is also a cluster of at least five more or less independent campaign staffs with the same objective. ... The three best-known staffs Sergei Filatov's group, Viktor Chernomyrdin's Russia Is Our Home, and Vladimir Shumeiko's Reforms/New Deal tried to sort out the relations among themselves at the aforementioned congress. The two others are operating in a more clandestine fashion in close proximity to Yeltsin. They are the groups headed by Ilyushin (a close aide of Yeltsin's) and by Korzhakov and Soskovets (the Director of the President's Security Service and a First Deputy Prime Minister of the government, respectively). ... Each of these five staffs is participating in the campaign within the limits of its understanding of its goals and priorities. Filatov has, in effect, assumed responsibility for the votes of the democratic electorate, which, through his efforts, should go to Yeltsin. Russia Is Our Home should bring him the 10% of the vote that it won in December. Shumeiko and his Reforms/New Deal will take on the job of locking up the regions. Korzhakov and Soskovets, who see little use in the democratic campaign fuss, think it is more effective to act directly through the vertical chain of command. Ilyushin, on the other hand, who is the person closest to the President and who, moreover, knows better than the others what elections are like (he participated in Yeltsin's last campaign), is working directly with the candidate. His team already includes Aleksandr Urmanov, the well-known election-campaign organizer from Yekaterinburg, who, together with Gennady Burbulis, helped get Yeltsin elected President in 1991. The scenario for Yeltsin's first two campaign trips to Yekaterinburg and Chelyabinsk was worked out by Ilyushin's staff. . . . ... Among all the aforementioned groups that have started working on the President's election campaign in one way or another, there is a hidden rivalry that is being deftly kindled from above. Let us recall that some time ago, it was promised that, of the initiative groups in support of the President that existed at the time, whichever was the first to collect 1 million signatures would be given the top spot. At the level of nomenklatura staffs, this rivalry is especially fierce, manifesting itself, in particular, in an undercover struggle for the post of manager of the entire election campaign. More than a month ago, Yeltsin appointed First Deputy Prime Minister Oleg Soskovets to head his campaign staff. But his first steps in this field were so unsuccessful that the question of staff management was dropped altogether for a time. A few days ago, Yeltsin reaffirmed his intention to appoint Soskovets to the top post. Mr. Filatov publicly commented that, for the duration of the election campaign, the campaign manager should leave his office in the White House. . . . The democrats behind Filatov obviously would like to weaken the First Deputy Prime Minister's influence as much as possible by removing him, if only temporarily, from the White House, where he is the strongest rival of Chernomyrdin, who has the democrats' support. . . . ... In the end, a third figure may be given a high post on the staff (the election campaign per se does not begin until late April), and it might well turn out to be Nikolai Yegorov, the President's current Chief of Staff, who has been extremely active of late." @default.
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- W4510483 title "Boris Yeltsin's Election Campaign: STAFF MANEUVERS" @default.
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