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Sliska Lubov Konstantinovna: biography, political career

In recent years, you can rarely hear the name of the former politician Lyubov Sliska. She completed her rather short but vivid political career, but her fate continues to be of concern to the general public. Questions about what Sliska Lubov Konstantinovna is doing, where she is currently working, what her path was in politics, is still often asked by people. Let's try to answer them.

Childhood

Lyubov Konstantinovna Timoshina was born on October 15, 1953 in Saratov in a very simple family. My father worked as a chief mechanic, but he quickly disappeared from the life of the Timoshins. Mom raised two children alone, there was no special wealth in the house. From childhood, Lyuba and her brother Sergei were not granted any privileges, so they had to make their own way. My mother worked as a salesman, an uncle was helped by an uncle - a police colonel. Timoshins lived on the outskirts of Saratov in a private house, the mother tried to educate children in severity.

Education

In 1961, Lyubov went to school, which she graduated in 1971. In her school years, she did a little bit in music school, but quickly quit. Classmates and teachers recall that Luba Timoshina studied at school is not brilliant, the "five" in her diaries appeared very rarely. In the eighth grade she even got a deuce in the quarter in mathematics. But her class teacher, Maria Maximovna Derbeneva, stood up for her defense, and she helped the girl finish 10 grades, and did not go to vocational school. Almost all the classmates of Sliska entered the university at the end of the school, but she was able to pass only to the bookselling technical school. It was not a bad choice at all, in the Soviet Union books were a big deficit, and work in the store promised Sliska good prospects.

But over time Lyubov Konstantinovna still received higher education. It happened when she was already 37 years old. She entered the evening department of the Saratov Law Institute. In the group, she was the oldest, performing the duties of the elder. Thanks to her work, she could help teachers in signing up for scarce books and books, which made her learning easier. In 1990, she received a diploma of higher education in the specialty of "jurisprudence."

The beginning of the way

After school, Lyubov Timoshina worked at several industrial enterprises, which are rich in the Saratov region. In 1977, she came to work in "Soyuzpechat" first as a secretary, then as a personnel officer. She was always very active, and this helped her to start promotion on the trade union line. In 1987, she became the vacated chairman of the company's trade union committee, then she thought about getting higher education. According to Sliska, she tried several times in her life to join the ranks of the CPSU, but she was refused, interfered with too direct and independent.

Coming to power

In 1996 Sliska Lubov Konstantinovna was invited to work in the Saratov city election commission. She was appointed deputy chairman of the election commission, and it was there that her fateful meeting with Dmitry Ayatskov, the vice mayor, was held, which he intended to become in future a governor of the Saratov region. After successfully held elections in April 1996, Ayatskov, by the Decree of the President of the Russian Federation, BN. Yeltsin was appointed head of the Saratov region administration. After that, successful governor elections took place, and Ayatskov sat in the desired chair. During these elections, Sliska and Ayatskov worked together to discredit the incumbent governor and became close associates. So, the Saratov region found a new manager, and he needed a team. And Lyubov Konstantinovna moved to a new level, she was appointed deputy governor. Its head decided that she, having experience in "Soyuzpechat", would be best able to work with the media, and appointed her to oversee the press. But she quickly parted with this place because of constant conflicts with representatives of local media (she was convinced that they had to write what she told them) and became a permanent representative of the governor in the regional Duma.

The State Duma

In 1999, Lubov Konstantinovna was included in the pre-election list of the party "Unity", and in December 1999 she became a deputy of the State Duma of the third convocation. In January 2000, she was elected vice-speaker of the State Duma, her nomination is associated with the call of V. Putin to promote women more in leadership positions. For most of the deputies this appointment was a surprise. Sliska Lubov Konstantinovna, whose position now required confirmation, a year later defended a thesis on "The experience of the formation of representative bodies of state power of the subjects of the Russian Federation, 1990-2000". The theme of her work was formulated in the best traditions of Soviet science, when party functionaries wrote works on their regions. So, the candidate of historical sciences Sliska defended the research about the work she was a participant in.

In 2003, Sliska again became a Duma deputy, now from the party "United Russia", and again sat in the chair of the deputy chairman. In 2007, history repeated itself. But in 2011 it became known that Sliska would no longer participate in elections to the Duma. Journalists suspected that the reason for the refusal was in an open conflict with Deputy Prime Minister Vyacheslav Volodin. Her activities in the Duma attracted the attention of the media more than once, she voted, for example, for ratifying the treaty on the transfer of river islands to China in the Khabarovsk Territory, for the law on the abolition of elections in single-seat constituencies, favoring the introduction of direct presidential rule in Chechnya after the assassination of A. Kadyrov.

Scandals

When Lyubov Konstantinovna was still working in Ayatskov's team in the Saratov region, she was known for her incontinence in words. Speaking even with the press, she was not shy in the expressions, and her scandal with Alexander Miroshin on one of the banquets still go bike around Saratov, then they loudly expressed each other's claims for the best Russian foul language.

In 2000, after the elections to the State Duma, the Communist Party tried to protest the results of the elections in the Saratov region, since Sliska's brother, Sergei Timoshin, worked as a member of the election commission with the right to vote. But the scandal was gradually hushed up.

A bigger scandal erupted in 2006, when Sliska received a stake in OAO Transmash, which was valued at $ 50 million. At the same time Sliska did not even pay tax on such a gift, saying that she had no money.

Life after the Duma

After leaving the Duma and United Russia, Sliska Lyubov Konstantinovna announced that she was going to take care of her health. But even after a few years, she no longer returned to the public sphere. Journalists claim that she went to Saratov, where she has real estate and a high-yielding business. It is known that she was a member of the attestation commission in her native law institute.

Awards

For her activity, Sliska Lubov Konstantinovna received several awards, including the Order of Merit for the Fatherland and the Order of Honor, several orders from the Orthodox Church, and has the title "Honored Lawyer of the Russian Federation". In 2003, she won the "Olympia" award for women's achievements.

Personal life

About her personal life Sliska Lyubov Konstantinovna speaks little. She is married to Sergei Germanovich Sliska, half Pole, half Russian. He worked in the justice bodies, then was a judge in the Saratov Regional Court. This is Sliska's second marriage, nothing is known about her first husband. Lubov Konstantinovna has no children. Next to her name is also constantly the name of her brother Sergei Timoshin, who after the election of his sister in the State Duma became the representative of the governor and thanks to this post he acquired a diverse business in the region.

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