| The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-07. |
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| Zhirinovsky, Vladimir Volfovich |
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(vl dy ´m r vôl´f vy ch´´ zh r´´ nôf´sk ) (KEY) , 1946, Russian politician, b. Kazakh SSR (now Kazakhstan). Born into a poor family, he had a mediocre record as a student in Moscow and as a lawyer. In 1989 he was a founder of the Liberal Democratic party, an extreme right-wing Russian nationalist group that has advocated restoring Russia to its previous imperial borders (including Finland and Alaska), and the following year he became its chairman. In 1991 he and his party finished a distant third behind Boris Yeltsin in the Russian Republics presidential election. | 1 | | Zhirinovsky later defended the failed 1991 August Coup against Mikhail Gorbachev and was an outspoken critic of Yeltsin, although he did not join the parliaments bid to oust the Russian leader in 1993. That year, his party won the largest share (about 23%) of the popular vote in the elections, and Zhirinovsky was elected to the new Russian State Duma. In 1995 his party was the runner-up to the Communists in the elections for the Duma. Denounced as a fascist and xenophobic extremist by his opponents, he was nonetheless been popular with many Russians. In 1996 Zhirinovsky again ran for president but received only a small percentage of the vote. In the late 1990s his popularity waned: His party won 6% of the vote in the 1999 parliamentary elections, and he placed fifth in the 2000 presidential election. | 2 |
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| | | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright © 2007 Columbia University Press. |
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