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Tatyana Yumasheva

Russian politician (born 1960)


Russian politician (born 1960)

FieldValue
nameTatyana Yumasheva
imageTatyana Yumasheva (2020-01-17).jpg
captionYumasheva in 2020
officeAdviser to the President of Russia
term_start28 June 1997
term_end3 January 2000
birth_nameTatyana Borisovna Yeltsina
birth_date
spouse
{{marriageLeonid Dyachenko19872001enddiv}}
children3
fatherBoris Yeltsin
motherNaina Yeltsina
native_name_langru
native_nameТатьяна Юмашева

Tatyana Borisovna Yumasheva (; formerly Dyachenko (Дьяченко); (Ельцина); born 17 January 1960) is the younger daughter of former Russian president Boris Yeltsin and Naina Yeltsina. Since 2009, Yumasheva has been a citizen of Austria.

Early life and education

She graduated from MSU Faculty of Computational Mathematics and Cybernetics in 1983.{{cite web

Career

Yeltsin made her his personal advisor in 1996 when his re-election campaign was faltering. A memoir written by Yeltsin, as reported by The New York Times, credited her with advising against "banning the Communist Party, dissolving Parliament and postponing presidential elections" in 1996. She was particularly influential as Yeltsin recovered from heart surgery in late 1996. She became the keystone in a small group of advisors known as "The Family", although the others (Alexander Voloshin and Valentin Yumashev) were not Yeltsin relatives. Boris Berezovsky and other oligarchs were often included in the group as well.

In 2000, her name came up during a corruption investigation, but no charges were brought. She remained on the staff of Yeltsin's hand-picked successor Vladimir Putin, and was a key adviser to him during his 2000 election campaign, but Putin dismissed her later that year.

She is portrayed in the 2003 satirical comedy Spinning Boris, based on the real experiences of U.S. political consultants in the 1996 campaign.

She and Yumashev provided editorial assistance in preparing the last volume of her father's memoirs, Midnight Diaries.

Business interests

According to reports by Vedomosti, Yumasheva and her husband have ownership stakes in construction and real estate ventures. These include a reported 50% ownership of the Imperia Tower skyscraper in Moscow-City and a 49.58% controlling stake in the construction management company PAO CITY. Valentin Yumashev has denied these ownership claims.

Real estate

In 2021, media reports indicated that Yumasheva owns a villa valued at €15 million on a Caribbean island. In 2010, she had stated on her LiveJournal blog that she owned no property abroad, offering a challenge to anyone who could find such property. Lyudmila Telen, First Deputy Executive Director of the Yeltsin Center, stated that at the time of Yumasheva's 2010 statement, the family did not own foreign property, as the villa was purchased in December 2020.

Valentin Yumashev, in whose name the villa was registered, acknowledged the purchase to Novaya Gazeta. He stated that he financed the acquisition through a loan from a Russian bank and personal funds, including dividends from a 1.6% stake in En+ given to him by his former son-in-law Oleg Deripaska, as well as income from consulting and corporate board positions.

Personal life

In 1980, Yeltsina married fellow Moscow State University student, Vilen Ayratovich Khairullin. In 1981, they had a son. They divorced in 1982.

In 1987, she married Leonid Yuryevich Dyachenko (known as Alexei), a businessman, designer from Salyut Design Bureau, billionaire, and executive director of Urals Energy, a company under investigation by the Putin government as of 2008. In 1995, they had a son before divorcing in 2001.

In 2001, Tatyana married her fellow presidential adviser Valentin Yumashev, and flew to London to have a baby daughter. Until 2018, Yumashev was the father-in-law of oligarch Oleg Deripaska.

Tatyana is a close friend of another multi-billionaire, Roman Abramovich.

Along with her husband and their daughter, she has been a citizen of Austria since 2009.

On 25 February 2022, Yumasheva condemned the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

Sanctions

On 3 June 2025, Yumasheva and her husband were added to Canada's sanctions list. According to the Anti-Corruption Foundation, the sanctions were imposed on individuals alleged to have supported or benefited from the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The Anti-Corruption Foundation had previously included Yumasheva on its list of officials, citing her role in facilitating Vladimir Putin's appointment first as Prime Minister and then as President of Russia.

Awards

  • Commendation of the President of the Russian Federation for active participation in the organization of the presidential election campaign (1996){{cite web

References

References

  1. (2002). "Khrunichev Center – Leader of the Russian Space Sector". [[Centre for Analysis of Strategies and Technologies]].
  2. (15 July 1996). "Rescuing Boris".
  3. Tyler, Patrick E.. (8 October 2000). "How Yeltsin Nearly Scuttled Democracy in Russia". The New York Times.
  4. (23 August 1999). "Russia's Puppet Master".
  5. Quinn-Judge, Paul. (16 May 1999). "Survival Of The Fittest". Time Warner.
  6. Quinn-Judge, Paul. (5 March 2000). "The Ice-Cold Strategy". Time Warner.
  7. Poniewozik, James. (15 March 2004). "Television: Moscow on the Hustings".
  8. Osnos, Peter. (25 April 2007). "Mother Russia's Guiding Hand". The Washington Post.
  9. (2011-06-07). "Зять Ельцина оказался владельцем недвижимости в "Москва-сити"".
  10. "Чудесная вилла на острове миллионеров".
  11. DW на русском. (2019-12-17). ""Путин уже не отмороженный кагэбешник" - советник президента РФ Валентин Юмашев в "Немцова.Интервью"".
  12. (2021-04-07). "Дочь Ельцина не отдаст найденную у неё виллу на Карибах. Сделать это она обещала в 2010 году".
  13. Дубах, Борис. (2024-10-15). "Книга небытия".
  14. Colton, Timothy J.. (2008). "Yeltsin: A Life". New York: Basic Books.
  15. Colton, Timothy J. (2008). "Yeltsin: A Life". New York: Basic Books.
  16. "Yumasheva Tatyana Borisovna / rutelegraf.com".
  17. The Moscow Times (Russia)]
  18. Yeltsin's daughter picks London for baby's birthplace. ''The Evening Standard'' (London)
  19. "Due Diligence, Business Intelligence, Asset Retrieval, Debt Recovery in Europe, FSU, USA and worldwide". www.templetonthorp.com.
  20. Franchetti, Mark (7 March 2010). [http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article7052415.ece "The Sober Truth Behind Boris Yeltsin's Drinking Problem".] {{Webarchive. link. (29 June 2011 ''The Sunday Times''. Retrieved 22 February 2011.)
  21. [http://top.rbc.ru/society/26/04/2013/855807.shtml RBK: Yeltsin's daughter T.Yumasheva became a citizen of Austria ]. ''top.rbc.ru'' {{in lang. ru
  22. (25 April 2013). "Jelzin-Tochter hat österreichische Staatsbürgerschaft erhalten". Der Spiegel.
  23. Roth, Andrew. (25 February 2022). "Prominent Russians join protests against Ukraine war amid 1,800 arrests". The Guardian.
  24. (2022-02-04). "Sanctions – Russian invasion of Ukraine".
  25. "Канада внесла в санкционный список дочь Бориса Ельцина и бывшую жену Владимира Путина".
  26. (1960-01-17). "Yumasheva Tatyana Borisovna".
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