Generated by GPT-5-mini| Vladimir Zhuravlev | |
|---|---|
| Name | Vladimir Zhuravlev |
| Birth date | 1967 |
| Birth place | Moscow, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union |
| Occupation | Politician, Businessman |
| Alma mater | Moscow State University of Railway Engineering |
| Party | United Russia |
Vladimir Zhuravlev is a Russian politician and businessman who has served in the Federation Council and the State Duma, and has been associated with major industrial and financial enterprises in Russia. He has been active in regional administration and national legislature, with a career spanning energy, transport, and banking sectors, and has attracted international attention through sanctions and media scrutiny. His public roles intersect with prominent Russian political figures and institutions.
Zhuravlev was born in Moscow during the late Soviet period and completed secondary education before enrolling at the Moscow State University of Railway Engineering, where he studied engineering and transport-related disciplines, graduating in the late 1980s. During his student years he lived through the final years of the Soviet Union and the political transformations surrounding Perestroika and Glasnost, contemporaneous with figures such as Mikhail Gorbachev and events like the August 1991 coup attempt. After graduation he undertook postgraduate training and professional certification linked to enterprises such as Russian Railways and regional transport administrations.
Zhuravlev entered the private sector during the 1990s, joining commercial firms and state-affiliated corporations in sectors connected to transport and energy, including positions in companies that did business with Gazprom, Rosneft, and regional holdings associated with Sberbank and VTB Bank. He held executive roles in joint ventures and subsidiaries that interacted with entities such as Transneft and industrial groups like Lukoil and Rostec. His career included board appointments at regional industrial enterprises and participation in corporate governance linked to municipal administrations such as the Moscow City Hall and oblast authorities. During the 2000s Zhuravlev expanded into finance, collaborating with private equity firms and banking institutions engaged with Central Bank of the Russian Federation regulations, and worked on projects involving logistics providers and port operators in cooperation with Ministry of Transport of the Russian Federation initiatives.
Zhuravlev formally entered politics through regional party structures, affiliating with United Russia and serving in elected and appointed capacities at the regional level prior to election to national bodies. He was elected to the State Duma where he served on committees overlapping with transport, economic policy, and industrial legislation, engaging with committee chairs and deputies from factions including Communist Party of the Russian Federation, Liberal Democratic Party of Russia, and A Just Russia. Subsequently he was appointed to the Federation Council representing a constituent entity, interacting with senators from Moscow Oblast, Saint Petersburg, and other regions, and participating in inter-parliamentary delegations to bodies such as the Interparliamentary Assembly on Orthodoxy and bilateral meetings with delegations from Belarus and China. He worked with ministers in cabinets led by prime ministers such as Vladimir Putin (as President and Prime Minister in different periods) and Dmitry Medvedev.
As a legislator Zhuravlev sponsored and supported bills concerning transport infrastructure, energy regulation, and fiscal measures, collaborating with deputies involved in legislation alongside prominent parliamentary figures including Vyacheslav Volodin, Sergey Mironov, and Gennady Zyuganov on cross-faction initiatives. He participated in drafting amendments to laws administered by the Ministry of Energy (Russia), the Ministry of Transport (Russia), and fiscal rules overseen by the State Duma Committee on Budget and Taxes, advocating positions aligned with industrial lobby groups and regional stakeholders such as oblast governors. His public statements referenced cooperation with international partners including delegations from Germany, Italy, and China on infrastructure projects, and he voted on sanctions-related countermeasures and economic stabilization packages debated during sessions presided over by Duma speakers.
Zhuravlev's business links and political votes have prompted scrutiny from media outlets and watchdogs, with allegations touching on conflicts of interest involving corporate boards and procurement contracts with regional administrations, leading to inquiries by bodies analogous to the Accounts Chamber of the Russian Federation and public reporting in national outlets. In response to international events and Russian foreign policy decisions, he was included in sanction lists announced by entities such as the European Union, the United States Department of the Treasury, and the United Kingdom Treasury, with measures affecting assets and travel, alongside other Russian officials and business figures like Igor Sechin, Alexey Miller, and Gennady Timchenko. These measures were tied to votes and political alignment during legislative sessions concerning territorial and security matters debated in the State Duma and the Federation Council.
Zhuravlev is married and has children, and his family connections include ties to regional business networks and professional associations linked to transport and industrial sectors such as Russian Union of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs and regional chambers of commerce. He has received state and regional awards recognizing service to industry and public office, including honors analogous to medals issued by the Government of the Russian Federation and commendations from oblast administrations and ministries such as the Ministry of Industry and Trade (Russia), presented at ceremonies attended by ministers and governors. He maintains residences in Moscow and a regional constituency, and participates in public events with figures from academic institutions such as Moscow State Institute of International Relations and think tanks associated with policy debates.
Category:1967 births Category:Living people Category:Members of the State Duma (Russian Federation)