Alexandra Pavlovna Biryukova was a prominent female politician in the USSR. She was the highest-ranking female politician under Soviet leaderMikhail Gorbachev. Biryukova was the second woman ever appointed to the Politburo, the executive committee for the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. The first woman was Yekaterina A. Furtseva, an advocate for women and trade unions. Biryukova echoed these beliefs, as she was involved with the Bureau for Social Development, specifically focused on labor conditions, consumer issues, housing, and health.
Early life
Biryukova was born in Voronezh Oblast, Russia on February 25, 1929. She was the middle child of five. Throughout her education, she was extremely ambitious and scored top grades. She graduated with distinction from the Moscow State Textile Institute in 1952. After graduating, Biryukova worked in a Moscow textile factory called The First Printed Fabric Works. She began as a specialist and rose to the position of deputy supervisor and later shop supervisor.
Political career
Biryukova joined the Communist Party of the Soviet Union as a full member in 1956. Administrators for Nikita Khrushchev took attention to her in 1959, and she was appointed to one of Moscow’s administrative committees on the economy, and put in charge of Moscow’s textile and knitwear industries. She became successful within this movement and created a strong rapport with the workers by campaigning for improved safety and working conditions. In the 1960’s and 70’s, she campaigned to establish holiday homes for trade union members and families, as well as to improve health and safety provisions. Biryukova was made secretary and Presidium member of the All-Union Central Council of Trade Unions in 1968. In 1971, she would become a candidate member of the Central Committee of the CPSU and would go on to become a full member in 1976. On March 6, 1973, Biryukova was appointed the Secretary of the Consumer Goods Industry, responsible for supervising the consumer goods industry. When Mikhail Gorbachev came into power in 1985, Biryukova entered the highest level of soviet politics by becoming Deputy Chair of the All-Union Central Council of Trade Unions. In 1986, Gorbachev selected Biryukova at the 27th Congress of the Communist Party as a lead on what would become perestroika. She became the first woman elected to the Secretariat of the CPSU in over 20 years, and was responsible for the light industry and production of consumer goods. She was also made a deputy to the USSR Supreme Soviet and the RSFSR Supreme Soviet. In October of 1988, she was elected as a candidate member of the Politburo. In the same month, she was made the deputy USSR Prime Minister and chair of the Bureau for Social Development. The bureau was tasked with providing Soviets with improved food, clothes and many other crucial consumer goods. As chair, Biryukova was required to do a large amount of international shopping. She took a major trip in which she went to eight different cities and purchased 50 million pairs of tights, 1.7 million pairs of lady’s shoes and mass quantities of necessities like toothpaste, soap, razor blades, and instant coffee. All of this international shopping was due to product shortages in the Soviet Union and was intended to help reduce labour strikes and workforce unrest. In 1989, she was the only woman out of the more than 200 highest ranking members of the Soviet political sphere.
Alexandra Biryukova attended the congress held on July 5, 1990. At the conference, Biryukova called the Soviet consumer market “a crisis situation” and described the status of health services as “criminal”. At this time, the Communist Party was experiencing an unfavourable period. At the Congress, Biryukova was criticized by many attendees, some of whom also called her to resign. In response to these criticisms, Gorbachev told the group that she would receive a pension and be relieved of all her duties. As a result, Biryukova resigned from all her positions in September of 1990, at the age of 61.
Political views
As Biryukova was a supporter of Soviet Communism, she was anti-capitalist and was also an advocate for women. She viewed the lack of representation of women in high-ranking roles as a result of their natural inclination to be a mother. She spoke out about the lack of contraceptives and access to abortion in the Soviet Union in 1989.
Personal life
Biryukova’s father and one brother died in World War II. She married Alexander Nikitovich Biryukov a staff military officer who retired in 1980. They had a daughter who passed away at the age of sixteen, due to natural causes. In 1973, Biryukova published a book called “The Working Woman in the USSR”. The book discusses women and their contribution to the creation of the Soviet socialist state. In her free time, Biryukova enjoyed skiing, swimming, and opera.