- Tikhonov's Second Government
-
The former government of Nikolai Tikhonov was dissolved following the Soviet legislative election of 1984 which gave a clear majority in favour of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. Tikhonov's government was dissolved in 1985 when Mikhail Gorbachev replaced him with Nikolai Ryzhkov as Premier.
Ministries
Ministry Minister Period Chairman of the Council of Ministers Nikolai Tikhonov 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 First Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers Heydar Aliyev 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Ivan Arkhipov 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Andrei Gromyko 11 April 1984 – 2 July 1985 Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers Nikolai Baibakov 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Venyamin Dymshits 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Nikolai Talyzin 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Leonid Kostandov 11 April 1984 – 5 September 1985 Yakov Ryabov 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Juri Marchuk 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Nikolai Martynov 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Aleksei Antonov 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Ziya Nurijev 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Leonid Smirnov 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Ivan Bodyul 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Boris Shcherbina 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Agriculture Construction Viktor Danilenko 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Agricultural Products Procurement Grigori Zolotukhin 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Agriculture Valentin Mesyats 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Aviation Industry Ivan Silayev 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Assembling and Special Construction Boris Bakin 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Automobile Industry Viktor Poljakov 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Building Material Industry Aleksei Jasin 11 April 1984 – 15 July 1985 Sergei Voyenushkin 15 July – 27 September 1985 Minister of Chemical Industry Vladimir Listov 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Civil Aviation Boris Bugajev 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Coal Industry Boris Bratshenko 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Communications Vasily Shamshin 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Construction Georgi Karavajev 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Construction the Far East and Transbaikal Region Aleksandr Babenko 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Ministry of Constructuction of Heavy Industry Nikolai Goldin 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Construction of Oil and Gas Industry Boris Shcherbina 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Construction of Petrochemical Machinery Konstantin Brekhov 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Construction of Power Plants Vladimir Velichko 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Construction, Road Building and Communal Machines Vitali Chudin 11 April 1984 – 2 August 1985 Jevgeni Varnachev 2 August – 27 September 1985 Minister of Culture Pyotr Demichev 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Defence Dmitriy Ustinov 11 April 1984 – 22 December 1984 Sergei Sokolov 22 December 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Defence Industry Pavel Finogenov 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Education Mikhail Prokofjev 11 April – 21 December 1984 Sergei Shcherbakov 21 December 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Electrical Engineering Anatoli Mayorets 11 April 1984 – 8 May 1985 Gennady Voronovski 8 May – 27 September 1985 Minister of Power and Electrification Pyotr Neporozhny 11 April 1984 – 23 March 1985 Anatoli Mayorets 23 March – 27 September 1985 Minister of Electronic Industry Aleksandr Shokin 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Finance Vasily Garbuzov 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Fish Industry Vladimir Kamentsev 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Food Industry Voldemar Lein 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Fruits and Vegetables Nikolai Koslov 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Foreign Affairs Andrei Gromyko 11 April 1984 – 7 July 1985 Eduard Shevarnadze 7 July – 27 September 1985 Minister of Foreign Trade Nikolai Patolitshev 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Gas Industry Sabit Orudzhev 11 April 1984 – 13 February 1985 Viktor Tshernomyrdin 13 February – 27 September 1985 Minister of Geology Jevgeni Kozlovski 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Health Sergei Burenkov 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Heavy and Transport Construction Sergei Afanasjev 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Ministry of Higher Education Vjatsheslav Yeljutin 11 April 1984 – 16 July 1985 Gennady Yogadin 16 July – 27 September 1985 Ministry of Industrial Construction Juri Solovjev 11 April 1984 – 16 July 1985 Arkadi Shchepetilnikov 16 July – 27 September 1985 Minister of Instrument-Making, Automation and Control Systems Mikhail Shkabardnya 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Internal Affairs Vitali Fedorchuk 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Iron and Steel Industry Ivan Kazanetz 11 April 1984 – 16 July 1985 Serafim Kolpakov 16 July – 27 September 1985 Minister of Justice Boris Kravtsov 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Land Reclamation and Water Conservancy Nikolai Vasiljev 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Light Industry Nikolai Tarasov 11 April 1984 – 6 July 1985 Vladimir Klyuyev 6 July – 27 September 1985 Minister of Machine Building Vjatsheslav Bakhirov 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Machine Building for Light and Food Industries Ivan Pudkov 11 April 1984 – 19 May 1984 Lev Vasiljev 19 May 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Machinery for Stock Raising and Feeding Konstantin Beljak 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of General Machine Building Oleg Baklamov 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Manufacture of Communication Media Erien Pervyshin 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Meat and Dairy Industry Jevgeni Sizenko 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Medical Industry Afanasi Melnitshenko 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Medium Machine Building Yefim Slavski 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Merchant Marine Timofei Guzenko 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Mineral Fertilizer Production Aleksei Petrishchev 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Non-Ferrous Metallurgy Pyotr Lomako 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Oil Industry Nikolai Maltsev 11 April 1984 – 13 February 1985 Vasili Dinkov 13 February – 27 September 1985 Minister of Oil Processing and Petrochemical Industry Viktor Fjodorov 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Radio Industry Pyotr Pleshakov 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Railways Nikolai Konarjev 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Shipbuilding Igor Belousov 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Ministry of Timber and Wood Processing Industry Mikhail Busygin 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Tractors and Agricultural Machines Aleksandr Yezhevski 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Trade, Home Grigori Vashchenko 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Minister of Transport Construction Ivan Sosnov 11 April 1984 – 8 May 1985 Vladimir Brezhnev 8 May – 27 September 1985 Committees
Committee Chairman Period Chief Administrator of the Council of Ministers Mikhail Smirtyukov 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Chairman of the People's Control Commission Aleksei Shkolnikov 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Chairman of the State Planning Committee Nikolai Baibakov 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 Chairman of State Committee for State Security (KGB) Viktor Chebrikov 11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985 References
- General
- Government of the Soviet Union > List
- "Governments of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (1964–1991)". elisa.net. http://www.elisanet.fi/daglarsson/dokumentit/sov1.htm. Retrieved September 12, 2010.
- Specific
Government offices Preceded by
Tikhonov IGovernments of the Soviet Union
11 April 1984 – 27 September 1985Succeeded by
Ryzhkov ICategories:- Soviet governments
- 1984 establishments in the Soviet Union
- 1985 disestablishments
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.