Then the head of the latter – the former pastor of the Baptist church Mikhail Yuryevich Glukhov (born 1960)[1] – took part in two election campaigns to the State Duma, preparing the basis for the creation of a larger political organization.
The name of this man says practically nothing today to the residents of Tatarstan, but 11 thousand Kazan citizens gave him their votes in the elections to the State Duma on 12 December last year, just five months after Mikhail Glukhov announced the creation of the Oprichny Dvor party in Kazan, the beginnings whose ideologies are already visible through the name.
In the Privolzhsky electoral constituency, in which Glukhov ran, he left behind a well-known entrepreneur, nominees of the DPR and the bloc "Future of Russia–New Names».
The main initiator of the creation of the NSRWP was Mikhail Glukhov, who simultaneously controlled the activities of the Kazan branch of the movement "Russian National Unity".
Glukhov himself was proclaimed the leader of the NSRRP, A. Fomenko was appointed his deputy and the commander of the "security detachment".
On 15 July, the center of Kazan was covered with leaflets of the National Socialist Russian Workers' Party (NSRWP).
The founding conference of the NSRWP was included, in particular, within the framework of the human rights commission under the President of the Russian Federation "On the observance of human and civil rights in the Russian Federation in 1994–1995," where it was noted that the ideology of the party "is largely aligned with the ideology of others extremist organizations".
[3] Analyzing the activities of the NSRWP, the Kazan historian I.E. Alekseev noted:[4] «At the same time, the topical national problems and needs of the Russian people were considered in its ideology only through the prism of abstract socio-political rhetoric and "biological" terms.
So, for example, in one of the first documents of the NSRWP under the laconic title "Appeal", it was first reported that "rats were in our common house", and then their detailed description was given.
Both from a political-pragmatic and from an organizational point of view, the NSRWP, like all the organizations created by Mikhail Glukhov, had a shocking, "leadership" character and did not have a serious social support,[5] which is why its activities ceased shortly after Mikhail Glukhov (who in 1997 became an adviser to the President of the Republic of Mari El Vyacheslav Kislitsyn) in Yoshkar-Ola.
S.A. Sergeev, Candidate of Historical Sciences, wrote about this in 1998:[6] «Some of the young people who were members of the NSRWP joined the Kazan branch of the Liberal Democratic Union of Youth.