Vydvizhenets

In the early history of the Soviet Union, a vydvizhenets (выдвиженец) was someone, especially an ordinary person (worker, peasant, rank-and-file engineer, etc.)

Vydvizhentsy in this sense should be distinguished from people being appointed to various leadership positions for the virtue of being trusted Bolshevik Party members.

[1][2] Later the term vydvizhenets was applied to persons promoted in ranks by higher leadership and may be translated by the term "protege", and in this meaning it was seen as an evidence of widespread clientelism within Soviet Communist Party elites.

[4] The word is a noun derived from the verb выдвигать, meaning "to promote" in this context and it is literally translated as "promotee".

[5] Russian satirists Ilf and Petrov had a novella "Vydvizhenets for an Hour" within the novel 1001 Day or New Scheherazade.