Boris Borisovich Nadezhdin is known as a politician, teacher, deputy of the State Duma. The politician himself considers himself Russian, although his ancestors were representatives of different nationalities: Ukrainians, Jews, Poles, Romanians. This was reflected in Boris’s versatile abilities and helped to achieve success in several areas of activity at once.
early years
Biography of Boris Nadezhdin began in Tashkent in 1963. The name was not chosen by chance, it has been present for five generations of the Nadezhdins family. When the boy was six years old, the family moved to Dolgoprudny, Moscow Region. His father received technical education at that time, his mother studied at the conservatory. At school, a teenager showed a great love for mathematics. Among the tenth graders of the country, he received the second prize of the All-Union Olympiad in this subject.
The young man followed in his father's footsteps and graduated from the Moscow Physics and Technology College with honors. At the university he showed himself as a bright personality, participated in amateur performances, sang copyright songs. The next step in education was postgraduate study and defense of the candidate dissertation. He began his career as a certified engineer at the Research Institute of Surfaces and Vacuum. Then he became chairman of the Integral cooperative.
Carier start
In the early 90's began the political career of Nadezhdin. Countrymen expressed their confidence in Boris and elected him to the Dolgoprudny City Council. The deputy’s political sympathies were on the side of the Democratic Reform Movement. In 1995, he announced his membership in the Party of Russian Unity and Consent. He was nominated from the organization in the State Duma elections, but did not overcome the necessary percentage barrier. Public and political work led to the need for a legal education. With a law degree, he joined the Property Fund, and then at the Institute for Investment Policy. For two years, he served as the head of the legal department of Processor OJSC.
In 1997, Nadezhdin was invited to work in the Government of the Russian Federation. Boris Nemtsov and Sergey Kiriyenko appreciated an adviser with experience in politics, economics, and law.
Work in the State Duma
In 1999, Boris Borisovich organized the Department of Law at the alma mater and headed it. During this period, he shared his political views with the movement "New Force" and "Union of Right Forces." From SPS, Nadezhdin ran for the State Duma and soon received a deputy mandate. He participated in the creation of a document providing for changes in the regional government of the state. He took part in the activities of the Duma Committees on construction and electoral legislation. In 2000, proposed for approval by the State Duma his own text of the anthem, taking the Soviet version as a basis. A year later, Nadezhdin replaced Nemtsov at the post and became the leader of the Union of Right Forces, but after a disastrous result in the 2003 elections, he left politics and returned to teaching at the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology. Boris tried several times to continue his political career and ran for the State Duma, first as part of the Just Cause, then from the Growth Party, but to no avail.