Yeltsin took the secretaryship as his due. Still running the construction department, he was relieved that he no longer communicated with the administrative and political summit through a go-between, which had been for him “a severe trial.” All spring he had fidgeted at meetings of department heads where he was meant to write down every pearl Dolgikh dropped. Other than a tour of the oil boomtowns of Tyumen province with Gorbachev in September 1985 and the odd meeting, his only communication with number one was by the Kremlin’s high-frequency telephone line.28
It was the third promotion that lofted Yeltsin into the political stratosphere. On Tuesday, December 24, 1985, the Moscow gorkom (city committee) of the CPSU, the relative of the Sverdlovsk obkom, installed him as its first secretary. Gorbachev, who moved the resolution on behalf of the Politburo, had been weighing the move since July, when he had Yeltsin promoted to Central Committee secretary: “I was ‘trying him out for size’ for Moscow.”29
In
Most of this is to be taken with a grain of salt. We know that Yeltsin and a Sverdlovsk confrère compared notes on the Moscow job a few days before the Politburo meeting. On that occasion, Yeltsin was champing at the bit and agreed with the suggestion that “for the second time only the Urals can save Moscow”—the first being in World War II, when munitions factories were evacuated there and it became an arsenal for the country.31 The transcript in the archives for the Politburo session of December 23 shows unequivocally that Yeltsin took the change in stride and said nothing about other likely appointees. Gorbachev was quoted, in the tradition of the spoken word taking precedence over the written, as having talked the position over with him. The only other members who spoke on the motion, all briefly and all in favor, were Gromyko, now head of the executive board of the Soviet parliament; Solomentsev of the control commission; Vitalii Vorotnikov, the prime minister of the RSFSR and its representative on the Politburo; and Viktor Grishin, the incumbent Moscow leader.
Gorbachev opened with word that he had received a letter of resignation from Grishin and wanted him to be given an honorific post as adviser to Gromyko:
GROMYKO: It should say in the text of the resolution that comrade Grishin will be assigned to the group of advisers.
SOLOMENTSEV: That’s right.
VOROTNIKOV: Yes, it has to be written up like that.
GORBACHEV: If the comrades have no objections, I am available to take part in the plenum of the Moscow gorkom of the CPSU. Now, let us talk about who should be the candidate for the post of gorkom first secretary. The question is about the party organization of our capital. This makes it appropriate to recommend for this post someone from the Central Committee who has work experience in a major party organization and knows about the economy, science, and culture. There is a suggestion that we recommend comrade B. N. Yeltsin.
VOROTNIKOV: Good idea.
SOLOMENTSEV: Sure.
GORBACHEV: I have had a conversation with comrade Yeltsin. He understands the place and significance of the Moscow party organization, how thorny and complex work as first secretary of the Moscow city committee would be. The capital, after all, is the capital. It is our administrative, economic, scientific, and cultural center.
GROMYKO: In population size alone, Moscow is like a real country. VOROTNIKOV: Yes, a country like Czechoslovakia.
GORBACHEV: Do the comrades have any other suggestion?
MEMBERS OF THE POLITBURO: No.
GORBACHEV: In that case, comrade Yeltsin, we will be recommending you as first secretary of the Moscow party committee.