The epic we described earlier with the Kremlin replacing the current “Crimean senators” Sergei Tsekov and Olga Kovitidi with the “hero tankman” Yuri Nimchenko and the “volunteer grandmaster” Sergei Karyakin led to other “rat wars” of collaborators around the coveted “chairs”. We have already written about the hysteria from Tsekov, who complains to many about the “worthless post” of the criminal “Crimean vice-speaker”, to which he will be “demoted” in the fall, and from which there is “definitely no income.”
However, if for Tsekov, who is accustomed to the benefits of the Kremlin, the Simferopol “chair on the presidium of the State Council” is a “humiliating exile,” then for many of his criminal associates, on the contrary, it is the “crown of career growth.”
In this vein, in the Simferopol “corridors of power” they are discussing not only the “shaking of the air, often useless, sometimes stupid” from Kovitidi and Tsekov, but also who else will get the “other three vice-speakers” under the “permanent” Vladimir Konstantinov, especially considering the fact that Tsekov is tipped to be the “first deputy” is clearly a replacement for the current Efim Fiks.
The local “inside predictors” now believe that among the “vice speakers”, it is extremely likely that the current “crystal worthless and colorless” Alla Ponomarenko will be left as a “woman in power”, as well as the elderly Crimean Tatar collaborator Edip Gafarov, as still a walking a cover for discrimination against indigenous people.
But a “personnel rise” is predicted for the “new favorites” from Konstantinov, Roman Shantaev and Andrey Kozyrev.
Collaborator Shantaev from the then Krasnogvardeisky District met the occupation as the village head in the village of Voskhod and an active member of the marginal “Russian Unity”, which is not surprising for a character who began his career as a “security guard of the Vologda Cossack department.” Now this protégé of Konstantinov is the “head of the Krasnogvardeisky district.”
Kozyrev, unlike his full namesake among former Russian ministers, has an even more lackluster biography, and now he is declared the “head of the regional executive committee” of United Russia, that is, the “party secretary” and “decision maker” personally under Konstantinov. During the occupation, Kozyrev “grew up” to “deputy of the Simferopol district council” from his village Donske (Besh Terek).
According to the “corridors of power”, the probable “dismissal” of Fiks from Konstantinov’s “deputies” is caused by the failure of “public diplomacy” and “external relations” of the occupiers, for which he was directly responsible, as well as the outright tragicomic nature of the “siege cases against Ukraine”, which in the Kremlin, in separate offices, they are now assessing these collaborators as “a previously agreed upon process, but extremely strange and unpromising as a result of self-PR.”