after his inauguration on 7 May 2000 and Lyudmila at an official dinner in honour of the heads of state and their spouses, who arrived in
St. Petersburg to mark the city's 300th anniversary in 2003 After Vladimir's rise to political power, Lyudmila maintained a low profile on the Russian political stage, generally avoiding the limelight except as required by protocol and restricting her public role to supportive statements about her husband. As First Lady, Lyudmila Putina was a curator of a fund that aimed to develop the
Russian language and sometimes produced statements concerning Russian language and education. Her preference for "maintaining and preserving" the Russian language led her to make public statements against
orthographic reform. The Russian Academy of Science sponsored a commission to study the
orthography of the Russian language and propose changes. Their recommendations were made public in 2002 after eight years of work, but were subsequently rejected by Putina, who used Russia's burgeoning economy as one of her reasons why the orthographic reform was not just unnecessary but untimely. However, although one newspaper in Moscow alleged that "Lyudmila Putina
de facto cancelled any attempts to reform spelling", the fact remains that public and academic reaction to the reforms was sufficiently negative to have that particular reform attempt abandoned. == Divorce and remarriage ==