Crisis of power Most deputies elected to the
Altai Krai Legislative Assembly were supporters of
Aleksandr Surikov. Evdokimov, as the new head, failed to establish relations with the Krai Assembly. Most deputies argued that over a year of work, Evdokimov demonstrated an inability to form an effective management team and blamed him for the failure of economic policy. The reason for this was considered to be the "personnel" leapfrog in the governor's entourage (17 deputies were replaced during the year). At the same time, Evdokimov's supporters (for example, the Awakening movement, which had about 30 active members and was led by Alexei Nikulin) organized rallies and collected signatures in his support. In March–April 2005, the Awakening movement organized several rallies and pickets against the actions of the Krai Assembly to remove Evdokimov. On 23 December 2004, Altai Krai Legislative Assembly deputies accepted an appeal (
interpellation) to Evdokimov, as Head of the Administration of the Altai Krai, with a request to comment on the personnel policy pursued by his administration. At the end of February 2005, at a session of the Krai Assembly, a resolution was adopted on Evdokimov's improper performance of his duties as head of the Altai Krai. The resolution was sent to the embassy of the
Siberian Federal District and the president of the Russian Federation. In March, the heads of 49 districts of the Krai and several cities of regional subordination sent a letter to the plenipotentiary representative in the Siberian Federal District,
Anatoly Kvashnin, and Russian president
Vladimir Putin, in which they demanded Evdokimov's resignation as governor. Finally, Evdokimov's resignation was demanded by representatives of various regional political parties and public organizations - from
United Russia to the
Communist Party of the Russian Federation. At the same time, Evdokimov's supporters collected more than 52,000 signatures from ordinary citizens in his defense in just nine days. They sent the collected signatures to the
Administration of the President of the Russian Federation. On 31 March 2005, at a session of the Krai Assembly, deputies expressed no confidence in Evdokimov. 46 out of 52 deputies voted for this. According to federal law, the governor's fate was to be decided by the President of the Russian Federation. Thus, a nationwide precedent could be created: for the first time, the removal of a governor from office could occur not only on the head of state's initiative, but also at the insistence of the region's Legislative Assembly. However, President Vladimir Putin did not intervene in this situation. At the same meeting, Evdokimov refused to read the traditional report on the region's socio-economic situation to the Krai Assembly's deputies. He explained his step by saying that the deputies were still unconstructive and could not perceive the report adequately. On 11 May 2005, Evdokimov invited all his deputies and heads of committees and departments of the administration to resign. This was his response to the actions of the Krai Assembly, which twice recognized the administration's work as unsatisfactory. Most of his team members wrote letters of resignation. == Filmography ==