with
Chairman of the Federation Council Vladimir Shumeyko and
Chairman of the State Duma Ivan Rybkin during the 1995 Presidential Address to the Federal Assembly In the Soviet Union, prior to the institution of the post of
President of the Soviet Union, such messages were not known, but their role in the political sense was played by regular Reports of the Central Committee of the
Communist Party of the Soviet Union to a Congress of the CPSU. After the presidency of the Soviet Union was established in March 1990, the amended Constitution stipulated that the USSR President "... shall deliver to the Congress of People's Deputies annual reports on the situation of the country, inform the Supreme Soviet of the most important issues of domestic and foreign policy of the Soviet Union". However, no such reports were ever delivered due to the fact that the USSR president
Mikhail Gorbachev had too short time in the presidential office. Nevertheless, Gorbachev gave on 31 March 1990 with a message to the Supreme Soviet of the USSR on family issues and on 13 April that year to the Supreme Soviet of the Lithuanian SSR and the Council of Ministers of the Lithuanian SSR, which pointed out the unacceptability of a situation in which "... the republic's leadership makes all new legislative acts and decisions, which contrasted with the Lithuanian SSR and other republics of the Soviet Union as a whole ". In the
Russian Federation, the provision that the head of state addresses the highest legislative body first appeared in the Law of the RSFSR of 24 April 1991 "On the President of the RSFSR," under paragraph 3 of Article 5 of which the President "... shall at least once a year deliver a report to the Congress of People's Deputies on the implementation of socio-economic and other programs adopted by the Congress of People's Deputies of the RSFSR and the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR, on the situation in the RSFSR, give messages to the people of the RSFSR, the Congress of People's Deputies of the RSFSR, and Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR. The Congress of People's Deputies of the RSFSR by a majority votes of the People's Deputies shall have the right to request from the President of the RSFSR an extraordinary report ". Prior to the adoption of the
Constitution of Russia in December 1993, Russian president
Boris Yeltsin addressed directly the people of Russia on several occasions. Specifically, on 10 December 1992 speaking at the VII Congress of People's Deputies, he appealed to citizens to collect signatures for the initiative to hold a popular vote of confidence in the president; on 20 March 1993, he gave a televised address to the nation, in which he called the
nationwide referendum for 25 April that year. After the adoption of the Constitution of the Russian Federation in 1993, presidential addresses to the Parliament became an annual fixture. The first such message was read out on 24 February 1994. Initially, there was a tradition to give each appeal its own title, for example: "On strengthening the Russian state" in 1994 or "What kind of Russia we are building" in 2000. However, since 2003 messages have ceased to be given specific names. Also, until 2008, the chairmen of the Chambers of the Federal Assembly sat at the podium behind the president, emulating American practice for the analogous
State of the Union address. Since 2008, the Chairmen of the Chambers now sit among Members of the Federal Assembly. No address was held in 2017, due to it being postponed to early 2018. It was the first time a presidential address was not given during the year since its introduction. All messages since 2018 have been held outside the
Kremlin. The 2018 address was held in the
Manege. This was due to the increasing number of participants and the need to use infographics. In 2019, the message was held at the
Gostiny Dvor. Due to the implications of the ongoing
Russian invasion of Ukraine, no presidential address was given in 2022. The official Russian news agency
TASS reported that Putin explained he did not deliver an address in 2022 "because the situation was unfolding very quickly and it was difficult 'to fix the results at a specific point, as well as specific plans for the near future.'" ==Legal basis==