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ABC News
ABC News
National
Rebecca Armitage

Vladimir Putin's right-hand woman is Valentina Matviyenko, a Ukrainian-born politician who passionately supports his war

Russia's President Vladimir Putin has known Valentina Matviyenko for decades.  (Kremlin via Reuters: Evgenia Novozhenina)

As Vladimir Putin's plan to invade Ukraine gained momentum in February this year, he called a surprise meeting of his inner circle.

The Russian President sat glowering behind a desk while members of his National Security Council squirmed on little chairs like schoolchildren. 

One by one, Vladimir Putin demanded they come forward and tell him what they thought about his decision to send what he called "peacekeepers" into the separatist Ukrainian regions of Donetsk and Luhansk. 

As the cameras rolled, they spoke. Some were enthusiastic. Others stammered as they tried to explain their position, prompting Mr Putin to snap repeatedly: "Speak directly!"

But the sole woman in the room walked confidently to the lectern. 

Vladimir Putin hastily arranged a meeting of his Security Council in the days leading up to his invasion of Ukraine.  (Kremlin via Reuters: Alexey Nikolsky)

With her coiffed blonde bob and Chanel-inspired boucle skirt suit, Valentina Matviyenko has long been accustomed to standing out in meetings full of men. 

But where some equivocated, the chairwoman of the Federation Council was strident. 

"A humanitarian catastrophe has been unfolding before our eyes in the centre of Europe," she claimed without evidence.

She made baseless allegations that a "puppet" regime ruled Ukraine, responsible for "genocide" and mysteriously burned bodies in Odesa. 

And borrowing one of Mr Putin's favourite talking points, she said the West was "trying to pit the two Slavic fraternal nations against each other". 

She concluded with a plea to Vladimir Putin. 

"I believe it is time to make a decision," she said. 

"It is simply immoral to continue discussing it to death and dragging it out while pretending that something is being done." 

With the thanks of her president, Ms Matviyenko returned to her chair. 

At no point did she seem fazed that she was asking the president of Russia to invade her homeland. 

Valentina Matviyenko was born in Shepetivka, west of Kyiv, when Ukraine was still part of the Soviet Union. 

But her decision to study chemistry as a young university student in Russia's historic imperial capital changed her life.

It put her right in the path of a young KGB agent-turned-politician who would help her become the most powerful woman in Russia since Catherine the Great. 

In Putin's Russia, you're nobody unless you're from St Petersburg

Throughout his long reign, Vladimir Putin has projected an image of a solitary, almost monk-like figure who toils, as he puts it, "like a galley slave" for Russia. 

Even his former wife, his children and his rumoured new partner never appear publicly by his side.

But in reality, he has surrounded himself with a close-knit group of allies, many of whom he has known since his 20s.

Everyone in this photograph, except for Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu (on Vladimir Putin's right) got their start in politics in St Petersburg.  (Reuters: Sergei Karpukhin)

Like others in Mr Putin's inner circle, Valentina Matviyenko got her start in politics in the 1970s in St Petersburg, back when it was known as Leningrad. 

"I was not eager for politics," she admitted to Russian media in 2019.

While studying to be a scientist, leaders of the youth division of St Petersburg's Soviet Communist Party asked her to join their organisation.

When she refused because she wanted to focus on her science career, they called the head of her graduate program.

"They said 'we do not need irresponsible people either in science or in graduate school'," she recalled. 

By the time she met Vladimir Putin, Ms Matviyenko was already a local political heavyweight, if perhaps a reluctant one. 

At a time when Soviet women were there to be seen, not heard, she swiftly earned herself the nickname "Valka the glass" for her ability to drink her male comrades under the table. 

Her career skyrocketed and she became the USSR's youngest female MP and the chairwoman of the Supreme Soviet Committee on Women, Families, Maternity and Childhood.

But when the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, she had a tricky choice to make if she wanted to survive the ensuing decade of chaos and maintain her power. 

As Russia's president Boris Yeltsin descended into alcoholism and deep unpopularity, there were two potential successors waiting in the wings. 

When Yevgeny Primakov was Russia's prime minister in the 90s, Valentina Matviyenko served as his deputy in charge of social policy. 

One was Mr Yeltsin's own prime minister, Yevgeny Primakov, an extremely popular politician, with whom Ms Matviyenko was close. 

The other was Vladimir Putin, then the director of the country's post-Soviet intelligence agency and virtually unknown to the Russian public.

What few knew at that stage was that Mr Putin had been tapped by Mr Yeltsin's family for mysterious reasons to be Russia's next leader.

Armed with a dossier of kompromat — the KGB term for damaging intelligence — Vladimir Putin was able to swiftly and quietly knock his rivals out of contention.

When Vladimir Putin suddenly overtook Yevgeny Primakov to become the anointed future leader of Russia, Valentina Matviyenko switched her allegiance to him.  (Reuters)

While Valentina Matviyenko was encouraged to run for the presidency, she refused, instead switching her allegiance to Mr Putin.

"I think she's a political animal," said Dr Sara Meger, a lecturer in International Relations in the School of Social and Political Sciences at Melbourne University. 

With Mr Putin sweeping aside Soviet-era power players and replacing them with KGB colleagues and old friends from St Petersburg, Ms Matviyenko's loyalty was quickly rewarded.

The most powerful Russian woman since Catherine the Great

With the endorsement of Mr Putin, Valentina Matviyenko ran to be governor of their hometown in 2003. 

Her rivals festooned the streets with banners claiming: "Being governor is no job for a woman."

Valentina Matviyenko was elected governor of St Petersburg in 2003.  (Wikimedia Commons: Russian Federal Council)

But in the end, she won with a commanding majority. 

The girl from rural Ukraine who went to St Petersburg for a better life found herself ruling over the 300-year-old city. 

Under her leadership, the dilapidated region flourished: New developments sprung up, the birthrate doubled for the first time since the collapse of the USSR and tourism increased. 

Her critics claim that it was around this time she got rich — seriously rich. 

Alexi Navalny's Anti-Corruption Foundation claims that this seaside Italian villa belongs to Valentina Matviyenko.  (Twitter: Maria Pevchikh)

An investigative group run by Vladimir Putin's arch rival, Alexei Navalny, linked a huge luxury villa sitting on Italy's east coast to her family. 

"Where could a Russian official get the money for this?" the group's chief investigator, Maria Pevchikh, asked. 

But the biggest prize was yet to come. 

In 2011, she ascended to heights not reached by a Russian woman since Empress Catherine the Great in 1762. 

She was made speaker of Russia's Federation Council, after winning a seat in the upper house of parliament. 

That made Valentina Matviyenko the third most powerful person in Russia. 

Her astounding landslide victory — with 95 per cent of the vote — was dismissed as "100 per cent fraud" by opposition leaders.

And it would be from these lofty heights that her connection to her humble past would be put to the ultimate test. 

A possible successor to Vladimir Putin? 

When Vladimir Putin sent troops into the country of her birth, Valentina Matviyenko was right by his side. 

For Dr Meger, it's not a surprising move for a woman of her generation. 

Valentina Matviyenko has sometimes been suggested as a potential successor to Vladimir Putin.  (Kremlin via Reuters: Mikhail Klimentyev)

"I think we could probably read into her politics and life trajectory as feeling more allegiance to the Soviet Union," she said. 

"Older Ukrainians are a lot less optimistic than younger Ukrainians about independence and the turn towards Europe.

"There's a lot more Soviet nostalgia and a belief that things were better under the Soviet Union." 

And, as a woman who has survived five decades in one of the most chaotic power structures in the world, Ms Matviyenko has learned how to keep herself in the inner circle. 

"She has long been tipped as perhaps the successor to Putin for the Russian presidency, or at least having some sort of major role in Russian politics," Dr Meger said.

"So to her, it's strategic to keep telling the Putin line." 

Whether Russia could ever see a president Matviyenko is unclear, according to Dr Meger. 

"I think that Russian society certainly would be open to it. I don't think the men of the inner sanctum would allow it," she said. 

"She's the eldest of that inner circle. So I imagined that by the time Putin is retiring, or somehow ousted from power, there will be some significant, more youthful challenger."

Valentina Matviyenko has been tipped as a potential Russian leader but experts say she would find it challenging to overcome patriarchal attitudes in the Kremlin.  (Wikimedia Commons: Kremlin under Creative Commons 4.0)

Still, Valentina Matviyenko has spent her life being underestimated. 

When speaking to the press, she regularly jokes that women are better suited to hold power than men. 

"It seems that male politicians with their brutal style have not coped with managing the world. They allowed wars, conflicts, violence," she said in 2019

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