Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 24 – Since the
Russian presidential election in March 2012, Russians have become increasingly
negative about Vladimir Putin personally and about his current impact on the
country, according to a detailed focus group study out by the Moscow Center for Strategic
Research of Civil Initiatives.
The
122 page report on shifts in Russian attitudes toward Putin and even more
toward the Russian president’s policies and impact on the country was commissioned
by Aleksey Kudrin’s Center for Civic Initiatives and confirms many of the
trends suggested by polls conducted over the last six months (www.csr.ru/2009-04-23-10-40-41/378-2012-10-23-14-37-20).
On the one hand, the study
identified four major shifts in Russian attitudes toward Putin. And on the other, it suggested that Russians
are ever more concerned about the state of their country under his stewardship
and ever more open to thinking about what could happen if he stays in office
and what could happen if he departs.
The four trends the study
identified, according to citations from it published today by Globalsib.com (globalsib.com/15915/).
First, “practically in all focus groups, the respondents talked about the
possibility and at times about the desirability of a revolution” and they did
so “not some much in an emotional key but in a rational one.”
Strikingly,
the report continues, “concerns and fears relative to a revolution with its
possible excesses were expressed significantly more rarely than in the spring,”
and that shift, it says, represents a “transitional shift in social
consciousness which can lead to the final destruction of the so-called ideology
of ‘Putinist stability.’”
“In the eyes of the mass strata,”
the report continues, “the legitimacy of revolutionary protest renewal of the
powers that be have markedly intensified.” And the regime’s ability to counter
these attitudes “can for a certain time slow the manifestation of political
activism but [cannot any longer affect] the widespread political convictions of
the population.”
Second, a minority of participants
in the focus groups said, the reports compiled added, that there could be “a
voluntary self-renewal of the powers that be,” with Putin leaving office before
the end of his term as Boris Yeltsin did in 1999 or replacing many of those
around him. Many others in the focus
groups dismissed this as a “utopian” hope.
Third, all the focus groups the Moscow
Center organized were uniformly “negative” about Putin’s “public relations”
efforts. “Instead of serious government
affairs,” the member of the groups said, the Russian president “as before is
occupying himself with secondary questions which do not have serious importance
for the population.”
And fourth, the participants in these
focus groups had an “extremely negative” attitude toward new legislation
restricting meetings, imposing harsher penalties for slander, and restricting
the work of “non-commercial” groups, all of which have “complicated the lives
of the legal opposition.”
Commenting on these findings, Viktor
Shenderovich, who writes a blog for Ekho Moskvy, suggested that in the face of
such attitudes, “an armed uprising was improbable,” thus leaving the political
system with three possible “scenarios” (www.echo.msk.ru/blog/echomsk/943851-echo/).
First, and Shenderovich argued this was
the most realities, would be the rise of “massive civil disobedience,”
especially if Russia goes into a yet deeper economic crisis. Second, he said, would be “the voluntary self-renewal
of the powers that be,” not necessarily requiring the departure of Putin but certainly
others.
And third, and in this Shenderovich was
echoed by an unsigned piece on the Grani.ru portal, “if a change of the powers
that be does not take place, then Russia will face ‘the withering of the nation
… depression and alcoholization.’” Those trends in turn would lead to “a fall
in fertility and the mass influx of immigrants,” who share of the population
would reach “critical” mass quickly (grani.ru/Politics/Russia/m.207786.html).
Such a scenario, the authors of the
Moscow say and Grani.ru underlines, would mean “the national death of the
Russian people, and this is the precise course along which the current Russian
powers that be are leading the country.”
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