Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 31 – Some Russian
commentators suggest that the Popular Front Vladimir Putin addressed last week
will replace the increasingly unpopular United Russia as the party of power.
Others argue it will usher in a new era of Russian politics. And one says its
format reflects Putin’s attachment to what he saw while a KGB officer in East
Germany.
The debate on this is just
beginning, and it is far from clear who is right or whether any final decision
has been made about how the Russian president may use the Popular Front format
in the future. But two surveys, one in Kavkaz-Uzel.ru, and a second, on KM.ru, provide
some initial food for thought (kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/222157/ and km.ru/v-rossii/2013/03/30/707290-narodnyi-front-eto-imitatsiya-obnovleniya-vlasti).
Mariya
Lippman of the Moscow Carnegie Center, told Kavkaz-uzel that given the declining
popularity of United Russia, the All-Russian Popular Front “could replace ‘United
Russia’ as the ruling force,” with its currently “amorphous organization”
becoming “a significant structure.”
Dmitry Oreshkin, a Moscow political
scientist, in contrast, suggested to the same news service that the front will “become
for Vladimir Putin an alternative not so much to ‘United Russia’as to all institutions of public policy” including
paties and parliamentarianism “which have been discredited.”
In his view, the Front will not
become a political party for elections but means by which Putin can reach out
to the majority of the population. In that event, “instead of administered or
sovereign democracy,” Russia will have “all-people democracy,” one much less
institutionalized than the current version.
And Aleksey Makarkin, the general
director of the Moscow Center of Political Technologies, said that the Front is
something Putin now needs for the preservation of his own personal power. “The voter will search for an alternative to
the party of power,” the analyst says, “and one will be offered him – the popular”
one of a front.
According to Lippman, there are two
scenarios for the transfer of power from United Russia to the Popular Front.
The first would require snap elections so that everything could be calm and in
place before the Sochi Olympiad. But the second is more likely and would have
the Front “peacefully” take part in the scheduled 2016 vote.
Oreshkin for his part suggests that
the Front will be able to play such a role or bring the Kremlin significant
dividends in that regard. In his view,
the Front reflects the Kremlin’s lack of alternatives.
Another analyst, Aleksey Mukhin of
the Center for Political Information told Kavkaz-Uzel that such predictions are
“too simple and banal.” In fact, he says, Putin is “planning to create his own group
of support at various ends of the Russian political field,” in order to have
the opportunity for maneuver beyond the establishment views of United Russia.
Writing in KM.ru, Viktor Matynyuk
argues that the Popular Front is first and foremost about giving the appearance
of a renewal of the powers that be by suggesting that the top leader is open to
new ideas from the bottom and allowing people to pose questions even if Putin
and other leaders will not answer them directly in such choreographed shows.
But
perhaps the most interesting and certainly the most intriguing idea is offered
by Pavel Salin, the director of the Center for Political Research at Moscow’s
Financial University. He argues that the
future of the Popular Front is as “an umbrella brand and structure” which will
include United Russia and help the authorities “imitate” political renewal.
Because this new brand entirely
depends on Putin, it “will disappear sooner than [his] brand.” But the form of a popular front itself is
clearly a reflection, Salin says, of “the sympathy of our president for the
model which existed in the German Democratic Republic where he served in the
1980s and had the chance to become acquainted with the party system there.
In the GDR, he continues, there “really
was something similar” to the All-Russian Popular Front, when under the aegis
of one social movement were united” all kinds of political and social trends.
At the same time, as Putin certainly knows but Salin doesn’t note, the GDR was
swept away a few years later, a fate the Russian president certainly does not
want to share.
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