Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 28 – Russian nationalist
parties are likely to form in the near future and to gain enough support to put
their representatives into the next Russian Duma, according to a Moscow specialist
who has examined polling data, monitored the Russian media and talked to other
members of the expert community in the Russian capital.
“Izvestiya” reported yesterday that
Mikhail Romanov of the Institute of Social Projections which the paper said is
close to the ruling United Russia Party had presented that conclusion to the
Social Chamber’s working group on the analysis and resolution of inter-ethnic
conflicts (izvestia.ru/news/547440).
“All the results
show,” Romanov told the paper, “that the nationalists are gathering strength.” At present, if elections were held today, they
would not garner the five percent needed to have deputies in the Russian parliament,
but if the vote occurs as scheduled in 2016, they would pass that barrier “without
difficulty,” possibly gaining as much as ten percent.
Aleksey
Grazhdankin, the deputy director of the Levada Center polling agency, agrees, but he said that for that to
happen “the nationalists must become less aggressive in order to attract the
support of voters.” Because of their prospects, both the LDPR and United Russia
are likely to try to steal their thunder and their votes.
Gadzhimet
Safaraliyev, head of the Duma nationalities committee, told “Izvestiya” that he
had no problem with the rise of “a healthy nationalism.” After all, “there is a nationalist party in
France, it works and has its own electorate. Therefore why shouldn’t this”
happen in the Russian Federation as well.
The nationalists themselves
certainly have confidence that they are on the rise. Vladiimir Tor, head of the National
Democratic Party, said that Russia has tried communism and liberalism and won’t
be deceived by either again. “The
nationalists are a fresh face and the future belongs to them.” The powers that be need to carry out “a
moderately national democratic program.”
But Aleksandr Verkhovsky, the
director of the SOVA analytic center, introduced a cautionary note. He told the
daily that what happens will entirely depend on what the Kremlin does. If the
elections should turn out to be honest, he suggested, the nationalists “would
break through the barrier.” But of
course they might not be.
The spectrum of Russian nationalist
opinion is very wide ranging from those who simply want to be proud of their
country to those who want to restore Russian rule over the former Soviet space
to those who want to expel immigrants and ensure that ethnic Russians
predominate in all things.
Not all of these ideas are noxious,
but the extent to which many Russian nationalists are playing on broader
Russian concerns about immigration and winning support for that is
disturbing. And it is certainly a matter
of concern now that at least some more extreme nationalists argue that Vladimir
Putin is personally responsible for the immigrants and their “crimes” against
Russians (forum.dpni.org/showthread.php?t=49210&p=777942#post777942).
Given the divisions within the Russian
nationalists, the Kremlin will likely to reduce its power by simultaneously coopting
some of its ideas while using repression against the advocates of others. That strategy has been effective, with the nationalists
often proving to be their own worst enemies, but it will be increasingly
difficult to use if the nationalists gain in strength.
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