Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 28 – The statement
by Vyacheslav Volodin, first deputy chief of Presidential Administration, that Moscow
won’t block opposition candidates is just for show, Russian analysts say, but
it does indicate that the Kremlin has sufficient confidence in its ability to
manage the process in ways that will distract and divide society and thus help
itself.
Yesterday, the “Moy region” portal
in St. Petersburg interviewed two analysts who have been critics of Vladimir
Putin’s approach on a variety of issues about this shift in the Kremlin’s
position concerning elections, Daniil Kotsybinsky, an historian, and Dmitry
Oreshkin, a political scientist (mr7.ru/articles/90353/).
According to Kotsyubinsky, “the
Kremlin has finally become convinced that the spectacle under the name of ‘elections’
does not threaten it and that it completely controls this deceptive process.”
Moreover, the Russian leadership believes it is successfully promoting “the
fiction of ‘the participation of the opposition in elections.”
If a real opponent of the regime
were to win office in Moscow – and that is almost impossible, Kotsyubinsky says
– even then the Kremlin wouldn’t worry. It could easily parry the situation by
saying to that figure and those who supported him or her, go ahead and try: “the Kremlin will carry out this game
until a minimum a 100,000 people come into the streets.”
Clearly, the historian continues,
the Kremlin leadership now believes that it has passed through “the dangerous
situation of 2011-2012” and that all it needs to do is to direct the aggression
of Russians “along horizontal lines and not vertical ones.” Hence, it promotes “hatred
to homosexuals and migrants,” a tactic that appears to be working.
But this current calm “won’t last
long,” he continues, and he argues that Russian society is increasingly
interested in “a velvet political revolution” and that this “will occur sooner
than Putin would like” -- and sooner than many of those who now pose as
opposition figures would like either.
If any real opposition candidate
does emerge that can challenge the Kremlin, the Kremlin will find a way to keep
him from running or “at a minimum” from having the resources to do so
successfully. Consider, Kotsyubinsky says, the different ways in which the
regime has treated Khodorkovsky and Navalny, and this becomes clear.
According to Kotsyubinsky, “all the
leaders of today’s opposition are collaborationists. All without exception, and
Navalny is at their head. Their
participation in elections thus will change nothing.”
Not have the Moscow elections done
much to attract the attention of Russian society to “the serious questions” of
political reform and the end of the military operation in the Caucasus. No one
running is raising these issues, and people are talking only about who will win
in Moscow and what size fish Putin actually caught.
Oreshkin in contrast says that the
Kremlin’s new attitude toward elections involves only the city of Moscow. In the regions, where there is “an extremely
ineffective model of the vertical of administration,” those in power get in
trouble with the center only if mass demonstrations happen. They don’t if they
block opponents from running against them.
Only in Moscow or in some other
place where the risk of large demonstrations is higher will officials go along
with Volodin’s argument. Otherwise, the
political scientist says, they will ignore the opposition and its efforts to
force honest elections.
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