Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 14 – Muscovites are
more xenophobic than are Russians living elsewhere in the Russian Federation, a
pattern that means that Sergey Sobyanin’s appeal to such attitudes may help
him in his race for mayor of the Russian capital, according to the director of the
SOVA Analytic Center.
In an article in today’s “Vedomosti,”
Aleksandr Verkhovsky says, analyzes the results of a May 2013 ROMIR poll which
surveyed 1,000 people in Russia and 600 in Moscow about their feelings about
nationality issues (vedomosti.ru/opinion/news/15191451/konkurenciya-za-ksenofobskoe-bolshinstvo#ixzz2bv7m7Vm7).
While 85 percent of the Russians
outside of Moscow agreed with the statement that “the Russian people ought to
play the leading role in the Russian state,” 95 percent of Muscovites told the
ROMIR sociologists that they supported that idea. Outside the capital 60 percent of Russians
backed the slogan “’Russia for the Russians,’” but in Moscow, 64 percent did.
Moreover, Verkhovsky reported, while 56
percent of those outside the ring road said it was time to “’stop feeding the
Caucasus,’” 73 percent of residents of the capital said that it was. In the Far
East, the ROMIR poll found only 36 percent agreed with that idea.
According to the SOVA analyst, 39
percent of Russians understand Russians “by nationality” as being equivalent to
Russians “by blood,” while 30 percent take a less “biological” view, and 25
percent are prepared to consider as Russians all the citizens of the Russian
Federation.
Verkhovsky points to three other intriguing
findings of the poll. First, it found that Russians are ever less drawn to the
idea of restoring the empire: 36 percent accept the current borders, 21 percent
would like the addition of Slavic areas, and another 21 percent want the
borders to be those of the USSR. Only 13 percent back separating out the North
Caucasus.
Second, 63 percent of Russians say they
are part of a Eurasian world, while only 3 percent say that Russia belongs to
European civilization, even though few see the West as an enemy – less than
five percent – or even an opponent – less than 20 percent. Sixty percent view
the West as a partner. And third, Russians are increasingly view the main
threat to be from the south rather than the West.
But Verkhovsky devotes most of his
attention to the issue of immigrants and Russian attitudes about them. According
to the ROMIR poll, “a little more than half agree that the low paying work of the
immigrants is something Russia needs while a little less than half think that
migrants often do not make” a positive contribution to Russia.
Muscovites tell pollsters that they are
slightly more prepared than are other Russians to say that they favor expelling
immigrants, 53 percent to 43 percent. But Verkhovsky suggests that such
declarations need to be examined critically because many who say they favor
such steps might not be prepared to follow up with actions.
Indeed, the ROMIR poll itself found that
“in xenophobic Moscow,” 89 percent of the sample was prepared to ban
ultra-nationalist groups, 16 percent more than among Russians outside the
capital. That suggests that Russians in both places could be led in a more
positive direction than Sobyanin and other political leaders are currently doing.
It is still not too late for them to
change direction and help Russians to do so as well, but Verkhovsky suggests he
is far from optimistic. For such a shift
to happen, he says, there would have to be among officials “a recognition of
the growing danger and a willingness to reconsider their own approaches,”
neither of which appears to be on offer.
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