Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 12 – The 1993
Russian Constitution specifies that “no ideology can be established as a state
or obligatory one,” but some Russian officials are taking steps to make an end
run around that ban and others are openly talking about the repeal of that
provision so that they can more actively disseminate Vladimir Putin’s vision of
a common set of national values.
In an essay on Polit.ru yesterday, Moscow
commentator Grigory Viktorov describes the course of this discussion and these
actions over the past three months and why that discussion is troubling for
those who remain committed to the constitutional principle that Russia is to be
a country of “ideological multiplicity” (polit.ru/article/2014/02/11/ideologia/).
Last
November, the rector of a St. Petersburg university called for establishing
positions at his institution to engage in “ideological work,” an idea that was
criticized by Vyacheslav Volodin and Dmitry Peskov, among others, whose words
seemed to have put an end to the idea but “things have turned out differently,”
Viktorov writes.
The
same month, Aleksey Aleksandrov, the plenipotentiary representative of the
Federation Council to the Russian Constitutional Court, said that the 1993 ban
on an official ideology was the result of fears of a revival of totalitarianism
and that as those fears are no longer real, the constitutional prohibition “is
a mistake.”
That
prompted “a new wave of rumors,” the commentator says, that the Kremlin
intended to change Article 13 of the Constitution and end this ban, and those
rumors continued even after “Izvestiya” reported on December 4 that any move in
that direction was “an initiative from below” rather than a reflection of
central plans (izvestia.ru/news/561785).
But even that did not end this
story, Viktorov continues. On January
31, Aleksandr Zapesotsky, the St. Petersburg rector who made the original
proposal, defended it in “Rossiiskaya gazeta” and argued that it is time to
stop avoiding a discussion about the role of ideology in the state (rg.ru/2014/01/31/vuzy.html).
Zapesotsky has
been rector since 1991, worked with Mayor Anatoly Sobchak when the latter’s
chief of staff was Vladimir Putin, the Moscow commentator says, and as such “he
is hardly likely to struggle for an obviously hopeless goal.” Consequently, it is “probable tht this issue
is being discussed by someone at the top.”
The authorities could seek to amend
the constitution, of course, although as Viktorov says, that is a long and
cumbersome process. Or as seems more convenient and thus more likely, they
could argue that the ban does not mean what it appears to mean either because
they are not imposing an ideology by force or because what they are offering
reflects broader values.
Some may object that in doing so,
Moscow would be violating its undertakings to international bodies by its
having signed various conventions, but as Viktorov points out, none of these in
fact prohibit a state from having an ideology, although they do have something
to say about what such an ideology must not advocate.
And, he continues, many supporters
of the promotion of a new state ideology could argue that what they are trying
to do is nothing like what the CPSU did. Zapesotsky was not recreating the
party committee and secretary system but giving assignments to university
officials that they were never given directly at least in Soviet times.
That argument opens a number of
questions such as “Does Article 13 of the Constitution really ban citizens of
Russia from uniting on an ideological principle?” or “has it prevented the
Russian Orthodox Church from involvement in the development and adoption of the
Foundations of Social Doctrine?”
Those opposed to ending the ban
already note, Viktoroc continues, that “I you look around, you will see there
are already many prohibitions. Imagine what would be the case if a state
ideology were to become possible?”
“Perhaps,” he says, the way out is
to put in place a ban on any government monopoly over political ideology. But those like Zapesotsky clearly aren’t
interested in doing that. They have another goal, one they have pursued in an “extremely
effective” manner even if it doesn’t conform to the provisions of the existing
Constitution.
Viktorov thus implies, although he
does not say specifically, that Russia today is on a slippery slope toward a
situation in which the Kremlin will seek to re-impose an ideological straightjacket
on Russian society, albeit one that will be different in kind than the one many
might see as its model.
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