Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 24 – The boost in
Vladimir Putin’s popularity as a result of the Crimean Anschluss and the fact
that again more than half of Russians do not see any alternative to him in the
immediate future undercut the possibility that Russia will become a more democratic
country anytime soon, according to the editors of “Nezavisimaya gazeta.”
In a lead article today, the paper
says that 73 percent of Russians now tell VTsIOM pollsters that they are ready to support
Putin if he runs for re-election in 2018, 11 percent more than said so in
April, 22 percent more than a year ago, and 33 percent more than in 2012 when
only 40 percent said they would (ng.ru/editorial/2014-06-24/2_red.html).
At the same time, the editors say,
54 percent of Russians, a clear majority, say that Putin does not have any
competitor now and that they do not see one emerging anytime soon, a clear
return to the sense of the absence of any alternatives that Russian citizens
had felt only a few years earlier.
“A popular politician in a
post-totalitarian society (and Russian society to a large extent remains that)
can use” that sense of an absence of an alternative “to concentrate power in
his own hands,” the editors say, or he can use it “as a mandate for fundamental
change” in the social and political system.
It is clear, “Nezavisimaya” says,
that “the Russian society and state need fundamental transformations,”
especially with regard to political competition and an independent judiciary.
Those today in Russia are “extremely weak.”
A politician with high ratings could change things in that direction,
and many “in the liberal part” of society expected and even continue to expect
this from Putin.
But the editors continue, “the
current political practice of the ruling elite gives ever fewer bases” for
expecting that.
With regard to Putin, they say, “one
can say with confidence that he is not becoming younger. He is not the
president for future decades. In this
situation, the centralization of power and the conversion (again!) of Putin
into the only functioning institution threatens Russia.” At some point before
or after his rule, the country will face the shock of change.
The real issue now, the editors
conclude, is whether Russians view the lack of an alternative to Putin as a bad
thing or a good one, a question that VTsIOM did not ask. If they see it as a
bad thing, then they may press for change.
But if they see it as a good one, “then the prospects for Russian
democracy are quite bleak” indeed.
No comments:
Post a Comment