Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 15 – Russia’s
intervention in Ukraine has “frozen the development of the Ukrainian
revolution,” but it has not eliminated the need for that revolution to go
forward both to achieve its long-term goals and to deal with the temporary nature
of the alliance between the Maidan and “the ‘patriotic’ part of the Ukrainian
oligarchy collapses, Igor Eidman argues.
According to the Moscow commentator,
“the democratic European ideals of the Maidan cannot be realized within the existing
framework of the system of Ukrainian politics,” because “the political class in
Ukraine (as in Russia) is a hopelessly corrupt oligarchy” (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=539C7260CB690§ion_id=444F8A447242B).
That reality has
been temporarily obscured by what Eidman says is a “temporary” alliance of the
Maidan and patriotic elements of the oligarchy against Russia. But the latter, including
the new Ukrainian president, because of their corruption and style of rule are at
odds with the interests of the Ukrainian people on most issues.
“The ‘Saul’
Poroshenko is hardly going to become ‘St. Paul,’” Eidman argues. But the main
issue is not even that, he continues.
Only Ukrainians themselves, “idealistically motivated people,” as in the
Maidan and again acting on their own and collectively, he says, “will be
capable of realizing in politics the ideals of the revolution.”
At present, the Moscow commentator
suggests, “the participants of the Maidan have paradoxically been deprived of
political representation.” The “unprivileged segment” of the population “has
not yet received anything from the changes” because “real power is in the hands
of the same oligarchy.”
That can be changed “only by the
appearance of a new and political political force outside of the bounds of the
systemic corrupt politics” of Ukraine now.
Most Ukrainians regardless of where they live hate the corrupt bureaucracy
and could come together in “a broad anti-elite, anti-oligarchic, and
anti-bureaucratic movement for democratic reforms.”
A major side benefit of this would
be the support such a movement would have in “the so-called ‘separatist’
regions,” where people feel much the same and where they are “beginning to
understand that no one in Russia needs them.”
Such a
movement, however appalled its members may be by politics as usual, nonetheless
must take part in elections “in order to achieve the realization of their
goals.” To mobilize, they must use the Internet, promote direct democracy, and
even select candidates via the web. That will allow them to do an end run
around the current compromised political class.
The
goals of this movement, Eidman says, must be direct democracy “at all levels,”
expanded local self-government, social and ecological protections, and “a
struggle against the rule of the financial and bureaucratic oligarchy.”
Like
similar movements elsewhere, such a Ukrainian movement would be directed not so
much at the replacement of this or that official but rather at “the radical
transformation of dying institutions” and
their replacement with ones that the population will have a better chance to
control.
Better
local administration must be a key demand, Eidman insists, because “federalization
under Ukrainian conditions would essentially mean feudalization,” in which the
constituent elements of any new federation would “inevitably fall under the
control of local oligarchs” who would run them for their benefit rather than
that of the population.
The
commentator concludes by saying that “only radical democratic reforms and the
creation of a new republic free from the rule of the corrupt bureaucracy and
oligarchy will save Ukraine. And only the Ukrainians themselves will be able to
achieve this,” however hard it may be.
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