Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 19 – Earlier this
year, Russia’s major parties pledged not to exploit ethnic issues in their
election campaigns, but a survey by Natalya Totskoynova and Ivan Kovalyov shows
that they have not avoided them and may do so even more frequently as the
campaign heats up.
The two Nazaccent portal journalists
cite what they say are statements by the parties and their leaders that
indicate how these parties are positioning themselves at present (nazaccent.ru/content/21346-proverka-vyborami.html).
Vladimir Zhirinovsky’s Liberal
Democratic Party of Russia (LDPR) has violated its pledge most openly. It has
listed among its official campaign slogans two which show where it is headed:
“Stop denigrating ethnic Russians” and “For the Russian People,” although party
leaders routinely insist that the LDPR “isn’t against anyone” and “doesn’t
promote radical views.”
This is nothing new for
Zhirinovsky’s party. His candidates ran for the sixth Duma under the slogan
“LDPR is for the Ethnic Russians” and for the fourth Duma with the slogans
“Russians are Tired of Waiting” and “Remember Ethnic Russians and be concerned
about the poor.”
The Communist Party of the Russian
Federation (KPRF) has also talked about nationality problems even though it too
pledged not to do so. Party leader
Gennady Zyuganov, for example, in a recent speech argued that “the fifth column
continues to promote Russophobia and anti-Sovietism,” implicitly linking the
two.
The Rodina (“Motherland”) Party has
also raised the nationality issue but largely in terms of immigration
questions. Its leader Alekssey Zhuravlyev,
for example, has said that “migration must serve the economic interests of the
citizens of Russia rather than harm them … and foreigners must not be allowed
to drive our fellow citizens from their workplaces.”
The Just Russia Party (SR) has
spoken in a rather different tone that the others. Its program declares that
“we are convinced opponents of racial and national exclusiveness, of any
manifestations of chauvinism and xenophobia, and attempts to limit the
opportunities for the development of the national culture of the peoples of
Russia.”
And the ruling United Russia (ER)
party has come closer to keeping its promise of not raising the nationality
issue. It hasn’t talked about it at all, Tokstoynova and Kovalyev say. The only
exception so far was Vladimir Putin’s remark that the party’s policies are
based on “respect for the traditions, culture, and history of our
multi-national people, a deep understanding of the state interests of Russia,
and the ability to competently and effectively defend them.”
It is far from clear, hwoever, how
much these different positions will affect the parties’ electoral outcomes even
in single member districts, given the widespread use of administrative measures
by the authorities to ensure that those whom the powers that be want to win in
fact do so.
But the differences may matter at
the margins, especially in the 26 districts where the parties are competitive (rbc.ru/politics/18/07/2016/578b94db9a7947284a4b858e?from=main). It will be interesting to see whether the
parties turn to or away from the nationality question in the days ahead, and
Nazaccent.ru pledges to do so.
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