Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 25 – In 2000,
Alexander Rahr published a book describing Vladimir Putin as “a German in the
Kremlin.” His words appear more
prophetic and more disturbing than the Russian-German analyst imagined as the
Kremlin leader is increasingly adopting an approach that recalls another German
leader, Adolf Hitler.
Until now, most people assumed that
Putin used the word “optimization” as a euphemism for his cutbacks in health
care and other social services. But now it has become clear that he really is
using it in the sense the Nazi leader did when he spoke about “Gleichschaltung,”
the standardization and subordination to the state of all political, economic
and social institutions.
Historians have long used that term
to describe the ways in which Hitler proceeded to destroy all independent
activity in Germany; and they have extended it to other authoritarian states as
well. But now, at least after Putin’s
words on Friday, it is entirely appropriate to extend it to the country he now heads.
At a meeting with the leaders of the
systemic parties on Friday, Putin said that the time had come to think about
how to “optimize” Russia’s party system by eliminating minor parties so that
Russians will have a real chance to choose among major ones and how to do that
without violating “the principles of democracy”
(tass.ru/politika/3648670).
As so often when dictators want to
move in such directions, calls for taking this or that step that they
themselves want often are voiced by others. The leader then expresses surprise
and says that clearly this is something that must be addressed. That is exactly what happened on Friday.
Sergey Mironov, the head of Just
Russia, complained at the meeting that the minor parties had taken away votes
from the major parties and, because these smaller parties did not reach the
five percent barrier for participation in the Duma, left the Russians who voted
for them without representation there.
Putin responded, according to TASS,
that “this is the first time he had heard that there might have become too many
parties. He noted that ‘at one time he had been told’ that there were two few
parties and that a sign of democracy is an unlimited number of parties having
the right to take part in elections.”
The Kremlin leader continued by
saying that ‘when the powers that be decided to permit all to take part in
elections, they wanted to assess ‘the political landscape.’” Now, Putin said,
that landscape is clear; and so the decision to allow all parties to take part
can be revisited and the number of parties “optimized.”
That is entirely appropriate, the Russian
leader said, but he reiterated that “such steps must not undermine the essence
of democracy. Let us accurately think about and analyze the experience of other
countries without hurrying and take a corresponding decision about public and
transparent discussions.”
That Putin may have been planning to
reduce the number of parties after the Duma vote has long been rumored -- see windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2016/09/will-russia-soon-cease-to-have-president.html
– although his orchestration of the overwhelming victory of United Russia might
have seemed to make that unnecessary.
However, if one understands that “optimization”
is not simply a euphemism for “cuts” but is in fact Putin’s translation into
Russian of Hitler’s “Gleichschaltung” then the likelihood of a Russian party
system entirely organized from and controlled by the Kremlin increases, as does
the threat this poses to any hope for democracy and freedom in Russia today.
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