Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 18 – Two of
Vladimir Putin’s “hybrid” moves concerning elections – his restoration of
single-member districts and his decision to make the ranking of people on party
lists dependent on participation – work against him in ways that he may not yet
imagine, according to Ukrainian analyst Maksim Mikhaylenko.
On the one hand, the return of
single-member districts allows regional leaders to re-enter the political fray
in ways that they were not able to do when all elections were conducted by
party list. And on the other, the
ranking system means that United Russia leaders in the regions have an interest
in boosting participation while the Kremlin is interested in lowering it (dsnews.ua/world/vybory-v-rossii-kak-kreml-ugodil-v-institutsionalnuyu-17092016150000).
These
and Putin’s other “hybrid” concessions after the 2011-2012 protests including
lowering the percentage parties need to get into the Duma and providing
government financing and access to more parties means that behind all the bombast,
there has re-emerged in Russia a real political struggle, albeit behind the scenes
as yet rather than in the streets.
Putin
took these steps, Mikhaylenko argues, because he “doesn’t want to be associated
with the Kim dynasty in North Korea but is still not prepared to proclaim
himself a leader for life in the manner of the sultan of Brunei.” And so he wants to use elections, to be sure
tightly controlled ones, to give himself and his regime the patina of
legitimacy.
But
the concessions the Kremlin leader has made this time around and his demand
that regional leaders not engage in falsification or allow others to falsify
the results may play some evil tricks on him, although it is far from clear how
his signals about falsification will be read outside of Moscow.
There
are two reasons for this, the Kyiv analyst says, allowing half of the Duma
deputies to be elected in single-member districts which returns real power to
regional leaders, and determining the rank on party lists by number of votes,
which encourages precisely the falsification Putin says he opposes.
The
Kremlin clearly wants United Russia to have “a minimum” of 240 seats in the new
Duma, Mikhaylenko says, something that requires managing not just the party
list vote but also contests in the single member districts. That creates
potential problems because as Ukrainians know, “in such a case, two time two
does not always equal four.”
Thus,
the logical question arises, not as to whether serious protests about the
voting will occur. No one expects that today because “Russia is not Ukraine.”
But there may be other events which are “in general less predictable” but
nonetheless “possible,” including the loss of Kremlin control over some of the
new deputies because of the way this election has been conducted.
Mikhaylenko
says he expects that “one way or another,” the party of power will get 250 plus
seats, with the remainder divided among “the loyal others,” the KPRF, the LDPR,
and possibly the SRs. But it is the last
50 deputies which offer the possibility of “intrigue.” Will they be “liberals
or ultra-rightists? And does the future history of Russia depend on them?”
He
suggests that the answer may be both “yes and now. If this answer seems
problematic,” he continues, “it is appropriate to remember that neither in the
last parliament of the USSR nor in the first parliament of Ukraine did
anti-communists form a majority.” But
that, as history shows, quickly became irrelevant.
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