Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 13 – Russia is
experiencing “a clash of nostalgias,” Vladimir Pastukhov says; but the one the
liberals are offering cannot compete or hope to defeat the nostalgia the
Kremlin is peddling, just one more reason why the liberal opposition must
change or risk becoming irrelevant in the future.
In “Novaya gazeta,” the Russian
historian at the London School of Economics points out that playing on
nostalgia is one of the most powerful means politicians have of promoting their
own agendas for the present and the future, but their success depends on what
they say they are nostalgic for (novayagazeta.ru/articles/2016/10/12/70157-stolknovenie-nostalgiy).
After the turmoil of the last decade
of the 20th century, he suggests, “’the extra-systemic opposition’”
has been promoting nostalgia for the early 1990s while the Kremlin has been
pushing the much more widely shared nostalgia for its and the population’s
understanding of the late Soviet period.
“But if nostalgia
for the USSR is widespread … nostalgia for the 1990s is encountered quite
rarely and is confined to a narrow ‘stratum,’ which is almost professionally
involved in ‘opposition activity,’” Pastukhov continues. Not surprisingly and
regardless of official manipulation of the voting process, the Kremlin is thus
set to always win this competition.
The Russian historian notes that “although
the Russian opposition thinks of itself as a revolutionary force, in fact it is
situation on the position of ‘the White Movement’ of 1919: it continues to
believe in ‘political idols’ which have long fallen and lost the trust of the
leaders” and can hope for success only if there is “’foreign intervention.’”
“By definition,” Pastukhov argues, “the
political agenda of the Russian ‘liberal’ opposition cannot be successful: it
is quite simple to look at what really interests the population and what that
group is offering it.”
The Russian opposition “completely
ignores the successes of the current powers that be – despite the fact that in
the eyes of the socially undefended strata of the population, these appear
extremely significant,” especially if one compares where Russians are today
with where they were in the first few years of the 1990s.
Moreover, the Russian historian
continues, the opposition compounds its problems by talking about theft and
corruption while “not devoting attention to the preservation of the level of
live of the population that has been achieved not to speak about promising something
more for the future.” In particular, it won’t address any revision of
privatization.
“The program of the ‘liberal
opposition to a large extent is ‘destructive’” in that it wants to destroy what
is rather than build on it. And that
means that even those who might find a real liberal program attractive has, in this
“clash of nostalgias,” nowhere to go but to support the current authorities.
In fact, Pastukhov suggests, “opposition
parties in Russia are not parties in reality. They are social clubs or even
pressure groups with their own narrow agendas which are more concerned with the
preservation of their ‘internal’ ideals and retaining the supporters they
already have” rather than reaching out to get more.
When the opposition criticizes the authorities
for “an inability to change themselves, they themselves consider in the deputy
of their political soul that adapting to the demands of the population, that
is, to the electorate is a deeply vicious thing and the evolution of ideals is
the equivalent of betrayal.”
If the Russian opposition is to
succeed, Pastukhov says, it will have to create “a program oriented not on the
past but on the future and one that takes into consideration the real views of
voters, including their misconceptions, phobias and prejudices.”
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