Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 28 – In the latest
example of Vladimir Putin’s proclivity for saying that what is true for
everyone else is not true for him, the Kremlin leader told the Valdai Club that
around the world people are tired of entrenched elites but that Russians are
not yet tired of him -- even though he has been in power far longer than most.
Putin has made his career by
alternatively insisting that he and Russia have every right to do what he
interprets others to be doing or have done and claiming that none of the rules
of the international system apply in his case, however valuable these rules
have proven in preserving the peace and protecting the rights of countries and
peoples.
Both of these claims and even more
Putin’s oscillation between them have the potential to cause trouble for him
even if in the first instance they lead to problems for others. That is because by speaking about others in
this way, the Kremlin leader unintentionally causes Russians and others to
reflect about what his words mean when applied to himself.
Putin began his comments in this
regard by a snide remark about the US not being “a banana republic” and then
observing that Donald Trump, for all his “extravagance,” has not behaved in a “senseless
way.” Instead, the Kremlin leader said, Trump “represents the interests of that
part of society which is tired of the elites who have had power for decades” (vz.ru/politics/2016/10/27/840601.html).
And population has
good reason to feel that way, Putin continued.
“There exists a deficit in strategic thinking and an ideology about the future,
something that gives rise to an atmosphere of uncertainty … The future doesn’t
call people; it frightens them, because people do not see real possibilities and
mechanisms to change anything and to influence the course of events.”
“Yes,” he said, “formally all the
attributes of democracy are present in contemporary countries: elections,
freedom of speech, access to information, the right to express one’s opinion.
However, even in so-called developed democracies, the majority of citizens do
not have real influence on political processes.”
Because people feel this, Putin
said, they “vote not as they are advised to do by the official and respectable
media and not as the so-called systemic parties recommend. But the social
movements which not long ago were considered too left or too right of center
have come to the foreground, pushing aside the political heavyweights.”
Putin’s portrayal of the situation
in these countries could with even greater force be applied to his country
under his rule. Indeed, his words about what is happening could have been taken
from the commentaries of many systemic and extra-systemic opponents of the
Kremlin’s system.
But, of course, Putin has no
interest in having what he says about others applied to himself, not only in
terms of popular disaffection with someone who has been in power so long and
who rarely listens to the population but also in terms of his own personal
future in office.
Consequently, he was dismissive of
suggestions from the Valdai moderator that perhaps it would be a good idea for
him to retire. Putin said that he too “wants
this when the time comes. This is very correct, it is what is necessary, but I
still am not on a pension but rather am an active leader of a great power” (newizv.ru/politics/2016-10-27/248434-putin-poobeshal-vovremja-vyjti-na-pensiju.html).
In short, Putin
has no plans to leave and no plans to reflect the will of the Russian people
except as he personally defines it or to play by the rules except as he
understands them, the classic position of a dictator in what can only be
described using his very own terms of a “hybrid” political system.
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