Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 8 – Vladimir Putin
clearly expects that Russians will be put off by and avoid any organization his
regime designates as “a foreign agent” because it receives money from
abroad. But the experience of the Levada
Center, one of the institutions he has classed in this way, suggests that the
epithet itself may not be having that effect.
In the course of a discussion about
recent poll results on declines in the Russian standard of living, Lev Gudkov,
the Center’s director said that “no more than one percent of our respondents in
connection with this status expressed to sociologists of the agency distrust by
refusing to speak with our representatives” (svpressa.ru/society/article/158124/).
If
Gudkov’s experience is shared by other institutions Putin has sought to
demonize in this way, it may mean that the Kremlin’s efforts in this direction
are failing and that Russians view this as a kind of inside-the-ring-road
politicking that has little or nothing to do with their real lives.
And
that in turn raises the more general question about how much Russians actually
care about other Kremlin labels, even if they are prepared to give lip service
to official polltakers rather than risk censure or the loss of benefits or
position. Such attitudes might mean many Russians are far more indifferent to
what the regime says that surveys often suggest.
Gudkov’s
other comments point to that conclusion. He says that there is a widespread
opinion that Russians are unwilling to share their views on political issues
even anonymously. “But,” he says, “pay attention to the fact that as soon as one
talks about … corruption in the highest reaches of the state” and about the
suffering of the population as a result of government policies, individuals “begin
to speak directly about what they think.”
If
they are asked directly whether they are afraid to answer certain questions,
Russians overwhelmingly respond that they aren’t. But deeper studies suggest, Gudkov continues,
that about 10 to 12 percent are “really afraid” to say things they believe the
authorities would not approve of. The rest aren’t.
Gudkov
also commented on the widespread view that United Russia won an “unqualified”
victory in the recent Duma elections. He said that “in fact, only 26 percent”
of all those with the right to vote cast their ballots for it this time around,
10 percent less than the figure in 2011.
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