Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 27 – Russians
have many reasons for taking part in elections, but using their votes to
influence who wins is one of the least important, according to a study by
Mikhail Chernysh of the Moscow Institute of Sociology that has been summarized
today by the Tolkovatel portal (ttolk.ru/2016/12/27/деды-голосовали/).
For the majority of Russians, the
portal says the Chernysh study concludes, “elections are a cargo cult: people
take part in them because everyone else does;” and they view them as “an
important ceremony.” Thus, most view those who refuse to take part as engaged
in unacceptable “protest behavior.”
Only 20 percent go to the polls with
the idea of backing a particular candidate, be it one selected by the powers
that be or an opposition figure. Approximately
40 percent think voting is something they have to do, although approximately 20
percent think that they can choose whether to do so and whether it is desirable
or required in a particular case.
“The larger the population point it,”
the portal continues, “the less obligatory its residents view elections,” with the
lowest share of such people being in Moscow and St. Petersburg. At the other
extreme, rural areas are dominated by people who view voting as something that
they must do, a pattern that gives an automatic advantage to the party of
power.
“Old Soviet stereotypes have
retained their influence in rural areas and partially in small cities, where
the structure of power relations, if it has undergone change, remains much as
it was because it hasn’t touched the deep bases of the relationship of the authorities
and the population,” Tolkovatel says.
Urban voters feel less obligated to
take part, but they are more differentiated than are their rural counterparts
regarding elections at different levels. Urban Russians feel more required to
take part in presidential elections than in parliamentary or local ones. About
a third of all Russians nonetheless feel they should take part in all
elections.
There are also generational differences.
Older people in cities are more likely to feel required to vote than are more
junior cohorts.
Only a fifth take part in order to
support a particular candidate, and only one in 16 – 6.4 percent – do so to
support a political party, and that pattern holds for those who support the
ruling party. And three percent now participate not to vote for someone or some
party but to vote against one or the other or both.
Drawing on Chernysh’s research, the
portal draws three conclusions: First, most Russians and especially those in
rural areas retain “a quasi-Soviet attitude toward elections as a carnival
measure,” an attitude local officials encourage because it makes it easier for
them to deliver the percentages those above them want.
Second, there is now “a relatively
small segment” of the population which picks and chooses when to participate on
the basis of whether its members believe voting will do them any good. And third, there is emerging, at least in the
capitals, a more rational and skeptical attitude toward elections as such.
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