Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 27 – The tens of
thousands of Russians who marched in the anti-corruption demonstrations, both officially
permitted and not, yesterday were very different in three ways than their
predecessors who took to the streets in 2011-2012; and these differences should
give the Putin regime pause about the future.
First of all, the protesters were
far younger yesterday than those of 2011-2012 (newsland.com/community/7411/content/pokolenie-putina-vzbuntovalos/5750067)
and far more likely to be people who had not taken part in protests before or
been among the “celebrity” demonstrators such marches have often attracted (republic.ru/posts/81173 and ixtc.org/2017/03/blog-andreya-malgina-novye-pesni-pridumala-zhizn/#more-13937).
That
change suggests not only that the protest potential in Russia has broadened but
is likely to grow over time, and it is thus no accident that the Kremlin
suggested some young people had been paid to march and that some United Russia
representatives in St. Petersburg called for raising the minimum age to protest
(znak.com/2017-03-
27/v_kremle_schitayut_chto_podrostkam_platili_za_uchastie_v_mitingah_protiv_korrupcii).
Second, the protesters are far
angrier than they were and far more likely to be against something such as the
political system and its corruption as a whole than for anything in particular
be it a politician like Aleksey Navalny or a non-Russian cause (rosbalt.ru/blogs/2017/03/27/1602192.html and idelreal.org/a/28393091.html).
From
the point of view of the regime, the fact that the protesters were primarily
against something rather than for has a mixed meaning. On the one hand, it
gives the Kremlin the opportunity to deflect protest by sacrificing or
attacking a subordinate official. And on the other, it means that the
protesters seem less willing to coalesce around alternative people or programs.
And
third – and this reflects both the first and the second – protesters were far
more apocalyptic in their views, talking about their sense of hopeless about
the future and the notion that there is no way out if the current system is not
radically transformed (apn.ru/index.php?newsid=36140,
asiarussia.ru/blogs/15645/ and znak.com/2017-03-26/mitingi_ot_bezyshodnosti_pochemu_lyudi_snova_ichut_otvetov_na_ulice).
That apocalypticism, typical of
young people and of those who have not had experience with protests earlier,
may play into the hands of the Kremlin: it can portray the Navalny movement as “extremist”
at least for the majority of Russians. But it also means that there is an
energy behind the protests that likely means there will be more not future of
them in the future.
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