Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 12 – The real
threat to Russia’s future development, Grigory Golosov argues, lies not in the various
repressive actions Vladimir Putin has taken but in the presidential system
enshrined in the Russian Constitution which makes “any strong president” into “a
potential Putin.”
Writing in the Takiye Dela portal today, the St. Petersburg European University
political scientist says that under the existing constitutional arrangements,
any such president “can not only concentrate all power into his own hands but then
hold onto it as long as he wants.” If Russia is to be a democracy, this must be
changed (takiedela.ru/2017/10/takaya-rossiyavlast/).
Many Russians find
it difficult to imagine that until 1990, their country had no president. Only
in March of that year did Mikhail Gorbachev create and assume the position of
Russian president to protect himself against being ousted by CPSU leaders in
much the same way Nikita Khrushchev had been in 1964, Golosov says.
But even having become president,
Gorbachev ruled over a country that maintained “a fictional parliamentary
system with a party core,” and as a result, his power “hung in the air.” Then in
August 1991, the party leadership tried to take power but failed. And after
that, Gorbachev lost “both stools,” the presidency and the party leadership.
Boris
Yeltsin’s trajectory as president was rather different, Golosov says. He first
had himself elected president of the RSFSR Supreme Soviet and only in June 1991
did he become “the first elected president of Russia.” But despite that, significant changes of
Russian political institutions did not immediately follow.
“Formally,”
Golosov says, “power as before belonged to the soviets and the authority of
Yeltsin was primarily ceremonial. In this regard, the differences between the
statuses of Gorbachev and Yeltsin were almost nonexistent.” But the political
situation was different, and thus their real status was completely so.
“Gorbachev
didn’t need broad governmental authority, but Yeltsin did,” the political
scientist says. The latter’s victory in August 1991 allowed him to “concentrate
in his hands enormous power.” Moreover, “from November 1991 through June 1992,
Yeltsin combined the presidency with the post of head of government of Russia.”
Then
the conflicts between Yeltsin and the Supreme Soviet only grew, leading to “a
miniature civil war in October 1993,” a conflict Yeltsin won. As a result, he was in a position “to dictate
any constitution and to take for himself as much authority as he wanted,”
Golosov continues.
There
were only two limiting factors: Western public opinion which didn’t want to see
a dictatorship established, and Yeltsin’s own lack of interest in domestic
affairs. The Russian constitution that
emerged thus did not fulfill the main task of such documents: “It did not
define the authority of state institutions in a clear and exhaustive manner.”
Indeed,
it made the situation worse by declaring the president “the guarantor of the
Constitution” without specifying what that meant and thus opened the way to a
situation in which “the president could use practically unlimited power” and
override the legal government in anything it did.
“The
1993 Constitution wasn’t written for Vladimir Putin,” Golosov says; “but he
found a way to use it in his own interests.” Semi-presidential systems of the
kind Russian had under Yeltsin tend toward instability, a danger that Putin
ended by moving in ways so that by the early 2000s, “Russia has ceased to be an
electoral democracy” and headed toward authoritarianism.
Semi-presidential
systems give an active leader like Putin an additional “bonus,” the analyst
says. “If the president for some reason must leave his post, he can preserve
almost all the opportunities for influence by becoming head of government.” That
happened in 2008-2011 and it could happen again after 2024.
And
in addition, such systems only encourage a leader to blame all problems on the
government and to engage in the kind of foreign policy adventurism that can win
him support at home, Golosov says.
There
are various ways this situation can be fixed, he argues. Rewriting the
constitution and defining the powers of particular positions and institutions
is one way, something that could lead to the establishment of a parliamentary
system with a figurehead president or that could keep the president as in
France strong in certain areas but not in others.
But
it is essential that the president not remain “’the guarantor of the
Constitution.’ In a normal political system, he is only an official of high
rank.” And the prime minister in such a mixed system should be removed only if
he loses his parliamentary majority not if the president wants that to
happen.
At
the very least, Russians should be discussing how to move toward a more defined
system without waiting for some dramatic breakthrough to a Constitutional
convention. Otherwise the future of the country is bleak even after Putin eventually passes from the scene.
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