Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 17 – The Kremlin
has no good reason to fear a boycott: polls show that only four or five percent
of Russian voters are prepared to take that step, but Sergey Shelin says the
polls also show that the share of Russians who want real change is far larger
and something the Russian leadership is increasingly uncomfortable with.
A month before the presidential elections,
the Rosbalt commentator says, only a tiny proportion of the population says it
favors a boycott; but despite that, the Kremlin is worried by what it views as
a growing share of the population desirous of real change and thus directly challenges
the incumbent regime (rosbalt.ru/blogs/2018/02/16/1682971.html).
Polls suggest,
Shelin continues, that only about nine percent of the electorate favors a
boycott or plans to take part in it, while more than half (51 percent) say they
are opposed, some because they support the current president but also a smaller
number who think that it is useless. At the same time, 35 percent are “neutral”
as far as any boycott effort is concerned.
Why then are the bosses so worried
about this possibility? Shelin asks rhetorically. Obviously, things could
change in the coming weeks, but that is unlikely. Instead, the reason lies in the
nature of Russian voters and how they view elections.
“A great deal becomes clear if one
conditionally divides [Russians] into two groups,” he suggests, “those who
relate to March 18 approximately as they did at one time to Soviet elections,
as a boring and insignificant but required ritual, and those who take [this election]
seriously.”
Within the second group, of course,
are some who “intend to go to the polls not at the order of the bosses but with
sincere joy that with a pure heart they can give their vote to Vladimir Putin.
Unfortunately, how many of these there are is unknown.” That isn’t something
that any Russian pollster wants to find out.
But Shelin suggests that even this
mass of loyalists “isn’t burning with such enthusiasm.” But one can say how
many want a change in direction at the top: At a minimum, the 15 percent who
say they will vote for systemic opposition candidates, and the nine or ten
percent “who approve a boycott or who have already decided to take part in it.
In the Kremlin, they equate the
boycotters with Navalny supporters, and that means that if he were allowed to
take part and if things changed only slightly, Aleksey Navalny would receive more
votes than all the “opposition” candidates put together, a remarkable
indication of the desire for change.
And that in turn undermines what has
been the chief goal of the Kremlin: that “the main anti-systemic politician will
be marginalized.” That clearly has not
happened, and thus the regime is worried.
That emboldens the systemic opposition candidates and creates a
situation in which the idea of a boycott has begun to “dictate” the actions of the
powers that be.”
That is, Shelin suggests, “the main
surprise of the current campaign,” a surprise that the Kremlin clearly doesn’t
welcome.
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