Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 22 – As one would
expect after a crushing electoral defeat, some Russian opposition leaders are
again talking about joining forces by combining existing political parties into
some new ones (nakanune.ru/news/2018/03/21/22501873/
and politsovet.ru/58409-pochemu-u-sobchak-i-gudkova-ne-poluchitsya-partiya.html).
But as Moscow commentator Andrey
Frants points out, “in the present-day Russian Federation, there are no real
parties,” only “phantoms which are called upon to imitate ‘civic activity’” and
make it easier for the Kremlin to rule the country. According to him, the
population if not the analysts understand that (publizist.ru/blogs/109989/24044/-).
The clearest indication both that
the existing parties, except in part the KPRF, are not real parties and that
talk about their reforming into new ones comes from Nakanune commentator Yevgeny Rychkov who points out that these “attempts
at creating a single opposition bloc are possible [only] because this
corresponds to the Kremlin’s goals” (nakanune.ru/articles/113795/).
Not only would
such an arrangement have the effect of eliminating the KPRF as a separate unit
and thus its ability to promote left-wing ideas, Rychkov says; but it would
increase the Kremlin’s ability to manage the Duma by creating “’semi-party’
which would have all the appearances of an opposition force but no chances of
coming to power.”
And it would be consistent with what
some in the Kremlin were discussing six years ago. But up to now, the
Presidential Administration has not signaled what it wants to do, yet another
indication the analyst says that the country doesn’t have real parties but
rather politicians playing roles scripted for them by the Kremlin.
If these people were serious, the analyst
suggests, they would be focusing on creating parties rather than talking about
combining the things they now have.
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