Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 29 – In the run-up to
the presidential elections, Russian opposition groups divided between those who
argued that participation in the voting was a mistake because there was no
chance to break through and it legitimated the Putin regime and those who
argued it was important because it helped mobilize an otherwise inert population
to take part in politics.
But with regard to the upcoming elections
of September 9 when gubernatorial elections will take place in 24 federal
subjects and local parliamentary elections in 17, that debate is irrelevant,
Igor Yakovenko says. Because Russia is a
diverse country, both methods can be useful and even supplement one another (afterempire.info/2018/05/28/elections2018/).
The opposition has almost no chance
to win any gubernatorial race, and in those cases, it may make sense to boycott
the voting in order not to give the Putin regime a victory. But it has a real
chance to elect some people to regional parliaments – and it should use that to
the fullest, the Moscow commentator says.
That is because, he continues, the
existence of even “a single honest deputy” gives the opposition the chance to
raise questions of the regime that will expose its criminal nature, such as
about the failed military adventure in Syria that is claiming ever more Russian
lives. A deputy can pose questions to the defense ministry that an ordinary
citizen cannot.
If an opposition deputy were elected
to the Transbaikal legislative assembly, he could sent a question to the
defense ministry about “what the four dead Transbaikal residents were doing in
Syria and how Sergeant Igor Mikhailov and his comrade Sergey Yelin who were
buried [earlier this week] in China suddenly turned out to be ‘military advisors’?”
Because of that possibility,
Yakovenko says, “arguments within the opposition between supporters of
participation in elections and their opponents [which] long ago acquired the harshness
and intolerance toward opponents characteristic of religious disputes” have no
place in the upcoming vote.
“The only wise approach in this
situation is not to try to convince one another because this is impossible” but
rather adopt a case-by-case approach. “It is important to recognize that
various methods of struggle with this personalist regime of a fascist type must
supplement one another.”
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