Paul Goble
Staunton,
July 19 – Three sociologists concluded in May that Russia does not now face any
risk of a color revolution; but in doing so, they came up with a question to
which so far no one has an answer: Can Putin govern the country in which no one
revolts but in which everyone hates the regime?
Sergey
Belanovsky of the Russian Academy of Economics and State Service, one of the
three (the other two were Anastasiya Nikolskaya and Mikhail Dmitriyev), says
they looked into the possibility of a color revolution in Russia because of the
general collapse in public approval for Putin and his regime (theins.ru/opinions/110401).
They concluded, he
continues, that support for Putin has been falling for most of the last decade
– the upsurge after the Anschluss of Crimea was a temporary blip, almost like
one from a narcotic, he says – because Russians have increasingly felt that the
Kremlin leader has failed to keep his promises and they are asking themselves
why he should remain in office.
In addition, Belanovsky says, the
decline in support for Putin reflects the Russian leader’s obvious “lack of a
clear strategic vision. Someone has
written,” he observes, “about the schizophrenic divide in Putin between the
idea of ‘back to the USSR’ and ‘forward to capitalism,’” a metaphor he says he
finds himself in agreement with.
The decline in support for Putin,
his increasing age, and the prospect that someone else will have to become
president in 2024 is leading ever more people both in the general population
and among elites to talk about who and what will come next, an increasingly
fraught problem because of how long Putin has been in office.
Some analysts have argued,
Belanovsky says, that this combination of factors could trigger “’an orange
revolution’” in Russia; but he and his colleagues in surveys in Moscow,
Vladimir and Gus-Khrustalny two months ago concluded that in fact “there are no
signs of such a revolution.”
Putin made his own situation worse
by failing to get rid of the even more unpopular Dmitry and his government and
for bringing into it such odious figures as the disgraced Vitaly Mutko. When he
did that, the sociologists found, Putin himself destroyed any hope that most
Russians had for positive change anytime soon.
Nonetheless, most are against a
revolution convinced that whatever they do, “nothing will be changed and that
it is better than all remain as it is” rather than take the risk that things
could get much worse. If a charismatic opposition leader emerged, that could
change overnight, Belanovsky says; but the prospects for that are still
relatively small.
But their most important finding,
the sociologist says, is the emergence of “a strange phenomenon which required deeper
investigation. Despite superficial calm and general apathy, “negativism toward
the authorities and a demand for radical and decisive measures is growing” across
Russia.
And that raises a question that
political science textbooks do not have an answer for, he continues. “Is it
possible to govern a country where no one will revolt” at least over
countrywide issues “but all totally hate the powers that be?”
Most Russian analysts, Belanovsky suggests, would predict
either the eventual emergence of “an orange revolution” or “stagnation … with
ever growing negativism” and the decay of various social structures. Neither,
however, appears that likely; and that raises the questions: is a third outcome
possible?”
No
one can be sure, but the course of the future development depends in large
measure, the sociologist suggests, on the regime’s ability to pay its officials
and siloviki, something that it may not be able to do given its desperate
search for cash from other groups in the Russian population.
If
the regime’s funds eventually do run out, then some kind of “orange revolution”
becomes possible if a leader emerges to organize and direct the anger of the
population. That risk is clearly on the minds of the Putin regime, Belanovsky
argues.
“What
must the state do to avoid a revolution?” According to the sociologist, it must
“radically restructure the state” by handing over vastly more power to the
municipalities so that Russians will see a direct connection between the taxes
they pay and the better roads and social services they need.
According
to Belanovsky, “reforms of that type are very complicated and require serious
advance preparation. But the time for this has almost run out.” The current
proposals before the government don’t really touch this issue. To avoid
disaster, he says, the government must “now take up reforms in a serious way.”
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