Paul Goble
Staunton,
August 21 – After falling since the election, Vladimir Putin’s poll numbers
have stabilized, with surveys by both the Public Opinion Foundation and VTsIOM
showing a slight uptick, a pattern that experts explain by a decline in
attention to the pension issue and a growing acceptance that this reform is
going to happen, Nezavisimaya gazeta
says.
In
a lead article today, the editors of the Moscow paper add that it should be
noted that “several months after the presidential election, the authorities are
hardly concerned by the sharp summer fall in ratings and are focused on
stabilizing it. The decline was expected and probably even programmed in” (ng.ru/editorial/2018-08-20/2_7292_red.html).
These “indicators of trust and
approval and the electoral rating are political currency, a resource which
there is no reason to save but many reasons to spend” when the regime needs it,
the paper continues. “Pension reform is
a rare case over the last 18 years when the authorities intentionally spent
part of this rating” for strategic purposes.
“The authorities,” Nezavisimaya gazeta says, “are changing the structure of
budgetary spending, including pension payments in order to build up means for
major socio-economic and infrastructure projects. If everything goes according
to plan, then by the end of the six-year term, the state and the ruling elite
will be able to recover for themselves the numbers which they have voluntarily
surrendered today.”
The
paper continues: “the stabilization of Putin’s rating has occurred at the level
of 60 to 63 percent,” figures that are still very high and ones that any
Western leader could “only dream of.”
That gives Putin the opportunity to carry out several unpopular measures
at once and “still remain the favorite of any electoral race.”
Indeed,
the fact that trust in the government is approximately 30 percent lower than
trust in the president “gives Putin space for maneuver. At a critical moment,
he can simply make changes in the council of ministers” as was the case in the earlier
period of his rule in response to anger about the monetarization of benefits.
Moreover,
Nezavisimaya gazeta says, the rating
declines Putin experienced this summer must be put in the Russian context.
Elsewhere such declines would force change, but in Russia, that is not the case
because the various political parties still have ratings far lower than Putin
and thus aren’t in a position to make press their case.
And
the editors thus conclude that “if elections were held now, the opposition
would have an agenda, but despite that, the powers that be do just as well as
they would have were Putin’s rating were still at 75 percent.” Thus overreading the changes in Putin’s
ratings is almost certainly a mistake.
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