Paul Goble
Staunton,
October 5 – The Kremlin’s approach to Russia’s regions is increasingly a
failure, generating “one failure after another,” with losses in the elections
followed by inexplicable and unjustified cadre changes, a pattern that suggests
that “new mistakes” are likely soon, according to Yekaterinburg commentator
Aleksey Shaburov.
The
failure of Kremlin gubernatorial candidates in four regions is itself “not the result
of an incorrect regional policy,” he says, “but only the beginning of a serious
crisis in this sphere.” And that danger has only been intensified by the
Kremlin’s approach to these failures (politsovet.ru/60506-pochemu-regionalnaya-politika-kremlya-dala-sboy.html).
For Khakasia, the Kremlin named an
official of the ministry for the North Caucasus, something consistent with its
past practice. “But this time, Putin directly said that he was appointing this
individual, Mikhail Razvozzhayev for only a month, after which he would be
offered work in Moscow.:
One clearly must not understand how
things work in the regions to make such a declaration and take such an action,
Shaburov says. No leader who is only going to be in place a month can win over
the population or reach the accords with elites that solving the problems there
will require. The first will ignore him; the second will wait him out.
For St. Petersburg, the Kremlin
removed Georgy Poltavenko as governor even though his term of office ends a
year from now and installed Aleksandr Beglov who is only three years his junior.
It appears the Kremlin “has doubts about Poltavenko’s ability to be reelected,
but even if that is the case, why remove him now?”
It isn’t clear that Beglov can win
over the people in St. Petersburg and win, or even that he will not face serious
challengers a year from now. And that again gives rise to the sense that “this
decision was taken in a hurry and panic” rather than the result of any careful
calculation of costs and benefits.
And for Primorsky kray, there are
also problems aplenty. The Kremlin installed Oleg Kozhemyakov who has already
headed three regions. “His appointment says that the Kremlin does not have
anyone whom it could throw into such responsible position” and therefore can
only rotate people.
All three cases suggest, of course,
that “the former Kremlin tactic of appointing outsiders and even accidental
people into a region no longer works.”
But they also suggest – and this is more serious – that “the Kremlin
itself does not understand this and intends to continue to act in the very same
way in the future.”
The appointment of the former body
guard of the president to be governor of Astrakhan Oblast shows that to this
day, “the federal powers as before consider that a governor personally loyal to
Putin is better than any of the local politicians.”
That approach indeed worked “for a
long time,” based as it was on “the indifference of the population and the willingness
of regional elites to go along. “But in the middle of 2018, the attitudes [of both]
changed” as a result of the pension reform and other Moscow actions that have led
the population to engage in protest action and regional elites to follow their
lead as well.
Only a local
politician could successfully address the dissatisfactions of the population
and calm the elites, someone who “has the credit of rust and ties with the
regional establishment,” Shaburov says.
But precisely such politicians are most unacceptable for the Kremlin
because the probability is very great that they will begin to play an independent
role.”
For the first time in a long time,
the federal center faces a real choice between turning to a local politician or
continuing to use outsiders. “Obviously, the powers that be are choosing the second
course and do not intend to turn from it. [But] if the situation in the country
doesn’t change, then by the next gubernatorial elections, the number of
regional crises will only grow.”
Appointing body guards or Moscow
officials won’t stop that. The center may try to use propaganda, force or
foreign policy actions to “save the situation.”
But in the current environment in the regions, Shaburov suggests, those
normally reliable methods may not work as well as they did in the past.
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