Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 25 – The decline
in support for Vladimir Putin has attracted far more attention than the sharper
fall in backing for the pro-Kremlin United Russia, but that is a mistake, the
editors of Nezavisimaya gazeta say,
because few Russians think they’ll be voting for Putin soon if at all while all
know there’ll be elections in which they can vote against United Russia.
And that in turn means, the editors
say, the Kremlin needs to decide how or if it wants to save United Russia,
whose “victories” many will assume were possible only by the application of
administrative measures or whose losses will confront the center with problems
in 2019 and even more in the Duma vote in 2021 (ng.ru/editorial/2019-01-24/2_7491_red.html).
It should be
obvious to everyone, the lead article continues, that it doesn’t make any
difference whether a governor is from the United Russia Party or from one of
the three other systemic parties, the KPRF, the LDPR or Just Russia. Anyone elected as a candidate of the latter
quickly becomes part of the system.
That means at
least two things. On the one hand, the Kremlin can pick and choose whom to
support on the basis of who is likely to win, confident that it can control the
behavior of the individual chosen. And
on the other, the center can leave the issue of regional or local parliamentary
elections to local party cells rather than trying to control everything.
Most of the problems in the regions
arise not because of the Kremlin’s actions but because “of the domination in
the federal subjects or one or another groups who do not want to give up their
monopoly on power.” Thus, it is not to be excluded that Moscow’s introduction
of outsiders is “an attempt to change that situation.”
The Kremlin will achieve far more,
the editors suggest, if it chooses its fights carefully rather than assumes
that it has to ensure United Russia wins in every case. Indeed, tying itself too closely to a party
that has become the target of anger among opposition groups and the population
is an almost certain way to lose.
The mayoral and gubernatorial
elections this year won’t matter that much, Nezavisimaya gazeta suggests, but
they will set the stage for the vastly more important Duma contests in 2021, an
election that the Kremlin will have little choice but to listen to unless it
intends to dispense with voting altogether, a high risk strategy few now think
possible.
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