Paul Goble
Staunton,
February 14 – Up to now, most analysts have assumed that polls conducted in the
Russian Federation overstate the amount of support that Russians have for
Vladimir Putin, with those surveyed either afraid to give a different answer or
convinced that declaring that they back the Kremlin leader is the only “correct”
response.
But
now that Putin’s poll numbers are falling, the editors of Nezavisimaya gazeta say, Russians may be telling pollsters what
they think the latter want to hear now, even if they continue to support Putin,
much as some Americans did with regard to Donald Trump in the run-up to the
last American presidential election (ng.ru/editorial/2019-02-13/2_7506_red.html).
In the US at that time, as
subsequent investigations and the vote itself shows, many who supported Trump
did not report that to pollsters, possibly on the assumption that those
conducting the surveys didn’t want to hear it. Now, one must ask, the editors
of the Moscow paper say, whether “a Trump effect” is occurring in Russia.
Indeed, some poll
results suggest that this may be the case. The Levada Center asked Russians
whether they believe other Russians report honestly to pollsters their views on
Putin. Twenty-eight percent said that “the
majority or practically all hide their true thoughts and attitudes.” The saying
this has gone up 10 percent since last year.
Most commentators nonetheless
continue to assume that “citizens think about the authorities and about Putin
worse than they are prepared to acknowledge,” the editors say. But that may not
be the case. Instead, they may now be saying what they think others want them
to say given Putin’s much-trumped decline in popularity.
The American experience is instructive
in this regard. In 1982, polls and exit interviews showed that Tom Bradley, a black
American, would win. “But his white competitor did. In interviews with others, the
voters wanted to look progressive,” but when it came time to vote, they acted
like “real conservatives.”
“Approximately the same thing was
observed during the last presidential elections in the US,” Nezavisimaya gazeta says. Americans appeared
reluctant to say that they were going to vote for Trump even though that is was
they ultimately did.
Nothing like this has yet been
observed or documented in Russia, the paper continues; but that doesn’t mean
that similar things couldn’t happen there.
It is entirely possible now that “Russians in what they say want to
appear more liberal than they are in fact,” exactly the same pattern as in the
US.
The editors note that Vladislav
Surkov in his recent article spoke about “the deep people,” a term of art which
is a synonym to “the silent majority,” a phenomenon “familiar to historians and
anthropologists.” And to the extent that
such a thing now exists in Russia, it could lead to poll results that will
mislead, but mislead in just the opposite way that many assume.
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