Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 28 – A key problem
with the Russian system is that the federal legislature can pass laws on almost
anything, thus putting at risk the rights and freedoms of Russian citizens and
a reminder that a Rechtsstaat is insufficient
to protect the rights and freedoms of Russian citizens, Aleksandr Vvedensky
says.
What is essential, the Moscow
commentator says, is that the legislators at the center be restricted in the
subjects on which they can pass laws so that they do not violate the
constitution and be further restricted by federal arrangements that will give regional
governments exclusive powers in certain areas (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5C9A7A21197F0).
Unless both things happen, Russia
will be able to give the impression of being a state ruled by law but in fact
be one in which the laws themselves will be so arbitrary and repressive that individuals
will not be able to have any confidence that their rights and freedoms will be
protected.
Vvedensky is blunt: “The cause of repressions
in the USSR, the cause of the existence at preset of repressive legislation in
Russia and the cause of the limitations on democracy lie in the expansive
legislative powers of the federal center which seize all spheres of the life of
society.” For progress, the center’s legislative
powers must be restricted and divided with the regions.
Otherwise, no one will be able to
count on laws being a guarantee of rights and freedoms because they can always
be used against those rights and freedoms when the powers that be require it.
According to the commentator, that
is the lesson of the American experience: The Congress is restricted to a
specific list of functions on which it can pass laws and further restricted by
powers that are explicitly reserved to the states and the people. Russia must adopt something similar if it
hopes to be free.
Vvedensky says that the constitution
must enumerate just what legislatures at various levels can and cannot do. He offers
such a list but devotes most of his essay to the problems of federalization,
convinced that it even more than constitutional restricts can rein in federal
legislators intent on passing laws about anything the executive wants.
Federalization requires the breaking
up of the power vertical of the federal center and the creation of “local centers
of power in the states and municipalities independent of the federal center on
the basis of elections.” Too often people think a Rechtsstaat is enough, but
Russia’s recent experience shows that not to be the case.
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