Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 19 – More than a
million Russians – nearly one percent of the population -- have sent in questions
for Vladimir Putin’s “direct line” program tomorrow (sovsekretno.ru/news/rossiyane-otpravili-bolee-milliona-vopros-na-pryamuyu-liniyu-s-putinym/). That allows him
and his staff to be highly selective in what queries he will respond to.
In the past, the Kremlin leader has
used such occasions to reinforce his status as the good tsar who can intervene
and correct the mistakes of the bad boyars; and there will certainly be
examples of this given that many of the appeals request him to do just that
(e.g., idelreal.org/a/30008089.html, idelreal.org/a/30008131.html and business-gazeta.ru/article/428405).
But in the current environment where
his support in the population is clearly ebbing (censoru.net/36469-putinskij-rezhim-slabeet-na-glazah.html),
Putin’s effort to continue to portray himself as sufficiently powerful to
assume responsibility for everything could backfire, regardless of the
carefully selected questions he will chose to answer.
On
the one hand, many Russians may dismiss this as simply the latest “political
show.” And on the other, it is entirely likely that many will view any steps
Putin does make to try to address the problems of the country as a measure of
how many problems he has not addressed and even bears primary responsibility
for.
To
the extent they make such reflections, this show may not work as intended but
instead further inflame the anger of many who are suffering from policies that
have Putin’s name on them. And if that happens, they may decide that there
really should be a genuine “direct line” between their anger and Putin
himself.
No comments:
Post a Comment