Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 20 – Vladimir
Putin’s latest moves almost universally viewed as part of the transition, in
fact are something quite different: an effort by the Kremlin leader to “reformat
the [Russian] political system under a new ideological project,” that of a
corporate state, Vladimir Pastukhov says.
The London-based Russian scholar points
out that most of Putin’s message was devoted to the redistribution of powers
among the branches of the government, nominally in favor of giving more
authority to the parliament and the courts but in fact consolidating even more
power in “’the presidential vertical’” (novayagazeta.ru/articles/2020/01/20/83540-pereuchredit-rossiyu).
Having made certain concessions to the
Russian parliament on the appointment of ministers, the Kremlin leader “made
two enormous steps” in the opposite direction, first by elevating the status of
the force ministers by means of putting their approval in a different category
and second, by extending this principle to the regions as well.
What these changes mean, of course,
is that “the distance between the real rules according to which Russia has
lived for a long time and the constitutional Potemkin village” that Moscow has
claimed to be operating under but hasn’t at least since Putin came to power “has
been reduced.”
In short, Putin has moved to
legalize the constitution of “understandings” rather than law and nowhere is
this clearer than in his insistence that the State Council be constitutionally
established even though it is not part of the division of powers as a clearly
defined executive, legislative or judicial branch body but stands above all of them.
“Of course,” Pastukhov continues, “people
of older generations know very well what ‘the State Council’ is – it is the
CPSU Central Committee.” And Putin already had a Politburo ready to replace
even it – the Security Council, “in which Medvedev is being readied to be ‘the
ideology secretary’ under ‘General Secretary’ Putin and ‘organizational
secretary’ Patrushev.”
Including the State Council in the Constitution,
the Russian scholar argues, opens “a little window through which into the
Constitution came return the principle of ‘democratic centralism,’ that is the
imperial principle of a single channel of personified power constructed from
top to bottom.” That is what Putin has been working toward for some time.
Thus, Pastukhov says, this shows
that all of Putin’s efforts on the constitution “do not have any relationship
to the so-called ‘transit of power.’”
They are simply a means to “complete in short order the legal formation
of the political system he has been working to establish over the last 20
years.”
And that means something else: the
issue of transition remains just as open now as it did before Putin made his
latest series of proposals, the scholar argues. More than that, these changes
indicate that there isn’t going to be any transit at all, that Putin will
remain in power although under just what title remains uncertain.
But that doesn’t mean that the
changes he has proposed do not have serious consequences. They provide a new
spirit for the interpretation of the basic document and in fact represent a
revolutionary or better counter-revolutionary change in the constitution
adopted in 1993.
That Constitution, for all its problems “did
not arise on an empty place but was a philosophical and political manifesto of
the new political force which had defeated communism and a new ideology.” That force
and that ideology was liberalism, however uncomfortable recalling that fact
makes the current rulers of Russia.
It inserted two principles into the
Russian system that had not been there before: the primacy of individual rights
and freedoms over the interests of the collective, the society and the state;
and the integration of Russia into the Western political-legal space by
specifying the primacy of international law over Russian legislation.
With his proposals, Putin is seeking
to enshrine in the constitution the rejection of both these principles and to
underscore Russia’s antagonism to the outside world and its ideas. But as bad as that is for the future of the
country, still worse are the other larger parts of his new “constitutional
philosophy.”
Given how radical a shift he is
making, Putin should really be calling for “a new constitution.” But he doesn’t
want to do so lest everyone see too clearly the direction in which he is
moving, one in which the changes he is calling for reduce the constitution to “a
puppet” and “a farce” as the Kremlin leader fills it with completely new “content.”
That content is of a corporate
state, something signaled by the fact that Vladimir Solovyev’s film about
Mussolini appeared “not by accident” at the same time as Putin’s remarks,
Pastukhov argues. Mussolini developed the idea of a corporate state as an
alternative to a democratic and law-based state. Putin wants to do the same in
Russia.
“This is not a revolution from
above,” as some think. Instead, “it is the last and highest stage of that
creeping constitutional counter-revolution which with small interruptions has been
going on since 2001,” a counter-revolution against the changes of 1989-1991
that were enshrined in the 1993 document.
“The empire which appeared to have
receded into the past has struck back, becoming again the main principle of the
state construction in Russia, one almost elevated into constitutional rank,”
Pastukhov concludes.
He then adds as a PS. Russian society has underrated Putin’s “ambitions
and pretensions,” the London-based scholar says. Putin wants to change Russia to such an
extent that he will stand “in one rank with Lenin and Stalin. And then no unmaskings
will be that terrible because there will always remain those who will consider
him a God.”
Putin “wants to repeat what the
Bolsheviks were able to do but not by borrowing from the West the idea of
communism as they did but by taking up another related idea, one which
officially in Russia it isn’t acceptable to call by its own name. This is a
real transit of power,” Pastukhov says; and he adds that it is the one that is
taking place.
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