Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 16 – This week,
Vladimir Putin “could have thought up something that would really preserve the
Russian dictatorship for decades, renew its image and overcome its worst contradictions,”
Vladimir Milov argues. “Instead of this, we have 1984, not in the Orwellian
sense but rather in that of CPSU General Secretary Konstantin Chernenko.”
Under Chernenko, “the last parliamentary
elections of the USSR took place in which the CPSU received in the absence of
alternatives 99 percent of the votes,” the Russian politician says. “Key here
is not ‘the 99 percent’ and not ‘the absence of alternatives’ but rather ‘the
last,’” although Putin like Chernenko before him doesn’t recognize that yet (theins.ru/opinions/196535).
According to Milov, Putin does
recognize “better than others that the Russian establishment is tired of him,
doesn’t trust him, and recognizes his negative role as the chief restraining factor
on Russia’s development and will try to throw off this inheritance at the first
possibility.”
In what can only be described as a “panic”
response to confidential polls done for the Presidential Administration, Milov
says, Putin this week moved in two directions to defend himself. First, he overturned the existing board of political
relationships by declaring that he will remain in power but perhaps not as
president, thus making it hard for an opposition to crystallize.
And second and far more important,
he effectively did away with the president-prime minister system that had
existed in Russia since the 1990s, by dismissing the hyper-loyal Dmitry Medvedev
and replacing him with a cypher who can be counted on to be even more loyal
rather than as a potential focal point of opposition to the Kremlin leader
himself.
One thing is clear, Milov continues.
“Putin wants to create a new system of checks and balances in order not to permit
the loss of his own influence” and he is doing so by declaring now that he will
remain in power but will provide details only later in his own good time,
thereby preventing any group from organizing against him.
Moreover, what his changes will do
is increase the number of potential players at the top of the Russian system.
That works to his advantage because it doesn’t allow any one of them to play
the role that a strong and more independent-minded prime minister at least in
principle could.
According to Milov, these moves
suggest that “Putin has panicked,” having gotten “’closed’ poll results which have
shown how bad his situation is.” And that conclusion is strengthened, he says,
by the man Putin has installed as prime minister, Mikhail Mishustin, someone
who will do nothing to rock the boat.
Misushtin’s appointment provides “a clear
portrait of the psychological state of the Russian leader: Putin feels himself insecure
… and wants to rely on someone who will secure his wealth at any price, even at
the price of the further decay of the Russian economy as a whole.”
Thus, this appointment is “not about
elections, growth or the future: it is about the personal confidence of Putin
that everything won’t crash despite all the indicators that it should. [It] is
thus about psychology and not economics or political technology,” the former Russian
official and now commentator says.
Another commentator, Aleksandr Rodionov of Yekaterinburg’s
Politsovet portal, suggests that in trying to shore up his power in one way, Putin has alienated a key part of
the elite by his call to ban those with second passports or foreign residence
permits or who have not lived in Russia for at least 25 years from serving in
senior positions (politsovet.ru/65190-putin-lishil-politicheskogo-buduschego-detey-elity.html).
This strikes at many members of the Russian
elite whose children have such passports and residence permits because of their
studies and who have not lived in the Russian Federation for the necessary
length of time. As such, Rodionov
argues, “Putin has deprived the children of the elite of a political future.”
That may solve one aspect of the 2024
transition problem by excluding many who may be looking to be part of a new
nobility (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2020/01/russian-ruling-clique-wants-to-become.html),
but precisely because it does, it creates another: anger among the parents of
these children at the current ruler in the Kremlin.
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