Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 18 – Vladimir
Putin’s latest constitutional proposals are not an attempt by the Kremlin
leader to retain power forever but rather “the beginning of his exit,” one that
he wants to be slow and carefully managed, according to Sergey Tsyplayev, one
of the authors of the 1993 basic law and a law professor at the Russian Academy
of Economics and State Service.
The constitutional specialist says
that he “categorically does not agree that all that is going on is to allow him
to remain in power as long as possible. Nothing interferes with Putin doing so now.
We simply remove references about two terms in a row.” (mnews.world/ru/putin-hochet-ujti-no-medlenno-soavtor-konstitutsii-sergej-tsyplyaev-ob-initsiativah-prezidenta/).
What Putin wants to do with his
constitutional changes is to create a situation in which he will be able to “leave
slowly” and thus preserve “the smoothness” of the transition. “At the moment of
exit of any authoritarian leaders there arise horrible perturbations, fights,
and struggle for power.” Consequently, leaders need to make provisions so that
these do not get out of hand.
What has happened in Kazakhstan
shows how this can work. And Putin’s
appointment of Dmitry Medvedev to be number two in the security council is part
of this effort. That is “a purely symbolic position for Medvedev” but “the
career of Dmitry Anatolyevich as a real politicians and potential aspirant for
anything has ended.”
One of Russia’s key problems,
Tsyplayev says, is that “with us, executive power is very weak” and the
relations between the center and the federal subjects are problematic. That means
that there is great concern about the risk that this or that institution such
as the Federation Council or the State Council could become an independent political
player.
That explains some of the
indefiniteness about that institution, indefiniteness that will need to be
clarified by the president in the future, the expert on constitutional law says.
He makes two other points, one on the ways in which these reforms are being discussed
and a second on the sources of strength and weakness of any constitution.
Regarding the first, Tsyplayev says
that the procedure to amend the constitution is “very simple” and does not
require the convention of a Constitutional Assembly. The two houses of the federal
assembly must approve a constitutional law proposed by the president and then
it must be ratified by two-thirds of the parliaments of the federal subjects.
That is all that is needed.
There is no need for a referendum
legally in the current case and it isn’t required but might be used for political
purposes, the legal specialist says. At
the same time, Tsyplayev continues, the working group Putin has formed is not a
substitute for a Constitutional Assembly. It is simply an advisory body.
Putin has the right to consult with
anyone: he can “discuss things even with Donald Trump or Philipp Kirkorov. This
is his right.” But the president is the one who will introduce a federal law to
the parliament for approval because he has the right of legislative initiative.
No advisory body has that power.
But Tsylayev makes another
observation which may prove even more important. He says that “each redrawing
of the Constitution undermines the strength of this building. If the Old and
New Testaments had been constantly rewritten, no religion would have survived.”
The basic law should be changed only “in case of extreme necessity.”
If it is treated as just another law
that can be modified at will, then this will regardless of anything else “open
a Pandora’s box” for the state and the country, the constitutional specialist
says.
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