Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 16 – “The Kremlin has
lost the levers for influencing” what is now a totally demoralized Russian
population, and voting on the constitutional amendments “may become the channel
for the expression of this sharp popular dissatisfaction with the powers,”
Boris Kagarlitsky says.
The director of the Moscow Institute
on Globalization and Social Movements tells Novy den that as a result, “a
catastrophe is already inevitable.” The only open question is “when will this
‘explosion’ occur.” It could come quickly and without apparent cause or it
could arrive later as pressures build (newdaynews.ru/moscow/691726.html).
One has the sense, Kagarlitsky says,
that the Kremlin has decided to put everything on pause, “as during a computer
game” when you then have the chance “to start again from the same place where
you stopped … But in real life this doesn’t happen.” The world keeps changing
and when you reenter it, it is a different place.
In the Russian political system, “ever
more negative trends had been manifest” even before the pandemic, “but up to a
certain time, it was possible to say that the technical aspect of rule was
working.” Now, that is not true. And it
is clear that there are problems not only with the process of taking decisions
but with the decisions themselves and their implementation.
The reason the Kremlin handed off
managing the pandemic response to the governors is that it “doesn’t know what
to do and does not have levers to influence the situation.” But the center only
went part way: it didn’t give the governors the powers and resources they
needed because the regime feared it might have a hard time recovering them.
“To expect effective results from
the regions which are tied hand and foot to the federal center is senseless,”
Kagarlitsky continues. “The regions will fight with the crisis until they fail.”
Exiting the crisis, he says, “is
being complicated by the divisions and passivity of society.” The powers view
that as a resource that helps them maintain their position, but it is now a
problem that makes it almost impossible to address the issues before the
country. But given the occasion, society can coalesce against the authorities.
The powers that be may be ready to
create one by insisting on going through with the referendum on the
constitutional amendments. If people are
angry and have no outlets otherwise, this may give them one. They may vote no,
and that will force the regime to falsify the results, triggering protests, or
admit defeat, which could become fatal.
“The best variant would be to put
off all-Russian voting on the amendments,” Kagarlitsky says. But the Kremlin
seems committed to going ahead, thus creating a disaster for itself. Indeed, a
catastrophe has become inevitable. The only question being when and how it will
become manifest.
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