Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 26 –One of the
unexpected developments in Russia as a result of the pandemic is that the heads
of regions and republics now have higher ratings than Vladimir Putin even
though he appointed them and they have little power independent of what he
allows them, Vadim Shtepa says.
That is just one of the paradoxes
and inconsistencies in Russian politics beyond the ring road today, the editor
of the Tallinn-based Region.Expert portal says, patterns that raise questions
as to how long these things can be maintained and how they will be resolved
after the pandemic passes (severreal.org/a/30635339.html).
Putin, “who has self-isolated in his
Moscow bunker” has handed over responsibility to right the pandemic to the
governors. And despite the expectations of nearly everyone, including quite
likely Putin himself, they have begun to take independent decisions without
waiting for directives from Moscow as they had in the past.
Many governors have taken the easy
way out, blindly copying whatever Moscow Mayor Sergey Sobyanin has done on the assumption
that the mayor of the capital has the approval of the man in the Kremlin
basement. But others have struck out on their own in ways that go far beyond anything
Putin or Sobyanin might have anticipated.
One who has is Artur Parfenchikov,
the head of the Karelian Republic, who on his own initiative stopped all public
transport and blocked the entrance of people from elsewhere, including Moscow,
lest they import the infection – and this despite Putin’s direct warning not to
do that.
Another paradox in this situation is
that governors like Parfenchikov have acted without any legal basis. “It is
possible this is connected with the obvious legal chaos which the Kremlin
introduced earlier in the year by announcing its constitutional amendments.”
That has allowed governors the chance to navigate between the old rules and the
new.
And yet a third paradox and
inconsistency is the willingness of the head of the Komi Republic to come out against
the Kremlin’s latest amalgamation plan and, even worse, to publicly declare that
any such plans should come “from below” rather than “from on high,” exactly the
opposite of the way the Putin system operates.
Clearly, since the start of the year
and the onset of the pandemic, “the status of governors has significantly
risen.” The question is now” “will they be able to hold onto it?” If they only
seek to boost their approval ratings, the answer is no because the Kremlin has
the power to outplay them.
But “if instead they prefer to
establish contacts with civil societies at the regional level, this almost
unbelievable choice could become the beginning of a new political era. But,
only a few months ago, at the start of this year, “much that has happened
seemed improbable and even impossible as well.”
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