Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 17 – One of the most
remarkable ideological developments in Russia during the time of the pandemic
is KPRF head Gennady Zyuganov’s final conversion to a full-throated version of
Russian nationalism and, in the absence of resistance from below, his party
into “the Black Hundreds on the left,” Aleksandr Stepanov says.
Compared to other communist leaders
since at least the death of Stalin, Zyuganov has been willing to play with
Russian nationalist themes, especially those involving fears of Russian
demographic collapse which can be presented in class terms as well; but he has
been resisted by those who remember what the KPRF is supposed to stand for.
Stepanov, a more traditional
communist, points to Zyuganov’s release of a 14,000-word statement about why
the communist party must do more than be fellow travelers to Russian nationalists
but must become a key part of their movement given what the KPRF leader says
are threats to the Russian nation (forum-msk.org/material/news/16455393.html).
According to Stepanov, a regular commentator
on the Forum-MSK portal, Zyuganov has gone so far that even “the CIA supports his
position,” a reflection of the radical changes in the KPRF leader and his party
rather than in the American special service. (For the complete text of Zyuganov’s
explanation of his change of heart, see kprf.ru/party-live/cknews/194458.html.)
Over
the last 15 years or so, there have been various attempts to raise “’the
Russian question’ in the KPRF,” Stepanov says, “but they were met with silent
resistance by a multitude of people, including some first secretaries who still
understood something of leftist ideology” and were not willing to surrender in
this way.
But
now with Zyuganov leading the way, the party is being fed with a mix of the
notions of Berdyaev, Clausewitz, Gudinin, Walter Shubart, and Matrona of Moscow
all covered with superficial references to the classics of Marxism. “It is surprising,”
Stepanov continues, that Zyuganov makes no reference to Ivan Ilin. But that
will likely come in the future.
The
KPRF chief’s words and the willingness of many in his party to accept them
shows two things. On the one hand, it shows the growing power of Russian
nationalist discourse, including the ideas of some of the most anti-communist
Russian and German thinkers, in Russia today.
And
on the other, it highlights the fact that Zyuganov and the KPRF are more
interested in remaining a systemic party supporting and supported by Putin than
they are in reflecting the values that informed both until so recently. Being for national unity is fine, Stepanov
concludes; but being for unity with German and Russian fascists isn’t.
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