Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 26 – Vladimir Putin
decided to have a referendum on the constitutional amendments as a way of
renewing his special ties with the Russian people and thus serving notice to
members of the establishment that they dare not challenge him or think about
the future, Tatyana Stanovaya says.
Formally, he will get his preferred
result at the polls, the Russian commentator continues; but elites may not read
this outcome the same way he does and instead of being intimidated once again
see Putin’s moves as an indication of his own sense of his growing weakness and
look beyond him even more intently (carnegie.ru/commentary/82177).
That does not mean that Putin will
soon face serious opposition from the elite to his continuation in office,
Stanovaya says. The elites are still overwhelmingly loyal to his person. But it
does mean that they will increasingly be thinking about what is best for their
own futures at a time when the Kremlin leader seems focused more on geopolitics
and the past.
“Any ruler bases his power either on
a contract with the people which permits him to impose his decisions on the
elite or on a contract with the elite which helps him to control the people,”
she continues. Putin first relied on the former, but ever more frequently, as the
elites have been filled with his own people, he has relied on the latter
instead.
That carries with it a danger: those
on whom he relies insist on the defense of their own interests; and their
interests may be at odds with his. There has been much discussion of the growing
divide between Putin’s agenda and that of Russian society, Stanovaya continues;
but the divide between his agenda and that of his “oligarchy” has been
deepening no less quickly.
“The Putin elite has become so large
and that already cannot allow itself not to have its own corporative
priorities, which do not always correspond with the priorities of the state.”
That doesn’t mean the elites are out of control; but it does mean that they are
becoming “ever more autonomous.”
“By providing their services to
Putin, they make him dependent on their success,” she says. “This sense which
is gathering strength among the elites cannot but concern the president,”
however loyal to him they may appear, because it represents a limitation on his
freedom of action.
Thus, Putin wants to relegitimize
his unique position with the population in order to show the elites the limits
of their ability to act independently even if they are not acting specifically
against him. Putin himself has made this
possible by shifting his focus away from domestic economic issues to geopolitics.
The elites have filled in where he has left a gap.
“But having cast aside routine
affairs,” Stanovaya says, Putin “has begun to lose the sense and intuitive link
with what is going on. That makes him simultaneously more suspicious and more
subject to manipulation.” Conflicts he
was prepared to tolerate earlier have now become intolerable for him.
Over the last six months, Putin has
repeatedly warned against looking for a successor; but by prohibiting that, the
Kremlin leader in fact is telling elites that they must not think about their
own futures given the links all of them have to the existing system of power.
His attempt has had exactly the opposite effect to the one he has intended.
Putin decided he needed a new
popular mandate, and he will get one. “But the problem is that the presidents and
the elites may understand the level of legitimacy of this mandate differently
and interpret the real firmness of public support for Putin.” The Kremlin
leader may see the vote as overwhelming; the elites may see his need for it as
signaling the reverse.
“The referendum was planned as a
form of blackmail of the elites, but its legitimacy is not obvious,” Stanovaya
says. “Wishing to put the clans in their place, Putin unilaterally has put down
for them new red lines which will make the relations between him and them more
pragmatic and less commanding.”
And she concludes: “By conducting the
referendum, Putin wanted to cement his post-Crimea world which in reality has
already long ago been subject to serious erosion;” and his focus on the past is
“frightening many not only in the ranks of the opposition but also among the
establishment where there is a desire to move forward.”
These feelings are not yet a
movement against him. They rather reflect “the instinct of self-preservation”
of elites at a time when the institutions around, because they are not working,
“can no longer guarantee stability.” And
that trend will only be exacerbated by the outcome of the vote no matter how
big a victory Putin proclaims it to be.
No comments:
Post a Comment