Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 22 – “For mass repressions
[in Russia], there are neither mechanisms, not resources, nor desire,” Yekaterina
Schulmann says; but there may not need to be, according to Aleksandr Baunov,
because “the average age of the population is about 40,” while “in all the
countries of the ‘Arab Spring’ it is about 20.”
“In youth, people revolt,” the
Moscow Carnegie Center editor says, “but 40-year-olds sit quietly, grumble and
drink beer,” to which the Russian political scientist and commentator replies
that demography will define the forms protest take and make it more likely that
in the year ahead, they will stay within the law rather than violate it.
Schulman says that protests will not
involve force but be legalistic in much the same way they were at the end of
2011 and the beginning of 2012. They will be “a protest against violations of
the law, rather than involve violations of the law, and will demand that the
Kremlin and the government observe the Russian constitution.
Those are just some of the
intriguing observations and exchanges that took place during a discussion
organized by “Gazeta” among these two writers and political scientist Georgy
Bovt and regional specialist Natalya Zubarevich (m.gazeta.ru/comments/2015/12/18_a_7976153.shtml).
Schulmann argues
that despite all the events of 2015, the past year “was from the point of view
of trends a year in which nothing special happened.” It was defined by the
increasing depth of the crisis in the economy and by the adaptation of the population
to that crisis. 2016 in contrast may be a year in which the political
consequences of that are likely to appear.
Research suggests, she continues,
that “the time lag between the worsening of the economic situation and
political consequences is from nine to twelve months. Naturally, this time is
conditional,” but it is certainly suggestive and points to a more restive year
ahead for Russia.
The Moscow analyst says that there
are likely to be more targeted protests like that of the long haul truckers and
that they will not link up. That will give the authorities the chance to
isolate them, to repress them or to buy them off, but the Kremlin’s chief
strategy is likely to be to try to drive the problem down the political latter
to the ministries or regions.
That will lead to a more varied,
mosaic-like response, with some governors acting harshly and others making
concessions, Schulmann says.
At the same time, tensions within
the elites will grow as they fight over access to an increasingly small pie.
Such struggles will take place in the form of the battle against corruption,
the main form of intra-elite competition and indeed politics in Russia
today. “Instead of open political
competition,” she points out, Russia has “inter-agency and intra-agency competition.”
“There are no reasons to suppose
that this will somehow suddenly change in 2016.”
Zubarevich says that pushing things
down to the regions will not necessarily lead some regions to copy or cooperate
with others. Russia has no horizontal
ties. Indeed, she says, “the only place from which the all-national is
translated is Moscow.” What happens elsewhere in short stays where it is.
The regional specialist adds that
Moscow has the resources necessary to buy off most if not all protests and may
do so. Only if they came altogether would that possibility be foreclosed,
especially if as seems like the authorities are prepared to use repressive
measures as well, something that will discourage protest.
And Zubarevich concludes that “an
individual who swears in the kitchen that they have again taken away his
overtime is dissatisfied, but he will not go out to protest” for that reason
alone.
Schulmann says that she expects that
despite the arrests of protesters, there will be a growth in the number of
popular actions which today appear “imitative and formal.” That is because she
argues “people over 40 do not want to be revolutionaries but at the same time
they want a more sensible state policy that takes their interests into account.”
Among the types of activities she
sees growing are involvement in election monitoring and public hearings,
examples of how Russians “will attempt to use those few legal instruments which
they have.” But that should not be discounted because even those who
participate in what may appear to be a Potemkin village see their expectations and
hence demands rise.
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