Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 15 – For the third
time since the collapse of tsarism, the possibility that Russia could move
toward genuine federalism, a contract among its component parts that is the
basis for a modern society in any large and diverse country, is currently
“caught between two fires,” each of which opposes such an evolution, Vadim
Shtepa says.
The Russian regionalist argues that
the idea of a contract state among territorial units was rejected in Russia by
both tsarist and communist groups in 1917, by the old nomenklatura and the new
“Russian democrats” in 1991, and by the Putinist state and the Russian
democratic opposition now (region.expert/treaty_state/).
The 1918 Constituent
Assembly, which met for only one day before being closed down by the Bolsheviks,
did manage to proclaim the Russian Democratic Federative Republic; but the
Bolsheviks having dispersed it imposed a system which was “much more
totalitarian” and much less federal in practice than even the tsarist
empire.
(For those who find any reference to
federalism in the tsarist past entirely inappropriate and thus view Bolshevism
as far as federalism is concerned simply an extension of tsarist practice, see
Georg von Rauch’s underappreciated book, Russland: Staatliche Einheit und
Nationale Vielvalt (Munich, 1953).)
“It is interesting,” Shtepa
continues, “that in 1991, the situation to a certain extent repeated itself.”
In opposition to Mikhail Gorbachev’s call for a confederal state, two otherwise
opposed groups, the party nomenklatura, and “’the Russian democrats,’” aligned
themselves against that possibility, the first via the putsch and the second by
a whole series of actions.
In March 1992, Boris Yeltsin did in
fact proclaim “’a federative treaty,’” but in contrast to Gorbachev’s ideas, it
was “limited to the territory of the Russian Federation,” but more than that it
was federal only in name because of two features that ensured it would never
become federal in fact.
On the one hand, and in contrast to
Gorbachev’s new union treaty, Yeltsin’s federative state was based not on an
agreement among the subjects but rather on an agreement between them “with the
Kremlin ‘center,’ which graciously shared with them certain particular
authorities.”
“In fact,” as Shetpa observes, “this was
not a federation but rather an agreement of the metropolitan center with its
colonies.”
And on the other, Yeltsin’s federative
state was not based on the equality of its components but rather offered the
republics within the Russian Federation “essentially greater rights and
authorities than the krays and oblasts.” That arrangement “undermined the
federation from within by introducing national privileges which in reality made
a treaty state impossible.”
“But even from such an internally
contradictory agreement, the Kremlin soon turned away,” Shtepa continues. “The 1993 Constitution in general abolished
the treaty principle of statehood as such.
The republic declarations about sovereignty were no longer mentioned’
from now on the federation was considered to be something created ‘from the top
down.’”
That is where Putin’s “’power vertical’”
had its origins.
For a time, it looked as if the Federation
Council could become the seedbed of federalism in Russia because its members
elected by the population and delegated to the center actively participated in
the formation of state policy. Between 1996 and 2001, it “recalled a real
Senate;” but that was too much for the Kremlin – and it has been reduced to a
vestigial fifth wheel.
Today, of course, Shtepa says, no
discussion about a treaty state is possible as long as there are no free regional
elections, something the center is not willing to consider. But even if one speaks about the possibility
of federalism in the future, the idea is again caught “’between two fires.’”
Genuine, contract-based federalism is
equally unacceptable “both for the powers that be and for the ‘federal’
opposition. That the authorities should
think this way is no surprise, but that their views should be reflected with
“mirror-like exactitude” by the opposition which views sometimes with regret to
be sure federalism as inconsistent with the Russian tradition.
In almost all cases, the federal
opposition doesn’t want federalism; it simply wants to be in charge of its own
empire, replacing what they view as a bad tsar who opposes their agendas with a
good one from among their own ranks.
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