Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 4 – Vladimir Putin
has ignored the provisions of the Russian Constitution and the laws adopted on
the basis of it so often that any changes that may be adopted now won’t have an
impact on their lives. But that is a mistake, Aleksandr Skobov says, because
the changes eliminate weak but existing barriers to a far harsher
authoritarianism.
Moreover, they are a call for others
who oppose liberalism to rally around the Kremlin to attack the Western values
that have been the foundation of European development for more than two
centuries, making what happens to the Russian constitution a matter of
fundamental concern for the Western world, the Russian commentator says.
Putin’s amendments, Skbv says, represent
“an ideological rejection of the principles of a legal state” because they
remove some “very serious barriers which up to
now have blocked the transition of the Putin regime from a ‘hybrid’ soft
authoritarianism to the stage of pure and harsh authoritarianism” (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5E5F4A937648C).
To be sure, he continues, the
authorities have routinely trampled on the constitution and laws when it suits
them. But up to now, they have done this informally and have been unwilling to
change the language of the basic law under which they are operating. Now, it
appears they are ready to do just that.
As long as the democratic provisions
of the constitution remain, the authorities have to take some notice of them
and the population can see what is considered normal and thus what is being
violated and how things should change. That is what happened with the Soviet
Constitution in the case of Perestroika times.
But there is an even more immediate consequence
of the changes in language that Putin wants. The new words give officials a
directive as to what directions they should move, vectors along which they are
almost certain to go far beyond what the specific language of the amendments specify.
Many Putin officials have been
waiting for an indication that the Kremlin leader is fully committed to subordinating
the rights of the individual to the interests of the state; and they will now
take his amendments as “a signal for a new massive attack on the remnants of
democratic freedoms” in Russia.
But the implications of the Putin
amendments don’t stop at the borders of the Russian Federation, Skobov
says. That is because they are intended
as “the declaration of a Vendee revolt against European liberalism” and a sign
that Moscow and no one else will be the leader of this revolt (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5E5E1AA883A80).
Succeeding in having Russia reject
European liberalism is only the first step in the agenda of the Putinists, the
Russian commentator says. “The next is to return prodigal liberal Europe to its
‘traditional values.’ Thus, ‘the special Russian path’ turns out to be not so
special: The entire rest of the world is to follow it as a universal
alternative to European liberalism.”
The new Putin constitution
underscores the unfortunate reality that “Putinism is the new European fascism.
And either it will swallow up Europe or the Vendee revolt of Russia will be put
down.” For everyone’s sake, Skobov argues, “it must be put down.”
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