#5 - JRL 2008-118 - JRL Home
No quick return to election of governors, says senior
Russian minister
Interfax
June 17, 2008
A senior Russian minister has said that there will be no return to the direct
election of regional governors, Russian news agencies reported on 17 June.
Regional Development Minister Dmitriy Kozak was commenting on the idea voiced
several days earlier by Mintimer Shaymiyev, the long-serving president of the
Russian constituent republic of Tatarstan.
"We have opted for this system, and it works OK," Interfax quoted Kozak
saying. He was referring to the current system, introduced by the then President
Vladimir Putin in 2004, under which regional governors are nominated by the
president and then approved by the local legislature. Until then, governors had
been directly elected by voters in the regions. "How many times can one sway one
way and then the other - one system today, another tomorrow? Let us live with
just one system for a while," Kozak said, according to Interfax.
RIA Novosti news agency said Kozak's comments came after a ministry
conference on regional policy. "One cannot change the system of government every
year," the agency quoted him as saying.
Another Interfax report quoted Russian upper house speaker Sergey Mironov as
saying that "it will be possible to consider a return to the election of
governors at some stage. But I do not think that stage has come yet." "I always
believed, and still do, that the president did the right thing by changing the
system of lection of governors in order to make the law on local government work
more effectively," Mironov added. He did, however, say that the appointment of
governors was, "after all, a temporary measure".
On 16 June, Interfax quoted a statement by Andrey Isayev, a senior official
in the dominant pro-Putin One Russia party, released by the party's information
centre. "We do not envisage changes to existing legislation on this issue for at
least the next decade," the statement said. Noting that Shaymiyev was a
co-chairman of the Higher Council of One Russia, Isayev said: "We respect his
view regarding the procedure for empowering heads of regions and the president's
right to dissolve representative bodies of constituent parts of the Russian
Federation. However, his view is not the view of our entire party." Speaking at
the Russian press forum on 14 June, Shaymiyev also suggested that the Russian
president's right to dissolve regional parliaments should be revoked.
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