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Moscow Times
May 16, 2008
Putin Announces New Mini-Cabinet
By Anna Smolchenko / Staff Writer
Prime Minister Vladimir Putin on Thursday announced the creation of a new
executive body that he said would inject efficiency into the unwieldy government
machine.
The new body, called the presidium, will comprise Putin's seven deputies and
seven other ministers and meet once a week, in a routine reminiscent of Putin's
weekly Monday meetings with key ministers in the Kremlin. The entire Cabinet
will convene at least once a month, Putin said.
"It is obvious that government meetings are a rather unwieldy mechanism and
pretty bureaucratized," Putin told the ministers at his first regular Cabinet
meeting since being confirmed as prime minister last week.
The weekly meetings will help increase "the efficiency of our work and the
discussion of the current issues," Putin said.
Three of the seven ministers named to the presidium report directly to
President Dmitry Medvedev, not Putin, a development likely to feed into a
widespread belief that Putin wants to stay in control of the country, at least
for now.
The three ministers are Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, Defense Minister
Anatoly Serdyukov and Interior Minister Rashid Nurgaliyev. The other ministers
are Regional Development Minister Dmitry Kozak, Health and Social Development
Minister Tatyana Golikova, Agriculture Minister Alexei Gordeyev and Economic
Development Minister Elvira Nabiullina, Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov told
reporters after the meeting.
Excluded from the presidium are officials such as the energy minister,
industry and trade minister and natural resources and environment minister.
These ministers will be invited to attend presidium meetings when need be, Putin
said.
"I have the feeling that he still hasn't fallen out of the habit of being a
president," said Yury Korgunyuk, a political analyst with Indem, a think tank.
Under the structure that Putin is putting together, the chain of command is
unclear, and that will play to his benefit if things go awry, Korgunyuk said.
"It's hard to see who's responsible for what," he said.
Peskov said the new structure was not an attempt to endow Putin with power
that went beyond his authority but represented "universal elements of
management."
"It's impossible to transfer the Kremlin to the White House," he said.
The presidium represents three-fifths of the Cabinet and essentially provides
the quorum necessary for the government to conduct its business and make
decisions, Peskov said. "We are not talking about the substitution of ministers'
activities but about the coordination of the activities," he said.
Some critics scoffed at the choice of the word "presidium," which is highly
reminiscent of Soviet traditions. In the Soviet Union, a small group known as
the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet made all decisions, albeit under the
influence of the Communist Party Politburo.
Former Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov criticized Putin's Cabinet as a step
back in history. "This reminds me of nostalgia for Soviet times," Kasyanov,
fired by Putin in 2004, said at a conference in Brussels, Interfax reported.
Whether the Kremlin or the White House will become the country's primary
center of power remains anybody's guess for now. State officials are taking
sides and pledging allegiances, while the country's biggest newspapers might be
providing clues with the way they cover Putin and Medvedev. Kommersant on
Thursday led its front page with a story about Putin's visit to a new oil export
terminal, while burying a story on Medvedev's meeting about small businesses on
Page 2. Izvestia put the story about Medvedev on its front page.
German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier, who met Medvedev on
Wednesday, tried to arrange a meeting with Putin but was rebuffed, German
reporters traveling with Steinmeier said. Peskov denied the reports.
Speaking at the Cabinet meeting, which focused on Russia's short and mid-term
development, Putin said the country must focus on innovation and criticized the
Economic Development Ministry for what he described as a "very strange" forecast
for its growth.
"We are talking about an innovative path of development, but if you look at
the ministry's forecast, it doesn't really smell like there is any innovative
development there," Putin said curtly. "Has anybody seen the investment
forecast?"
The share of "innovative goods" to be produced and exported is forecast to
grow at a "completely insignificant" pace, Putin said.
The economy will expand by about 6.5 percent per year from next year to 2011,
and investments will grow by 13 percent per year, he added.
Speaking to reporters after the meeting, Nabiullina said she would take
Putin's criticism into consideration but that additional measures were needed to
boost innovations. She agreed that the forecast growth rate of less than 1
percentage point was meager but said the current figures were the result of
earlier decisions.
In a separate development, Deputy Economic Development Minister Kirill
Androsov will be appointed a deputy government chief of staff, Peskov said.
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