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#2 - JRL 7264
Problems of Post-Communism
vol. 50, no. 4
July/August 2003
© 2003 M.E. Sharpe, Inc. All rights reserved.
ISSN 1075-8216 / 2003 $9.50 + 0.00.
[DJ: Used here with permission.]
Russian Democracy Under Putin
Timothy J. Colton and Michael McFaul
TIMOTHY J. COLTON is the director of the Davis Center for Russian and
Eurasian Studies at Harvard University. MICHAEL MCFAUL is a Hoover Fellow and an
associate professor of political science at Stanford University. This article is
adapted from their forthcoming book, Popular Choice and Managed Democracy: The
Russian Elections of 1999 and 2000 (Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press,
2003).
Russians seem content with the current quasi-democratic, quasi-autocratic
order.
IS Russia a democracy? Is democracy in Russia developing, eroding, or not
changing-for either better or worse? The answers to these questions have
tremendous implications for social scientists and policymakers. If Russia is a
democracy, then theories that explain democratic transitions may provide a
meaningful framework for understanding regime change in Russia. If Russia is not
a democracy, then other metaphorical lenses may be more appropriate. If Russia
is a democracy, then its entrance into Western multilateral institutions may be
justified and Western aid for democracy assistance is no longer needed. If
Russia is not a democracy, or if Russian democracy is eroding, then the exact
opposite policy recommendations may be more appropriate-delayed membership in
Western unions and more assistance that is democratic. If Russia is stuck in the
middle-caught in the twilight zone between dictatorship and democracy-then this
too has implications for theory development and policy-making.
The answers offered in this article to these difficult and politically
charged questions are unlikely to please anyone. They are based upon a mixed and
contradictory assessment. Although some might disagree, it is clear that some
form of democracy emerged in Russia after the collapse of Soviet communism in
1991.1 While not displaying the thick structures and norms typical of a mature
"liberal democracy," the Russian regime that put down roots under
Boris Yeltsin in the 1990s has many of the features of an "electoral
democracy."2 Especially after the enactment of Yeltsin's super-presidential
constitution in 1993, mass-based interest groups were consigned to the fringes,
pluralist interest intermediation became feeble, individual liberties began to
be abridged by arbitrary practices, and institutions that could have helped to
redress the imbalance-parliament, the party system, the judiciary-lost strength
and independence.
Nonetheless, the Russian state and Russian society displayed features of
democratic development.3 Elections took place under a set of rules recognized by
all. The results of these elections were not entirely certain beforehand, and no
authority intervened after Election Day to reverse the outcome of the voting.
The playing field for competitors in elections was never equal and has steadily
become less so. Nonetheless, the rulers of Russia were selected in competitive
elections. The regime that emerged in the 1990s was qualitatively different from
the communist and tsarist dictatorships.
Since Vladimir Putin became president at the beginning of 2000, democratic
institutions have eroded. When Yeltsin appointed Putin prime minister in the
fall of 1999, the regime's uncertain and unconsolidated nature lowered the
barriers for institutional change. Putin soon put his imprint not only on policy
but on institutions. He has not amended or radically violated the 1993
constitution, and he has not upended the institutional configuration of
Yeltsin's regime. Nor does he seem to have any coherent plan for doing so. He
has, however, initiated or tolerated a series of discrete changes that have
diminished the democratic legacy of the reform years. Yeltsin, in recruiting
Putin from the closed world of the security agencies and announcing him as the
"steel core" of a revitalized government, undoubtedly expected a
course correction toward discipline and order. He now thinks that Putin has gone
too far in certain respects. However, Yeltsin's feelings are irrelevant. What is
important and worrisome is the cumulative impact of the changes.
Putin's innovations coincide with a spate of revisionist thinking about
democratization in the contemporary world. Some say that autocracies are being
replaced, as often as not, by hybrid regimes entwining democratic with
authoritarian principles. Others go further, asserting that Russia and a series
of other countries are best thought of as "competitive-authoritarian"
systems, in which the authoritarian element has the upper hand.4 Much ink has
been spilled in recent years on the failure of the promising "third
wave" of global democratization, which extended from the 1970s into the
1990s, and was capped by the fall of the Soviet dictatorship and its satellites
in Eastern Europe. Although there have been democratic success stories in the
former Soviet Union, there have been terrible failures and disappointments as
well.5
It is premature to pigeonhole Russia into any of these autocratic categories.
The phrase "managed democracy" will do as a marker for the current
condition of its polity. If it is too early to sign the death certificate for
democracy, it is too late to ignore tokens of a backing away from the liberal
and democratic ideals in which name the Soviet regime was overthrown. Having
begun on Yeltsin's watch, the retreat has gathered momentum under Putin.
Russia's present rulers are modernizers in the economic and socioeconomic sphere
and pro-Western realists in foreign policy.
In the political domain, they take the electoral mechanism and the trappings
of democracy for granted. They accept that they must periodically renew their
popular mandate and that when they do, society must be afforded alternatives to
the status quo. They are also reconciled to a limited diversity of opinions and
interests within the state machinery. Without setting out to extinguish it, they
aim to contain this diversity within boundaries they alone fix. For those at the
rudder, democracy is neither good nor evil. It is an existential product of
larger forces that, like gravity, cannot be stopped, yet, with the appropriate
engineering, can be harnessed to one's own purpose. Institutional change under
Putin has reflected this odd blend of preserving formal democratic practices and
at the same time weakening the actual democratic content of these political
rules and norms.
The New Balance of Power in the Duma
Putin took office bent on resuming the economic reforms that had been stymied
by governmental disorganization and legislative resistance in Yeltsin's second
term. Although he selected a face from the Yeltsin era, Mikhail Kasianov, to
head his first cabinet, Putin inserted a team of market liberals into the next
tier, most of them known to him from his St. Petersburg days. Key players were
the new first deputy prime minister and minister of finance, Aleksei Kudrin (a
fellow vice mayor with Putin under Anatolii Sobchak), the minister for economic
development and trade, German Gref, and the president's personal adviser on
economic affairs, the iconoclastic Andrei Illarionov. The team came in with an
ambitious program encompassing tax reform, land privatization, deregulation,
changes in labor and welfare policy, and incentives for foreign investors.
The 1999-2000 electoral cycle put in place a Duma and a president with the
same basic political orientation, enabling rapid progress on this reform agenda.
The Unity bloc, partnering with the People's Deputy faction (consisting of
pro-Kremlin deputies from the districts) and Regions of Russia (which parted
from Fatherland-All Russia [OVR] after the Duma election), materialized as the
pivotal force in the Duma.6 These political partners made a deal with the
Communist Party of the Russian Federation (KPRF) to divide the chairs of major
committees, cutting out OVR, the Union of Right Forces (SPS), Yabloko, and the
Liberal Democrats (LDPR).7 The pact gave the KPRF's Gennadii Seleznev a second
term as speaker. Seleznev's subsequent departure from the communist hierarchy
made it apparent that he now had a binding commitment to Putin and the Kremlin.
Unity's alliance with the KPRF was purely tactical and unwound in the course of
2000 and 2001. Unity increasingly counted on rightist deputies to help it pursue
its legislative agenda, leaving the jilted KPRF leader, Gennadii Ziuganov, to
huff at Putin as a "liberal dictator."8
For the first time since 1993, the balance of power in the Russian parliament
is decisively anti-communist. The Duma has not indulged in squabbling with the
president by debating impeachment and censure resolutions. Pushed to act on the
economy by Putin and his government, the Duma has enacted new sections of the
Russian tax code, which had been in legislative limbo for years, putting in
place a flat income tax of 13 percent and a lower profits tax.9 It has gone
along with a new labor code, considered very friendly to business interests, and
a land code that allows for the ownership and sale of farms and urban land.
Putin and the executive branch have also managed to work with the Duma to pass
balanced and feasible budgets, a feat rarely accomplished in the Yeltsin years,
when parliament and president were so bitterly estranged.10 Putin has not yet
sent the Duma draft legislation on some of the most painful structural changes,
such as those touching on pensions and social assistance. Nevertheless, much has
been accomplished since the polarization of executive and legislature was eased
as a consequence of the 1999-2000 elections.11
The new relationship between the Duma and the president is not
"anti-democratic." Every president around the world wants to work with
a pliant parliament. Executives in liberal democracies most certainly spend
considerable political and material resources to achieve a pro-presidential
majority in their legislatures. The anti-democratic flavor of current
executive-legislative relations in Russia comes from the way in which the new
pro-presidential majority was achieved, that is, through an election in which
the playing field was not level for all participants. Unlike any previous
parliamentary election in Russia, the Kremlin intervened actively in the 1999
contest to assist Unity and destroy Fatherland-All Russia. The Kremlin relied on
its allies in the country's two largest television networks, ORT and RTR, to
unleash a negative assault against Fatherland-All Russia. Although other factors
contributed to Unity's strong finish and Fatherland-All Russia's disappointing
showing in the 1999 parliamentary vote, the playing field for the two parties
was not equal.12
Weakening the Federation Council
Putin has assembled super-majorities in the Duma-majorities capable of
overriding vetoes of bills handed down by the Federation Council, the upper
house of parliament. As a result, he has been able to transform the organization
of the upper house and therefore the federal system. To everyone's surprise,
Putin made reform of the Federation Council one of his top political goals in
his first months in office.
The Russian constitution states that after an interim period during which
members would be directly elected (1993-1995), each region of the federation was
to send two deputies to the Federation Council: one representing the province's
legislative assembly, and one representing its chief executive. The constitution
did not specify how these representatives were to be selected. By the end of the
two years, the regional governments had won agreement on a law mandating that
all provincial leaders were to be popularly elected-until then, Yeltsin had
appointed many governors-and that governors and legislative heads would
henceforth sit ex officio in the Federation Council. This formulation gave the
governors and their legislative colleagues increased local legitimacy and
greater autonomy from Yeltsin and Moscow. By granting the governors and republic
presidents a direct voice in the national parliament, it also created a
constitutional anomaly in that these figures would be concurrently executives
and legislators. The Federation Council functioned mostly as a lobby for
regional interests.
Two weeks after he was sworn into office, Putin proposed a new recipe for the
upper house that replaced the regional leaders with persons designated by them
under an intricate formula.13 The members of the Federation Council resisted
tenaciously, knowing they would lose their apartments and offices in Moscow,
their parliamentary immunity, and much of their clout with the federal
government. After a heated battle, in which the Duma said it would override a
Federation Council veto and the Kremlin allegedly threatened governors with
criminal investigations if they did not support Putin's plan, the law was
adopted in July 2000. As a sop, many governors and retired governors were
appointed to a new presidential advisory body, the State Council.
The reform has emaciated a significant institutional counterweight to the
president. Council members, being unelected, do not have the same authority as
their predecessors. Many, in fact, are Muscovites with patronage ties to Putin-they
obtained their seats with his administration's backing and have put the
Kremlin's interests ahead of their constituents.14 The new setup also makes it
more difficult for regional leaders to take collective action vis-à-vis the
central government. As the Duma deputy Vladimir Lysenko stated in 2001,
"The president had managed to get rid of one of the strongest and most
authoritative state bodies in the country. Under the old structure, the
Federation Council provided somewhat of a check and balance on the other
branches of power, especially the executive, which is fast evolving into an
authoritarian regime."15 Putin's reforms of the Federation Council did not
formally transgress the democratic rules of the game outlined in Russia's
constitution. Moreover, the prior method of constituting the upper house was far
from perfect, since it blurred the lines between executive and legislative
authority. Putin's correction to this odd formation, however, was not the
democratizing measure that many had proposed for years-that is, direct election
of senators. Instead, his reform decreased the role of the citizenry in
selecting its governmental representatives and thus weakened another check on
the Kremlin's power.
Moscow Versus the Regions
Putin's clipping of the governors' wings was extended to their home turf by a
decree enacted on May 13, 2000. The decree established seven super-regions
("federal districts"), accountable to Moscow, and super-imposed them
on the eighty-nine units of the federation. Each super-region was to be headed
by a plenipotentiary appointed by the president and sitting on his Security
Council. Five of the seven envoys named in 2000 were from the Federal Security
Service (FSB), the army, or the police.16 Their writ extends to every federal
agency in the regions other than the military forces, and thus they have access
to officials in the politically most sensitive and influential agencies, such as
the treasury, the tax inspectorate, the procuracy, the FSB, and the regular
police. Their mission is to oversee the activities of the bureaucracy and report
to the president's office on any regional noncompliance with the constitution or
the law.
Three other changes accompanied the super-regions. First, a law passed in
July 2000 authorizes the president to suspend elected governors accused of
wrongdoing by the procurator-general's office. Inasmuch as criminal proceedings
can drag on indefinitely (especially if it suits the president), the law is
tantamount to a presidential right to fire governors. Putin has used the power
only once, and indirectly at that (when he orchestrated the ouster of Governor
Evgenii Nazdratenko of Primorskii Krai in 2001),17 but the mere threat of it has
had a chilling effect on gubernatorial initiative. Putin can also dismiss any
regional legislature that passes laws contravening federal laws or the
constitution. Second, Putin's government has stopped signing the bilateral
agreements with the provinces that were one of Yeltsin's favorite instruments
for winning their acquiescence. As of 2003, the division of labor among the
national and subnational governments is to be governed by an omnibus law that in
principle is to be applied uniformly across Russia. Third, Moscow has pushed
through a more centralized allotment of tax receipts. As of 1999, roughly 45
percent of the revenues collected in the regions were supposed to be transferred
to the central government, but the amount that reached it was often smaller.
Under a law signed by Putin in 2000, about 55 percent is to go to Moscow and 45
percent to the regions, and the balance is to be reviewed regularly. Regions
like Bashkortostan, which for years paid almost no federal taxes by a virtue of
bilateral agreement, are once again contributing to the federal budget.
Party Fractures, Election Machinations
Russia's party system does not perform the role that party systems play in
working democracies. Most of the country's parties lack a distinct identity or a
stable following. They have little effect on the elections that count, the ones
in which the president and the regional administrative heads are chosen. Russian
electoral law assigns political parties a pivotal role in parliamentary
elections, but nonpartisans and weak party organizations continue to play a
critical role. Finally, there is little internal cohesion within the parties
that remain.
Fatherland-All Russia. The Fatherland-All Russia bloc (OVR), the founding of
which initiated the electoral struggle, spoke for current and recent
officeholders who sought control of the national government on the assumption
that Yeltsin and his entourage were a spent force. Unity, the response to OVR's
challenge, was initially created by some pro-Kremlin governors and businessmen
like Boris Berezovskii who were concerned about the problems they would face if
OVR and former prime minister Evgenii Primakov came to power.
Both founding groups miscalculated. OVR made the biggest blunder when it
fumbled the Duma election and then concluded that it could not field a credible
candidate for president. All Russia and the Regions of Russia caucus defected in
January 2000 and mended fences with the Kremlin. In due course, the entire
coalition followed abjectly into Putin's camp.
Unity. The original masterminds of Unity miscalculated in a different way.
Unity achieved electoral success and incorporation into the power structure, but
its architect, Berezovskii, did not survive as a political insider. Anticipating
Putin's gratitude, Berezovskii got the back of his hand, because Putin feared
that the "Family" group around Berezovskii and his business ventures
had too much influence. He first ostracized Berezovskii and then pushed him into
exile in London in 2001. Unity thrived without Berezovskii, upgrading its legal
status from electoral bloc to civic movement and then, in 2002, into a political
party named Unified Russia. OVR agreed to a phased-in merger with Unified Russia
that will be complete in time for the 2003 parliamentary election. Whereas
Yeltsin discarded two consecutive parties of power, Russia's Choice and Our Home
Is Russia, Putin favors strengthening Unity/Unified Russia as an organization
and seems ready to endorse and assist it in the 2003 parliamentary elections.
Communists. A smoldering disagreement in the Communist Party of the Russian
Federation (KPRF), the main opposition party, between the leader, Ziuganov, and
the parliamentary speaker, Seleznev, burst into flame in 2002. Seleznev resigned
from the party but, with Kremlin support, kept the speaker's job. He has formed
his own political organization, Russia (Rossiia), and vows to battle the KPRF
for leftist votes in the next elections. Many members are disgruntled with
Ziuganov's inflexibility, and thus the KPRF may very well nominate a younger,
less hidebound individual, such as Sergei Glazev, as its presidential standard
bearer in 2004. Despite these internal battles, the KPRF is poised to benefit
from its loyal and stable electorate. Compared to all of Russia's other parties,
the KPRF has the most promising short-term future.
Union of Right Forces. On the right, the SPS has made the transition from a
coalition of parties and movements to a political party. The head of its 1999
slate, Sergei Kirienko, withdrew from partisan activity when he became Putin's
plenipotentiary in the Volga super-region. This left Boris Nemtsov as
parliamentary chair, with Anatolii Chubais, Yeltsin's privatization tsar,
lurking in the wings. Having cooperated with the government and seen it
institute a liberal economic policy, SPS worries that it will not have a
attractive platform to sell to the electorate in 2003. Several veterans of the
Russian democratic movement, most prominently human rights advocate Sergei
Kovalev, have quit the party in disgust at its pro-war stance on Chechnya.18
With Unity creeping to the right and the Kremlin ever more hostile to its
leaders, SPS will have to fight hard to maintain its slightly right-of-center
electoral base in the 2003 parliamentary elections.
Yabloko. SPS's liberal rival, Yabloko, suffered a number of defections after
March 2000, including the manager of its 1999 campaign, Viacheslav Igrunov, who
left to form his own boutique political movement.19 Grigorii Yavlinskii remains
at the helm and has firmed his relationship with Mikhail Khodorkovskii, the CEO
of Yukos and the richest man in Russia. Sporadic negotiations with SPS about a
common slate in 2003 or other forms of collaboration have been in vain.20 After
years of standoffishness toward the government, Yavlinskii has edged closer to
Putin, perhaps aware of how much the president's blessings could help him in the
next election. Putin's attitude toward the liberals was apparently influenced by
their conduct during the crisis sparked by the seizure of hundreds of hostages
in a Moscow theater by Chechen fighters in October 2002. He accused Nemtsov of
exploiting the disaster for political gain and praised Yavlinskii for not doing
so. His reaction fueled suspicion that Putin may back Yabloko as his liberal
ally instead of SPS.21
Long-Term Effects. Whatever comes of these partisan intrigues and squabbles,
there are two other changes underway that must be watched for their long-term
effects. The first stems from the interest of the Russian leadership in
revamping the rules for party formation and State Duma elections. Addressing
Unity's convention in February 2000, Putin spoke in favor of a
"workable" party system made up of "two, three, or four
parties."22 Streamlining was the main aim of a new law on parties passed in
2001, which stiffened the requirements for registration and stipulated that
electoral blocs would now have to include one political party. In 1999, Unity
called for an end to proportional representation and for all deputies to be
elected in districts. Its motivations were not altruistic. Unity's poor showing
in the districts in 1999 notwithstanding, its founders calculated that a party
of power would do better in a district-based system, especially if it could
polarize the district races and then prevail in the runoff. Unity and its Duma
allies have so far failed to institute such a change, but in 2002, they raised
the threshold for the party list from 5 to 7 percent, effective in 2007 (they
originally proposed 12.5 percent), which will decrease the number of parties
that get into parliament. Putin's brain trust hopes eventually to push all
parties other than Unified Russia and the KPRF to the sidelines.23 If the
communists and Unified Russia were to cooperate in getting rid of proportional
representation altogether, Russia's proto-multiparty system might easily become
a hegemonic party system dominated by Unified Russia.24
The second and more alarming trend is toward arbitrary interference by the
central authorities in regional elections, usually with the connivance of local
politicos, electoral commissions, and courts. The tone was set in November 2000,
when Kremlin officials pressured a judge to remove the incumbent, Aleksandr
Rutskoi, from the gubernatorial ballot in Kursk on the eve of the election.
Rutskoi, a supporter of Unity in 1999 and Russia's vice president from 1991 to
1993, had, among other things, offended Putin during the controversy about the
sinking of the submarine Kursk several months before.25 In April 2002, the
scenario was repeated with the front-runner for president of Ingushetiia, a
republic bordering Chechnya.26 The same year, Moscow intervened on behalf of
clients in gubernatorial elections in Krasnoiarsk and Nizhnii Novgorod, and
there were charges of fraud in the vote counting.27 Such practices, whether or
not they spread to the national level, compromise Russia's functioning even as
an electoral democracy. As Andreas Shedler has observed, the process of
assessing electoral democracies is like multiplying by zero, as opposed to
adding: "Partial compliance to democratic norms does not add up to partial
democracy. Gross violation of any one condition invalidates the fulfillment of
all the others. If the chain of democratic choice is broken anywhere, elections
become not less democratic but undemocratic."28
The lack of strong opposition parties and the central state's ability to
intervene in local elections underscore the weakness of the checks on the
Kremlin's power. Rather than consolidating, these potential balancers of
presidential power have weakened with time.
Chechnya and Civil Liberties
Putin's rise to power dovetailed with a cruel war in Chechnya, the second
Russia had fought there since 1994. In the 1999-2000 electoral cycle, voters saw
Unity and then Putin as the political players who could best handle this
tormenting issue. The initial use of force against the Chechen fighters making
raids on nearby Dagestan in 1999 was justified. Russia also had a sovereign
right to deal with the lawlessness that enveloped Chechnya after the Khasavyurt
accord ended the first war in 1996, a plague whose barbarous manifestations
included was a wave of kidnappings and the execution of hostages. The Russian
government's response-full-scale reoccupation, bombardment by heavy weaponry,
oppressive patrols and "filtration camps" for segregating and
interrogating suspects-has not brought about the promised result. Putin has
pledged military reform, as did Yeltsin before him, and appointed a civilian,
Sergei Ivanov of the FSB, as defense minister in 2000, but this objective has
taken a back seat to prosecuting the war with archaic military forces consisting
of sullen conscripts led by a Soviet-era officer corps.29
Wars are always brutal, and Chechnya is no exception, but the violence of the
guerrillas and the terrorists linked to them does not exonerate Russia's
routinely inhumane actions. Human Rights Watch has documented atrocities that
include summary shootings, the torching of villages, the rape of Chechen women,
and the mistreatment of prisoners of war.30 Experts reckon that the fighting has
displaced 400,000 refugees.31 Moscow has no strategy for either withdrawal or a
negotiated settlement. The March 2003 referendum on Chechnya's status, in which
more than 90 percent of its citizens supposedly endorsed all three of Moscow's
questions, was a farce, emphasizing yet again the lack of a serious plan to end
the bloodshed. To stanch the flow of information about human rights violations,
Russia has expelled the observer mission of the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe from the republic.
President Putin has loosened the leash on the FSB, which he headed in
1998-1999 and which is now directed by his associate Nikolai Patrushev. The
agency has stepped up its harassment of targeted human rights activists and
environmentalists, Western non-governmental organizations, and religious groups
affiliated with outside organizations.32 New guidelines on foreign contacts for
academics have been issued, and contacts with scientists in so-called closed
nuclear cities are restricted. Several academics and environmentalists have been
prosecuted for espionage, although the most conspicuous cases ended with
acquittals or pardons.33 At the end of 2002, the FSB became more aggressive
about limiting contacts between Russian citizens and foreigners. The Ministry of
the Interior must now review most visa invitations to non-Russians. In addition
to evicting the OSCE from Chechnya, the Russian government canceled its
agreement with the U.S. Peace Corps and refused reentry to Irene Stevenson, the
long-time director of the AFL-CIO's Solidarity Center in Moscow.
Muzzling the Independent Media
Putin has also tightened the state's grip on the mass media, assigning
priority to national television.34 The commercial network NTV supported OVR in
the Duma campaign and, though less warmly, Yavlinskii in the presidential
campaign, and provided the most candid coverage of the two Chechen wars. Putin
moved to settle scores in the spring of 2000. His Kremlin administration leaned
on prosecutors to investigate alleged past misdeeds of Vladimir Gusinskii,
president of the Media-Most company, which owned NTV. Gazprom, the natural gas
conglomerate with strong ties to the Kremlin, then called in a large loan to NTV.
In the space of several months, Gazprom's media holding company took control of
the network, Gusinskii fled abroad, the staff of the weekly newsmagazine Itogi
was fired, and most Media-Most ancillaries were shut down. Gazprom purged NTV a
second time in January 2003, removing Boris Jordan, the Russian-American
director it had appointed in 2000, due to NTV's critical coverage of the
government's handling of the hostage crisis in a theater in downtown Moscow in
the fall of 2002. Evgenii Kiselev and many of NTV's best journalists and
producers migrated to TV-6, a much smaller station owned by Berezovskii, only to
have the government close it. The former NTV employees got back on the air on a
channel called TVS in 2002, but it has only a small fraction of the national
audience. One of the original TVS board members, Evgenii Primakov, "called
on editorial staff to exercise 'internal censorship' in order to keep the
network 'responsible.' "35 By the time Berezovskii relinquished TV-6, he
had already ceded his large minority stake and editorial control in ORT, and
Sergei Dorenko, the sarcastic newscaster who was his and the Kremlin's battering
ram against OVR in 1999, had been sent packing. Governmental agencies have
severely restricted access to Chechnya by Russian and foreign correspondents,
and have arrested and intimidated several print journalists whose war stories
they found inconvenient.36
The struggle about the media involves business and personality issues as well
as questions of free speech. The losers to date are not blameless. Gusinskii's
financial practices were questionable, and NTV did not offer equal access to all
comers during the 1999-2000 elections. Nevertheless, the pluralism that comes
from multiple owners and multiple biases is preferable to the monotone that
would result from a total state monopoly of the news. In nationwide television
broadcasting, Russia is closer to such a monopoly today than at any time since
the establishment of NTV in 1993. In its Global Survey of Media Independence for
2003, Freedom House listed Russia as "not free" for the first time
since the collapse of the Soviet Union. As the 2003-2004 round of elections
approaches, even moderate opponents of Putin have many fewer outlets for
delivering their message than in 1999-2000.37
Putin's Agenda and the Future of Russian Democracy
Putin and his statecraft cannot be appraised on one level or by one
criterion. Enough is not yet known to make it possible to sort through the
ellipses and contradictions in the thinking of the public man. The private man
is hidden behind many veils.
Some of what is here called managed democracy is a pragmatic response to the
trying circumstances Russia found itself in at the end of the 1990s. Boris
Yeltsin, capable of flashes of imagination and boldness, was bored with the
minutiae of government and preferred changing officials to rethinking policies.
To buy support and stability in tumultuous times, he repeatedly made concessions
to groups like the provincial governors and the new business elite, barely
considering the costs. Putin inherited these arrangements, found many of them
lacking, and set out to enforce or negotiate better terms. The particulars often
reflect common sense more than ideology, and might very well have been
implemented no matter who succeeded Yeltsin. Although the means have sometimes
been suspect, there is nothing objectionable in Putin's ending the polarization
of executive and legislature, removing the anomaly of governors sitting in the
upper house of parliament, squeezing more tax revenues from the provinces,
tinkering with the electoral system, putting one or two of the most arrogant
oligarchs in their place, and retaliating against the Chechen incursion into
Dagestan. In economic policy, Putin has listened to liberal advice and converted
it into legislation more consistently and effectively than Yeltsin did. His
reforms, along with the 1998 devaluation and the rise in world oil prices, have
helped sustain an economic recovery now in its fifth year, a welcome respite
after so long in the doldrums.
Prolonged economic growth should be conducive to democracy, for it will grow
a middle class that will demand freedoms and accountable governance.38 This
could end up being Putin's most benign legacy to Russia. Nor should one ignore
the institutional and political projects he supports that may ultimately
strengthen democratic governance. To his credit, for example, Putin favors legal
reforms that will pare the power of prosecutors, introduce jury trials
nationwide, and lessen the incarceration rate. In 2002, he vetoed restrictive
amendments to the law on the mass media passed by parliament after the Moscow
hostage crisis. On occasion at least, Putin says the right things about
democracy and human rights. In November 2001, he attended a Civic Forum
sponsored by his administration with the purpose of bridging the chasm between
state officials and grassroots activists. The sight of a former KGB agent, Putin,
sitting at the same table as a former Soviet dissident and Helsinki Watch
leader, Ludmila Alekseeva, was a stirring one, although some fretted that it was
all a ploy to co-opt activists.39 A year later, Putin met with a similar group
on International Human Rights Day and proclaimed that his heart was with them:
Protecting civil rights and freedoms is a highly relevant issue for Russia. You
know that next year will see the tenth anniversary of our constitution. It
declares the basic human rights and freedoms to be the highest value and it
enshrines them as self-implementing standards. I must say that this is of course
a great achievement.40
Unfortunately, Putin's actions are all too frequently at variance with his
words. He has worked assiduously to weaken the ramshackle checks and balances
built up during Yeltsin's tenure and to impose the tidy logic of the
rationalizer and controller but not, as a rule, the logic of the democrat.
Yeltsin loved adding pawns to the political chessboard. Putin is happier
subtracting them, as he has with Fatherland-All Russia, the oligarchs who got
too close to the throne (Berezovskii and Gusinskii), the governors who rashly
meddled in Moscow politics, the parties he wants to limit to "two, three,
or four," and the elected government of Chechnya. When the chips are down,
Putin has shown himself to be, if not actively antagonistic to democratic
values, indifferent to their application. In his pursuit of a strong state that
can solve Russia's problems, he tends to forget what he said in his open letter
to the electorate in February 2000-that a strong state, capable of promoting
popular freedom and welfare, must itself be "bound by the laws." A
presidential administration that schemes to have candidates whisked off the
ballot hours before a gubernatorial election is not one bound by the law.
Neither is a government that invokes phony legal excuses to seize control of an
NTV or a TV-6 or that lets ill-trained troops run amok in the North Caucasus.
It is not the trees that one should dwell on here but the forest. Democracy
as practiced by Putin is partly about practical problem-solving, but it is also
about eliminating external checks on the power of the state and the leader
without scrapping the constitutional framework bequeathed by Yeltsin. Russia's
political institutions were never more than partly democratic and were not
properly consolidated during the Yeltsin period. This makes it all the more
deplorable that Putin has diverted the country further away from democratic
development. After the critical set of elections in 1999-2000 and the first
several years in office of the talented leader who triumphed in them, the future
of Russian democracy is, in fact, more uncertain than before. Theorists and
policymakers must come to grips with the regime trajectory in Russia today. The
country is not following the democratic-transition script. Contrary to what some
in the Bush administration believe, Russia is very unlikely to graduate to
liberal democratic status by 2008.
The impact on the regime of Putin's rise to power suggests that the current
political system has not consolidated. Russia's nascent democracy is on a
negative trajectory, but the unconsolidated state of the regime gives some cause
for hope. The regime has not become a total dictatorship.41 Whether Putin even
wants to create such a regime is an open question. Whether he could is also
uncertain. Although weak throughout the 1990s and weaker today than just two
years ago, democratic rules and procedures are still embedded in the regime, and
democratic norms permeate society.42 Above all else, every major political actor
in Russia today believes that elections are the only legitimate way to choose
national leaders. No serious leader or political force in Russia today has
articulated an alternative model to democracy. For the near future, Putin and
his advisers seem likely to manage a version of democracy that limits real
political competition and blocks the strengthening of alternative sources of
political power. During new crises or after unforeseen events, "managed
democracy" can become unmanageable, and pseudo-democratic institutions may
suddenly gain real democratic content. The experience of Slobodan Miloseviæ in
the former Yugoslavia and Leonid Kuchma in Ukraine demonstrates how formal
democratic rules can suddenly and surprisingly undermine the best plans for
"managing" democracy.
In Russia, though, the most likely outcome for the near future is neither
more democracy nor more autocracy-neither liberal democracy nor dictatorship-but
a stable regime somewhere in between. Putin has eroded democratic institutions
and practices but has not destroyed them, nor has he articulated a plan for
their further erosion. Russian society seems content with the current
quasi-democratic, quasi-autocratic order. Russians value democracy but are too
exhausted, from decades of turmoil, to fight for better democracy. Stability is
the greater priority. Managed democracy could be around in Russia for a long
time.
Notes
1. For more skeptical assessments, see Vladimir Brovkin, "The Emperor's
New Clothes: Continuities of Soviet Political Culture in Contemporary
Russia," Problems of Post-Communism 43, no. 2 (March/April 1996): 21-28;
Peter Reddaway and Dmitri Glinski, Market Bolshevism: The Tragedy of Russia's
Reforms, (Washington, DC: U.S. Institute of Peace Press, 1999); Stephen Cohen,
"Russian Studies Without Russia," Post-Soviet Affairs 15, no. 1
(1999): 37-55; Lilia Shevstova, Yeltsin's Russia: Myths and Realities
(Washington, DC: Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 1999).
2. On the differences between electoral and liberal democracies, see Larry
Diamond, Developing Democracy: Toward Consolidation (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins
University Press, 1999).
3. For elaboration of the authors' views on this subject, see Timothy J.
Colton, Transitional Citizens: Voters and What Influences Them in the New Russia
(Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2000); Michael McFaul, Russia's Unfinished
Revolution: Political Change from Gorbachev to Putin (Ithaca: Cornell University
Press, 2001).
4. See Larry Diamond, "Thinking About Hybrid Regimes," Journal of
Democracy 13, no. 3 (July 2002): 21-35; Steven Levitsky and Lucan Way, "The
Rise of Competitive Authoritarianism," Journal of Democracy 13, no. 3 (July
2002): 51-65; Larry Diamond and Marc F. Plattner, eds., Democracy after
Communism (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2002).
5. Michael McFaul, "The Fourth Wave of Democracy and Dictatorship:
Noncooperative Transitions in the Postcommunist World," World Politics 54,
no. 2 (January 2002): 212-44.
6. See Thomas F. Remington, "Putin, the Duma, and Political
Parties," in Putin's Russia: Past Imperfect, Future Uncertain, ed. Dale R.
Herspring (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2003), pp. 39-62.
7. The pact scrapped a rule of thumb that assigned committee chairs in
proportion to the size of the respective fractions. OVR and the two liberal
groups, SPS and Yabloko, boycotted Duma sessions for several weeks, to no end.
8. Quoted by Susan Glasser in the Washington Post (June 8, 2002): A14.
9. For details on the package, see Erika Weinthal and Pauline Jones Luong,
"Resource Wealth and Institutional Change: The Political Economy of Tax
Reform in Russia," Yale University, December 2002.
10. See Alexander Sokolowski, "Bankrupt Government: The Politics of
Budgetary Irresponsibility in Yeltsin's Russia" (Ph.D. dissertation,
Princeton University, 2002).
11. Political polarization generally results in bad economic policy.
Polarization between institutions produces especially bad policy, as the 1998
financial crisis in Russia starkly demonstrated. On the first issue, see Timothy
Frye, "The Perils of Polarization: Economic Performance in the
Postcommunist World," World Politics 54, no. 3 (April 2002): 308-37. On the
second issue, see Sokolowski, "Bankrupt Government"; Vladimir Mau,
Ekonomicheskaia reforma: skvoz prizmu konstitutsii i politiki (Economic Reform:
Through the Prism of Constitutionalism and Politics) (Moscow: Ad Marginem,
1999).
12. For details, see Timothy J. Colton and Michael McFaul, Popular Choice and
Managed Democracy: The Russian Elections of 1999 and 2000 (Washington, DC:
Brookings Institution Press, 2003).
13. One representative is selected by the speaker of the regional assembly
and confirmed by the assembly as a whole. The governor selects the second
representative, but the assembly can veto the nominee with a two-thirds
majority. Representatives serve at the pleasure of those who select them.
14. Aleksei Makarkin, "Sovet Federatsii: novyi sostav, novye problemy"
(Federation Council: New Structure, New Problems), in Politika v regionakh:
gubernatory i gruppy vliianiia (Politics in the Regions: Governors and Groups of
Influence), ed. Rostislav Turovskii (Moscow: Tsentr politicheskikh tekhnologii,
2002), pp. 53-75.
15. Vladimir Lysenko, "The Federation Council Fails to Become a House of
Lords," in Russia on Russia: Administrative and State Reform in Russia, ed.
Yuri Senokosov and John Lloyd (Moscow: Moscow School of Political Studies, June
2002), p. 20.
16. Many of the "federal inspectors" reporting to them from the
administrative regions also have backgrounds in the FSB/KGB and the uniformed
police. Natalia Zybarevich, Nikolai Petrov, and Aleksei Titkov, "Federalnye
okruga-2000" (Federal Districts-2000), in Regiony Rossii v 1999 g (Russian
Regions in 1999), ed. Nikolai Petrov (Moscow: Moscow Carnegie Center, 2001), p.
190.
17. Nazdratenko, who supported the Unity bloc in 1999, was removed mainly
because his government was incapable of dealing with power outages in the
region. He was allowed to resign and given the comfortable Moscow post of head
of the national fisheries agency.
18. Viktor Pokhmelkin and Sergei Yushenkov also quit SPS, ostensibly for the
same reason. They joined forces with Berezovskii in 2002 to form a new movement,
Liberal Russia. They severed ties with him in 2003 and have demonstrated little
appeal for voters.
19. Other defectors included the well-known Duma deputies Nikolai Travkin and
Elena Mizulina.
20. In January 2003, SPS offered to support Yavlinskii as presidential
candidate and to sever its ties to Anatolii Chubais, whom Yavlinskii abhors, but
Yavlinskii rejected the proposition.
21. There were reports after the hostage crisis that Yavlinskii was
considering taking a senior position in Putin's government. See Boris
Sapozhnikov at www.gazeta.ru (December 23, 2002).
22. RFE/RL Newsline (February 28, 2000).
23. See the perceptive report by Olga Tropkina in Nezavisimaia gazeta
(October 8, 2002).
24. Pointing in a more positive direction is the 2002 federal law mandating
proportional representation for 50 percent of the seats in local and regional
legislatures. The law creates incentives for party building at the subnational
level, where it has gone at a snail's pace for the past decade. See the
statement by Aleksandr Veshniakov of the Central Electoral Commission (www.cikrf.ru/_1_en/doc_2_1/).
25. The incident was widely reported at the time. See, for example, Novosti
Rossii (November 9, 2000), available at www.newsru.com/russia/. Rutskoi
confirmed the main elements of the story, but did not blame Putin personally, in
an interview with Colton in Moscow on June 5, 2001.
26. Novosti Rossii (April 29, 2002).
27. See Anatolii Kostukov in Nezavisimaia gazeta (October 1, 2002).
28. Andreas Shedler, "The Menu of Manipulation," Journal of
Democracy 13, no. 2 (April 2002): 41.
29. Some Russian observers speak of the "militarization" of civil
government, as opposed to what Putin promised. See Olga Kryshtanovskaia, "Rezhim
Putina: liberalnaia militokratiia?" (Putin's Regime: Liberal Military
Rule?), unpublished manuscript, December 2002; "KGB vo vlasti,"
(KGB-There Is the Power), Kommersant-Vlas, (December 23, 2002), available at
www.compromat.ru/main/fsb/kgbvovlasti1/.
30. See, for instance, articles in the OSCE publication Russia/Chechnya:
"Now Happiness Remains: Civilian Killings, Pillage, and Rape in Alkhan-Yurt,"
12, no. 5 (April 2000): 1-33; "February 5: A Day of Slaughter in Novye Aldi,"
12, no. 9 (June 2000): 1-43; "The 'Dirty War' in Chechnya: Forced
Disappearances, Torture, and Summary Executions," 13, no. 1 (March 2001):
1-42; "Burying the Evidence: The Botched Investigation into a Mass Grave in
Chechnya," 13, no. 3 (May 2001): 1-26. John Dunlop's Chechnya Weekly,
published by the Jamestown Foundation, also provides full coverage of the war,
including human rights violations. There is extensive discussion of the first
and second wars in Matthew Evangelista, The Chechen Wars: Will Russia Go the Way
of the Soviet Union? (Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press, 2003).
31. This figure is cited in Sarah Mendelson, "Russia, Chechnya, and
International Norms: The Power and Paucity of Human Rights?" working paper,
National Council for Eurasian and East European Research, Washington, DC, 2001,
p. 11.
32. Details may be found in the special issues on civil society in Russia in
Demokratizatsiya 10, nos. 2-3 (spring and summer 2002).
33. Those involve Aleksandr Nikitin and Grigorii Pasko, who were accused of
leaking classified information about the Russian navy's mismanagement of nuclear
waste. Both were arrested when Yeltsin was still president.
34. For details, see Masha Lipman and Michael McFaul, "Putin and the
Media," in Herspring, ed., Putin's Russia, pp. 63-84.
35. RFE/RL Russian Political Weekly (April 2, 2002).
36. Criminal prosecutions by the national and regional authorities have also
been widely utilized. According to Oleg Panfilov, the director of the Center for
Journalism in Extreme Situations, the number of criminal cases against
journalists under Putin already exceeds the total under Yeltsin. Quoted in RFE/RL
Russian Political Weekly (January 11, 2003).
37. The parties are thus devising new information strategies. These include
expensive means for distributing programming to regional and cable stations.
38. See the argument in Adam Przeworski, Michael Alvarez, José Antonio
Cheibub, and Fernando Limongi, Democracy and Development: Political Institutions
and Well-Being in the World, 1950-1990 (New York: Cambridge University Press,
2000).
39. Alexander Nikitin and Jane Buchanan, "The Kremlin's Civic Forum:
Cooperation or Cooptation for Civil Society in Russia?" Demokratizatsiya
10, no. 2 (spring 2002): 147-65.
40. Remarks translated and circulated by Federal News Service (December 10,
2002).
41. On the differences between "politically close authoritarian,"
or full-blown dictatorship, and "competitive authoritarian," see
Diamond, "Thinking About Hybrid Regimes"; Levitsky and Way, "Rise
of Competitive Authoritarianism."
42. Timothy J. Colton and Michael McFaul, "Are Russians
Undemocratic?" Post-Soviet Affairs 18, no. 2 (April/June 2002): 91-121.
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