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#2 - JRL 9010 - JRL Home
Jamestown Foundation
www.jamestown.org
Eurasia Daily Monitor
Volume 2 Issue 6
January 10, 2005
RUSSIA: DEMOCRACY DISMANTLED
By Peter Rutland
No serious observer can dispute the fact that Russia is no longer a "managed
democracy"; it is a bureaucratic-authoritarian regime.
On September 13, 2004, President Vladimir Putin announced that the leaders of
Russia's regions would henceforth be appointed, not elected as they had been for
the past decade. The president's nominees must be approved by the regional
legislature, but if they refuse three times Putin can dissolve that body. The
reform effectively abolishes federalism and turns Russia into a unitary state.
Putin also declared that all seats in the State Duma would henceforth be filled
from party lists (currently, half are elected in single-seat races). New, more
restrictive, rules are also to be introduced for party registration (a minimum
of 50,000 members in place of the previous 10,000).
These measures were rushed into law by year's end. They remove the last
vestiges of voter choice from Russia's already rickety democracy. Yes, many
regional governors were corrupt and tyrannical: but in the past about half of
the incumbents running for re-election were defeated. The often hotly contested
single-seat Duma races gave voters another opportunity to express their
discontent, and the system allowed a few independent-minded politicians to win a
place in the legislature.
Now, these feedback mechanisms have been silenced. Why did Putin do this,
given that he has stressed the need to modernize Russia and enter the democratic
world community?
The ostensible reason is "the battle with international terrorism" --
Kremlinspeak for the war in Chechnya. The reforms were announced a week after
the Beslan attack. However, it is hard to see how the reforms will help fight
terrorism. Governors had already been stripped of their main security functions
with the introduction in 2000 of seven federal districts headed by presidential
representatives. Nor was there any evidence that elected governors were soft on
terrorism.
It is claimed that the authorities were "distracted" from the war on terror
by the need to bargain with regional leaders. But countries like Britain, Spain,
and India have managed to fight terrorism without destroying their democratic
institutions.
In reality, Putin's centralization of power began long before Beslan. That
tragedy merely provided an impetus and a political cover to the final
transition. For example, Central Electoral Commission Chairman Alexander
Veshnyakov had proposed abolishing single-mandate seats in the Duma as early as
May 2004, four months before Beslan.
The abolition of elected governors may have had more to do with economics
than terrorism. In a November 18 television interview, Putin linked the reform
to concern over the role of economic "clans" in certain regions. The reform may
be used to pry valuable assets out of the hands of regional bosses.
A country as large and ethnically diverse as Russia cannot be run effectively
from a single center. No other democratic federation has such a centralized
system of rule. Ukraine, fearful of fragmentation, never introduced the election
of governors -- perhaps that example, close to home, was uppermost in Putin's
mind?
Back in 2000 Putin gained the power to remove governors who were incompetent
or corrupt (subject to court review). But he never did so, preferring to remove
troublesome governors by promoting them to federal sinecures. This suggests that
Putin will not use his new powers to remove incumbents. Where would he find the
replacements, and how would such newcomers manage to rule effectively? Instead
Putin will probably re-appoint incumbents -- many of whom are nearing the end of
their second and final elected term in office.
Thus the reform will not ensure greater accountability to the center -- but
will remove accountability to the electorate. In compensation, Putin
simultaneously announced the creation of an appointed "Civic Chamber," drawn
from public organizations, that will provide expert commentary on legislative
proposals. It will be a poor substitute for a real legislature.
Voters themselves seem resigned to the changes. According to one poll, 55%
support and 36% oppose the abolition of governor elections (Novoe vremya,
December 30). But one can expect political clashes in regions anxious to defend
their ethnic identity, like Tatarstan. The regional legislature in neighboring
Chuvashiya was the only one that formally recorded their opposition to the
presidential draft (Rossiiskaya gazeta, December 15).
Outside the ethnic republics, people protesting wage arrears or power outages
used to vent their anger on elected governors. Now they will have to challenge
the federal government directly.
As Nikolai Petrov has suggested, "The state has become Soviet in both form
and content" (Moscow Times, December 28). But Putin no longer has a Communist
Party of the Soviet Union to serve as a check on state bureaucrats and a
training school for officials. The pro-government United Russia barely functions
as an independent organization, and it is a pale shadow of its ruling party
predecessor.
The left and right opposition parties have self-destructed, leaving United
Russia the only party that can be sure of clearing the new 7% threshold for
winning seats in the Duma (Romir poll cited in Rossiiskaya gazeta, December 28).
The new party law even strips voters of the quaint option of voting "against
all." In the future, citizens will have no option but support for the ruling
party.
(Kommersant-Vlast, December 20; Rossiiskaya gazeta, December 22; Nezavisimaya
gazeta, December 28; Versiya, December 6-12).
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