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Russia: Putin launches electoral bid to retain power
By Andrea Peters
12 October 2007
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Russian President Vladimir Putin announced on October 1 that
he intends to lead the slate of candidates for the pro-Kremlin
political party United Russia in the Duma elections scheduled
to take place this December. This latest move by Putinwho
is barred from running for a third presidential term by Russias
constitutionis part of the ongoing intrigue surrounding
who he will support as his successor in the Russian presidential
elections scheduled for next spring.
Speaking before a meeting of delegates from the United Russia
party, Putin indicated his willingness to serve as prime minister
in the event that United Russia wins the majority of seats in
the upcoming parliamentary race. With Putins approval ratings
hovering around 70 percent, it is now widely expected that Russian
voters will back United Russia against other parties running in
the Duma elections. As the leading candidate on the United Russia
list, Putin would then be called upon to form a government.
Putins announcement has put to rest months of speculation
as to how he would seek to retain power upon leaving office next
year. However, although the Russian president appears to have
found a means of holding on to a position within the government,
Putins decisionwhich still does not resolve the central
question of who he will indicate as his presidential successoris
an expression of political crisis within his authoritarian regime.
Once it became clear over the course of the past several months
that Putin would not attempt to change the constitution to allow
himself to serve a third term or to extend the length of his presidential
term, the political establishment has been waiting for an indication
of who Putin will support in the presidential elections. Two weeks
ago, when Putin dissolved his cabinet and accepted the resignation
of his Prime Minister Mikhail Fradkov, analysts expected that
Putin would name his successor to the newly vacant post.
However, with news sources close to the Kremlin reporting growing
factional tensions, neither of the two frontrunners in the unofficial
race, First Deputy Prime Ministers Sergei Ivanov and Dmitri Medvedev,
was appointed. Instead, Putin picked a loyal but relatively unknown
figure from within his political circle of loyalists from his
hometown of St. Petersburg, Viktor Zubkov.
Prior to his appointment as prime minister, Zubkov served as
the head of the Russian federal financial monitoring service,
which is a subdivision of the Ministry of Finance and conducts
investigations into financial dealings. He is, therefore, in a
position to know the intricacies of the various dirty financial
deals within Russian business and the government. However, while
Zubkov may very well become Putins successor, his appointment
was effectively a way for the president to put off making any
final decision about the matter and keep the various interested
parties in a state of suspension.
Asked several weeks ago whether or not he would run for president
in next years election, Zubkov simply indicated that this
was a possibility but failed to make any definitive
statement, a position confirmed shortly thereafter by Putin.
Putins decision to run on the United Russia ticket in
the Duma elections in hopes of becoming prime minister may give
some indication of how he will to seek to resolve the succession
question. That is, there is increasing speculation that Putin
will throw his weight behind someone of relatively weak political
staturelike Zubkovso that he is able to assert his
political authority through the post of prime minister. However,
this is a political gamble with many potential pitfalls.
In making a bid for this position, Putin is most likely gambling
on one of two uncertain possibilitieseither United Russia,
in collaboration with the to-be-elected Russian president, will
use its parliamentary majority to institute constitutional changes
that relegate more powers to the prime minister, or the future
president will at some point resign his post, thereby allowing
Putin to return to the presidential seat for an additional term.
There are, however, a number of political dangers in pursuing
either of these scenarios. First, under the current Russian constitution,
the prime minister has very limited political powers, the most
important of which reside in the presidency. The prime minister
does not even have the right to appoint his own cabinet.
Thus, Putin is counting on the person who is elected next spring
to be largely under his control, willing to do his bidding, and
able to fend off any competing demands from other Kremlin insiders.
In addition, Putin is betting on his presence as the leading
figure within United Russia holding the party together. United
Russia, however, was created as a pro-presidential party, based
on its loyalty to Putin as president. It has very little in the
way of a clear political program and is constituted by diverse
social elements.
As one commentator noted in an October 2 article on the Agenstvo
Politicheskikh Novostei entitled The midnight of Putin,
United Russia is not a collective of co-thinkers joined
together by a past history of civil war and common ordeals, and
thus able to preserve their loyalty to Putin after he leaves the
post of president. And this means that between [United Russia]
and [Putins] successor a gap could arise, through which,
sooner or later, this or that bureaucratic or political force
could insert itself.
While Putin himself enjoys high approval ratings, United Russia
as a political party does not command the same level of support,
with its approval ratings hovering around 45 percent. While Putins
decision to run as the partys candidate in the Duma elections
will greatly boost United Russias electoral fortunes, many
ordinary Russians harbor distrust and hostility to the bureaucratic
character and intrigues of party politics.
The general instability within Russias party system and
the unique importance of Putins position as president for
that system is further highlighted by the fact that Putins
decision to lead the United Party list was a tremendous blow to
the other pro-Kremlin party, A Just Russia. Ardent backers of
the Putin administration, A Just Russia presents itself as the
political alternative to United Russia, placing greater emphasis
on popular welfare and other social concerns. Putins announcement
that he will lead the United Russia list essentially pulled the
rug out from under A Just Russia, whose modus operandi has been
to back Putin, while supposedly opposing United Russia.
Within financial circles, the news of Putins bid for
prime minister was greeted rapturously. The Russian Trading System
closed above 2,100 points for the first time ever, while most
Russian securities rose between 1.9 and 5.7 points in the immediate
aftermath of the announcement. Despite the Yukos scandal and the
increase of state control over key industries, foreign investors
have been pleased with the Putin regime. Last year, foreign direct
investment rose 13.5 percent and in the first seven months of
this year, 20 percent.
However, the Russian economy is plagued by serious problems.
While investment in manufacturing and other industries has
significantly increased over the past several years, the oil and
gas industries are still the linchpin of Russias economic
boom. This places the country in a precarious position, as any
decline in energy prices on the world market, or challenges to
its geopolitical position in the worlds oil producing and
transportation areas, would be a significant blow to the countrys
economy.
Russia is currently facing major challenges from the United
States within its traditional sphere of influence. While US ambitions
in the former Soviet bloc have been dealt a blow by the disarray
within the various Color Revolutions and the cooling
of relations with several key states in Central Asia, this does
not mean that the US will simply retreat from a bid to assert
its dominance in these areas. Currently, the US and Russia are
at loggerheads over Washingtons aim to create a missile
defense shield in Eastern Europe and growing threats against Iran,
where Russia has major strategic interests.
According to news sources, many of the differences that exist
within various factions in the Kremlin have to do with disagreements
over relations with the United States.
Internally, the economic boom of the past several years has
created expectations on the part of the population that this growth
will translate into a significant improvement in its living standards.
As the coffers of the Russian treasury fill, the gross inequities
in the distribution of wealth in the country are felt all the
more acutely by the population at large.
An October 2 article in the daily Izvestia noted that
all the election campaigns of the various parties vying for the
Duma have made the demand for social justice a central
part of their platforms. Citing survey research by the All-Russian
Center for the Study of Public Opinion the newspaper stated, 64
percent of Russians are convinced that they and their families
are not able to resolve problems in their living conditions
without help from the government. And the government, for the
majority of people, is associated today with the figure of the
presidentin the eyes of the society it is he, and not a
political party, who is their defender.
However, recent experiences have shown that the various promises
made by the Kremlin and United Russia will not be met. In August
of this year, a strike hit the Russian automobile industry in
the city of Togliatti, which drew widespread attention. While
the number of participants in the strike was relatively small,
it had enormous political significance. The president of the AutoVAZ
conglomerate in Togliatti, Vladimir Artyakov, is a top leader
within the regional United Russia and a member of the local Duma.
Artyakov won office by promising to raise the monthly salaries
of workers to 25,000 rubles (approximately US$1,000), from its
current level of 7,000 rubles. What the strike effectively did
was reveal the hostility of a critical section of the working
class to the policies of Putins party.
An article entitled The time of proletarian solidarity,
published in the leading daily Nezaivismaya Gazeta on September
26, issued the following warning:
The current parliamentary and presidential campaigns
in Russias regions may develop on the basis of the increased
political activity of the new Russian working class. The recent
events at AutoVAZ (the strike, the attempt to stop the conveyer,
the demand for increased wages, the distribution of leaflets,
the active protest actions of the small but aggressive factory
union United) allow one to talk about the fact that
todays working class is no longer afraid of public forms
of protest.
The authoritarianism of the Putin regime and the game of smoke
and mirrors unfolding in Putins gamble to secure his political
position in the aftermath of his presidency are an expression
of growing strains within the Russian political elite as it confronts
a series of growing geopolitical, economic and social problems.
See Also:
Disarray in Putin regimes
cover-up of murder of Anna Politkovskaya
[13 September 2007]
Russia: The political significance
of the strike at the auto plant in Togliatti
[28 August 2007]
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