|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Russia
& the former USSR
New law on Russian referendums: crude attack on democratic
rights
By Vladimir Volkov
8 June 2004
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
In his recent annual speech before both houses of parliament,
Russian President Vladimir Putin placed particular emphasis on
the necessity of creating a free society of free people.
However, the actual actions of the government are aimed in the
opposite direction.
In this regard, a new law on referendums has been advanced
that effectively deprives the citizens of Russia of their constitutionally
guaranteed right to express their will through such means. The
law is outfitted with so many administrative and bureaucratic
barriers that the holding of a referendum will only be possible
with the full consent and active support of the government.
The requirements stipulated by this lawwhich was worked
out by the Central Election Commission (CEC) and approved by the
lower chamber of parliament on June 2make a mockery of the
essence of the democratic process.
According to the law, political parties are no longer able
to initiate a referendum. Only private individuals and federal
organs of state power have this right at their disposal.
The procedure is ludicrous. To gain permission to initiate
a referendum campaign, its supporters must employ no less than
4,500 signature gatherers in 45 regions of the country (with not
less than 100 people working in each region). Each of these people
must be individually registered with a notary public. Then, over
the course of a month, the signature gatherers in each region
must register as a group at the regional elections office. After
this, the applications submitted by these regional groups are
given to the CEC and examined. If all the regulations have been
adhered to, the regional groups are registered, after which they
are allowed to collect money to support their efforts. The maximum
size allowed for such a fund is 250 million rubles (less than
$30 million).
From this moment onward, the groups can also begin to gather
signatures. Two million signatures are needed to hold a referendum.
Once the signatures have been gathered and verified, the president
sends the submitted referendum question (or questions, as their
quantity, in the spirit of democracy, is not limited)
to the Constitutional Court (CC), which verifies that they conform
to basic law. If in the end the CC gives its approval, the pro-referendum
campaign begins, for which one month is allotted. At this time,
campaigning against the referendum is also permitted.
There are, however, still more limitations. The law identifies
a wide range of issues that cannot be addressed by plebiscite.
These include questions relating to the safety of citizens, private
lands, taxes and the monetary obligations of the state to the
citizenry. Any question regarding the recall of the president
before the completion of his or her term in office is prohibited.
The law specifically stipulates that a referendum cannot include
a question about the recall of government deputies. The rule,
passed in the fall of 2002 and approved by the Constitutional
Court last year, mandating that referendums must occur within
the first two years after a presidential or parliamentary election,
has been made permanent.
And finally, referendums are considered valid only in the event
that more than 50 percent of those eligible to vote cast a ballot.
(In comparison for example, in many regions of Russia, gubernatorial
elections are considered valid with a 25 percent turnout, and
some municipal elections are viewed as having a high enough turnout
so long as one person casts a ballot.)
The new law is of an openly prohibitive character. It is designed
to legitimatise the current state of affairs, which was created
by the Kremlin when, for tactical reasons, it temporarily prohibited
the carrying out of referendums in September 2002. This was done
after the Communist Party of the Russian Federation (CPRF) attempted
to initiate a plebiscite consisting of four questions dealing
with the purchase and sale of land, the size of utility bills,
and minimum wages and pensions.
The CPRF wanted to use the growing discontent of the working
class with their deteriorating conditions to gain political authority
before the start of the campaign for the parliamentary elections.
This was in large measure a political show, as the CPRF has long
participated in the carrying out of the Kremlins policies
and bears responsibility for the social catastrophe unfolding
in Russia. It is not accidental that the CPRF obediently submitted
to the prohibitions on referendums imposed by the Putin government
in September 2002, which in turn played not a small role in the
record low votes received by the CPRF in the elections for the
State Duma last year.
Justifying the introduction of the new rules on referendums,
the defenders of the law make reference to so-called dubious
practices. This is a completely false pretext. As the Nezavisimaya
Gazeta pointed out in its May 24 issue, Throughout the
13 years of the existence of the independent Russian Federation
we have had all of two referendumsin April and in December
1993. Both were initiated by the central government. Of the conceivable
independent attempts, there were also only two...and both were
successfully beaten.
In reality, the purpose of the new law on referendums is to
preemptively disarm any existing or potential opponents of the
government, under conditions in which raising almost any significant
question in a nationwide discussion could gain mass support and
yield an undesirable result for the powers that be. Putins
government is attempting to protect itself from this danger through
a crude manipulation of the law.
The countrys constitution clearly gives citizens the
right to hold referendums, with the significance of this right
regarded as being equivalent to the election of parliament (and
the president). The constitution states that the sovereignty of
the Russian Federation resides with the people. This power is
realised directly through the organs of state power and local
self-government. The highest immediate expression of the
power of the people expresses itself in referendums and free elections
(Article 3). Elsewhere it is stated: The citizens of the
Russian Federation have the right to elect and be elected to the
organs of state power and local self government, as well as partake
in referendums (Article 32, Point 2).
The new law, which effectively prevents the conduction of referendums,
is an attack on the constitution of the country. In a legal sense,
it constitutes a move towards conditions in which the holding
of free elections will be proscribed in general.
The actions of the current Kremlin government illustrate that
there are few obstacles standing in the way of the liquidation
of the basic rights and freedoms of the Russian citizenry, which
are increasingly perceived by the state as a hindrance to the
realisation of its aims.
See Also:
Russia: Putin sacks government
on eve of presidential elections
[1 March 2004]
Russian elections:
Putin consolidates regime of managed democracy
[18 December 2003]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |