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Russia: Putin sacks government on eve of presidential elections
By Vladimir Volkov
1 March 2004
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On February 24, President Vladimir Putin announced the surprise
dismissal of the government of Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov.
The decision expresses differences and conflicts that have reached
a crisis point. It concentrates the levers of state power in the
hands of the incumbent president and serves to prevent any disruption
of Putins re-election on March 14.
The sacking of the entire government only three weeks before
the elections was unexpected and came without any public announcement
or discussion. It reveals the deep weakness of the Kremlin regime.
At a time when its authority is extremely unstable, and relies
mainly on the personal popularity of the president, the Kremlin
finds itself in an intense conflict with the influential oligarchs.
The sudden dismissal of the government also provides a vivid
illustration of the present condition of Russian democracy. The
president emerges increasingly as an authoritarian politician
who tries to balance between the various social groups and interests,
and reverts increasingly to undemocratic measures to suffocate
every sign of opposition.
Putins explanations, made on the same day, are contradictory
and unconvincing. He admitted there were no formal reasons for
dismissing the government. He even stressed that the government
had functioned satisfactorily.
In a number of further statements, delivered with a certain
arrogance, he stressed Russias macro-economic successes.
Interfax reported that under the Kasyanov government, from
May 2000 to February 2004, gross national product had risen by
26.5 percent and inflation had been cut almost in half. Although
these figures say nothing about the real situation facing ordinary
people and their daily fight for survival, according to Putin
the governments sacking has nothing to do with them.
According to some press comments, if Putins real concern
had been in redefining the priorities of economic policy, there
were numerous other ways for him to have done so. In any case,
according to the constitution, he must formally reappoint the
government following the presidential elections.
Another of Putins comments seems to come nearer the mark
concerning the real reasons for dismissing the government: The
uncertainties in the structures of the federal executive can be
overcome with the recent cabinet reshuffle. This also supports
the viability of the state apparatus to maintain the present speed
of the reforms, in particular the reforms of the administration.
The reference to overcoming the uncertainties in the
structures of the federal executive is particularly interesting.
Putin is worried about the loyalty of the administrative structuresnot
only in the centre, but also in the regions.
Notwithstanding the monolithic unity that appears to exist
at the highest levels, these are riven by deep contradictions.
Political rule is based upon the glaring social inequalities that
arose in the course of the capitalist reforms. The
Putin regime is characterised by the fact that the frustrations
of ordinary people with all the structures of the state power
and the existing political parties find a negative expression
in hopes regarding the person of the president.
These hopes are based not so much on Putins positive
programme (he is, after all, the representative of the nouveaux
riches), but rest on a powerful tendency to dislike everything
to do with the Yeltsin period and its devastating shock
therapy. Another reason can be found in the political vacuum
that exists at presentthe absence of any other attractive
or respectable political figure or movement.
Given that the hopes placed in Putin grew out of increasing
discontent with the social and political conditions since the
collapse of the Soviet Union, his rule has become increasingly
unstable and tenuous. The president has good reason to be afraid
of any uncontrollable changes.
Putin and the oligarchs
The general instability of Putins rule is intensified
by the conflict with the influential oligarchs. Putins first
years in office were marked by the peaceful coexistence of a newly
strengthened state bureaucracy and these private entrepreneurs,
which was regulated by means of corruption and secret agreements.
Lately, however, it has become increasingly difficult to maintain
these arrangements. The conflict between the government and the
oligarchs has burst into the open since the struggle with the
Yukos oil concern and the arrest of its chairman Mikhail Khodorkovsky
last year.
The result was the isolation of Putin, about which
Stanislav Belkovski, the Kremlin pundit and opinion leader of
the campaign against the oligarchs, has written several times.
Belkovski also observed that Putins isolation in the highest
circles of power was complemented by the ungovernability of the
state apparatus.
Several events that have occurred during the presidential elections
show that Putin is very vulnerable to criticism. Any candidate,
even the most insignificant, can draw attention to himself and
increase his election chances if he expresses only a fraction
of the truth concerning the real situation, or protests against
the deeply anti-democratic measures of the Putin regime. This
is the only explanation, for example, for the strange five-day
disappearance of presidential candidate Ivan Rybkin, for which
the Russian secret services are probably responsible. Rybkins
sharp criticisms were ended through a secret service operation.
He was intimidated and discredited as a political figure and a
private person.
The intimidation of presidential candidates continues. On the
same day Putin dismissed Kasyanov, three candidatesIrina
Chakamada, Sergei Glasiev and Nikolai Kharitonovdeclared
they would consider withdrawing their candidacy.
The Russian media has repeatedly expressed the fear that the
absence of any alternative candidates could mean that turnout
will sink below the critical 50 percent mark, since the presidential
elections have been decided in advance and voters do not have
any possibility of expressing their discontent. According to the
constitution, the elections are invalid if turnout is below 50
percent and, if so, all existing candidates are excluded from
a new election.
It is therefore critical for Putins survival that the
turnout reach the necessary level. The use of administrative measures
could thereby play a crucial role. If for any reason sections
of the structures of power in the centre or in the regions do
not adhere to the Kremlins rules, there could be unpredictable
consequences.
Some of those around the oligarchs who have fallen into disgrace,
such as Boris Beresovski, who lives in exile in London, are interested
in the March 14 elections being invalid. They are agitating for
an election boycott. Although they do not have access to the necessary
media to publicise their line, they could throw substantial funds
behind such a plan.
From the outset, ex-prime minister Kasyanov was connected with
the leading oligarch clans who are no longer content with Putin.
Kasyanov belonged to the few last year who dared to publicly criticise
the attacks against Yukos. He condemned Khodorkovskys
arrest for not being objectively necessary.
However, Kasyanov did not adopt an independent political attitude.
Rather, he manoeuvred and tried to reconcile his loyalty towards
Putin with his support for the oligarchs. But even this little
courage was enough to raise his political standing.
As Gaseta.ru remarked, since last autumn Kasyanov was regarded
in some circles as a possible leader of an anti-Putin opposition.
Another important defender of the oligarchs was the former
Kremlin chief-of-staff, Alexander Voloshin. He submitted his resignation
shortly after the arrest of Khodorkovsky on October
24, 2003. Although he did this voluntarily, the resignation of
this influential figurelike the current sacking of the prime
minister and his governmenthappened shortly before the parliamentary
elections.
The Kremlins rules
Kasyanovs reaction to his sacking is remarkable. He has
not dissented or protested, and has not attempted to coin political
capital from it. He is undoubtedly playing according to the Kremlins
rules, which prohibit the controversy being conducted in public.
Whatever the extent of the differences he may have with Putin,
he is staying within the framework of the secret agreement and
has not spoken openly against the incumbent president.
His humble acceptance of his dismissal is not an isolated case,
but part of a tendency that has emerged clearly since the parliamentary
elections last year. An entire series of nationally well-known
leading politiciansthe chairman of the Communist Party Gennady
Zuganov, the leader of the liberal Jabloko party Grigory Javlinski,
and Boris Zhirinovski from the right-wing nationalist LDPR, as
well as the leader of the Union of Rightwing Forces (SPS) Boris
Nemzovhave all voluntarily forgone standing as candidates
in the upcoming presidential elections. The results of the parliamentary
elections have thereby played a crucial role, because at least
some from them could profit from the elections to the Duma.
Their behaviour took the form of voluntary political surrender
to Putin, dictated by their desire not to endanger the stability
of the regime. They preferred to remain in the background for
some time so as not to rock the boat.
Putin appointed Viktor Khristenko as acting government head;
he had previously occupied the post of vice-premier with responsibility
for questions of the oil and power complex. Born in 1957, Khristenko
has enjoyed a successful career as a bureaucrat. He was initially
concerned with privatisation on a regional level, and later with
problems of the state of the federal finances.
Initially, he was close to the radical-liberal Reformers
of the Yeltsin period, such as Anatoly Chubais. However, he never
came to prominence for developing his own positions on current
political questions. Khristenkos recommendation was that
he was a colourless but skilful manoeuvrer who did not harbour
any great political ambitions. He is regarded as a technocrat,
whose fate depends upon many circumstances.
Khristenkos personal opinions about the future of the
countryinsofar as one can assume he has anycan be
judged from an article that appeared in Wedomosti at the
end of January. In it he points out that both the path of insularity
(the orientation towards Russias internal resources) and
the path of openness (accelerated liberalisation)
have their risks. He stands for a third way, which
envisages a steady expansion of the borders of the attainable
market particularly at the expense of the CIS states. These
are ideas that correspond completely with the current political
thinking of the Kremlin and which are associated with plans for
a weak economic expansion of Russia within its traditional
spheres of influence.
See Also:
Russia: Behind the disappearance
of presidential candidate Ivan Rybkin
[24 February 2004]
Russian elections:
Putin consolidates regime of managed democracy
[18 December 2003]
Khodorkovskys
arrest and the defenders of billionaires democracy
[4 November 2003]
Russian President Putin
moves toward authoritarian rule
[3 June 2000]
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