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Parliamentary Elections in Russia
Russians trust Putin
Some say, that these elections are a farewell-elections - Putin is leaving
president's chair and he just needed a support to feel free to leave
this position. "Unified Russia" in its campaign always pointed
out: "It's not election, it's referendum if you trust Putin or
not". The "referendum" showed that people generally trust
Putin and he can leave now
By ALEXEY SIDORENKO
from Moscow, RUSSIA
One
of the most important results of the Russian Legislative Election held
on December 2, is almost absolute victory of the party "Unified
Russia" (64.24%) - a party-of-power was leaded on these elections
by president of the country Vladimir Putin. Putin decided to lead the
party in October 2007 which helped the party to get such success.
Although not only president's support helped Unified Russia to achieve
such high results leaving next to win party CPRF (Communist party of
Russian Federation) with only 12%. New electoral laws as well as questionable
election practices brought this hegemony of Unified Russia. So what
was new in these elections? This legislative election had 4 main features,
that distinguished it from the previous:
- 7% barrier for the parties to get into the parliament. All the votes
for the parties that got less than 7% go to the parties winner. Consequence
- only four parties will get to the Russian Parliament after this election:
Unified Russia, Communist Party, Liberal Democratic Party, Just Russia.
- All the deputies were elected by party lists. There was no chance
for independent deputies to get into the parliament this time. This
feature existed in all previous elections since 1991.
- OSCE observers didn't participate in the election monitoring. Russian
Ministry of Foreign Affairs simply delayed receipt of an invitation.
After month of waiting for invitations director of the Office for Democratic
Institutions and Human Rights at OSCE Urdur Gunnarsdottir said that
that ODIHR is unable to monitor these elections.
- Party of power "Unified Russia" refused to take part in
pre-electoral debates. The party officials posted it like this: "People
should trust deeds, not words. We don't want to bullshit people we will
better do something useful". Never before, the party of power didn't
refuse to participate in debate. On this election, party decided not
to bother their officials with "bla-bla-bla".
Who is in the Parliament?
Unified Russia (Centrist): Centrist party officially leaded by
Boris Gryzlov (speaker of the fourth Russian Duma and previous ministry
of internal affairs) is considered to be the party of power. The party
appeared from the two parties of power (Edinstvo -Putin, Shoigu and
others and Otechestvo-vsya Rossia - Primakov, Luzhkov, Shaimiev) after
Duma elections in 1999. After merge they always stated that they're
Putin's party although Putin never entered
the party as a member. The main slogan of this campaign: "Putin's
plan - victory of Russia".
CPRF (Leftist): Communist party of the Russian Federation - is
one of the oldest parties in Russia. After Communist party of Soviet
Union was banned by Boris Yeltsin in 1991, it had to re-register under
a new name. Chairman of the party - Gennadiy Zyuganov. Party was most
powerful in 1996 when they almost won presidential elections. On these
elections they've got 12%. In 1990s they were widely supported in the
conservative rural areas - analysts even found a Red Belt - vast number
of regions where communists were taking over party of power. In late
2000s their electoral support declined and moved mainly to the big cities.
LDPR (Populist Centrist): Liberal-Democratic party of the Russian
Federation - populist party with the charismatic leader - veteran of
Russian politics Vladimir Zhirinovsky. Zhirinovsky is famous for his
rather inadequate proposals, like "Let's bomb Tbilisi instead of
Iraq" (to George Bush at the beginning of the Iraqi campaign).
Main ideology of the party has evolved a lot from resurrection of the
Russian Empire to the defense of the interests of ethnic Russian population.
Analysts say that LDPR is totally controlled from the Kremlin and never
voted against the party of power. Main audience of LDPR - people with
criminal past (or present). Main slogans: "We're for the Russians,
we're for the poor", "Not to lie and not to be afraid".
A Just Russia (Leftist Centrist): A just Russia appeared from
the merge of three different parties: Party of Pensioners, Russian Party
of Life, "Motherland". The party is leaded by Sergey Mironov,
head of the Federation Council, close friend of Vladimir Putin. The
merge was initiated by the Kremlin and during 2006 there was a wide-spread
opinion that A Just Russia will be a second party of power and will
help to form a fully controlled parliament. In 2007, however, things
changed and the party got just enough votes to get to the parliament.
The main results of the elections
People laugh - there are only two winners in these elections: Vladimir
Putin and Eduard Limonov. After this election lots of professional politicians
had to leave big politics - they're unemployed at the present moment.
Where will they go now? There's a high possibility that unable to fight
on the scene of the parliament they will try to search for a street
support. And that may contain risks for the whole political system.
Some say, that these elections are a farewell-elections - Putin is leaving
president's chair and he just needed a support to feel free to leave
this position. "Unified Russia" in its campaign always pointed
out: "It's not election,
it's referendum if you trust Putin or not". The "referendum"
showed that people generally trust Putin and he can leave now.
Russia didn't became more democratic after these elections. The elections
proved that it's political system is getting worse and worse in terms
of democracy and public representation.
Liberal parties (SPS and Yabloko) were deadly defeated. None of them
didn't pass 7% barrier on this election. None of them didn't pass other
important marks. 4% - when the central electoral commission gives back
$2.5 mln of electoral deposit (that is needed to register a party),
and even 3% - to receive funding from the state (according to the law
parties can have state funding if they receive more than 3%). That was
the result of a dominating media-campaign where liberal politics of
the 90-s were presented as thiefs and spies of the Western countries.
All the parties in Duma generally support Kremlin's politics. The differences
may be found only on small, secondary issues. There are no political
parties in Duma that would question or oppose contemporary course of
the executive branch.
(Published: 09.12.2007.)
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