Russia’s Latest Elections Leave Its Problems Unresolved

By: - September 23, 2021

Source link


Legislative elections were held over three days in Russia last weekend to elect 450 deputies of the State Duma, the lower house of the Federal Assembly. President Vladimir Putin’s ruling United Russia party won just under 50 percent of the vote and 324 seats in an election accompanied by the customary accusations of vote rigging from the opposition and by the usual hostility from the Western media machine.


The Biden administration had the gall to condemn the Russian election as flawed and undemocratic. A spokesman for the U.S. Department of State said that the conditions were “not conducive to free and fair proceedings.” This was really rich, coming from an administration which owes its brazen power grab to a host of illegitimate and fraudulent proceedings. Pot meet kettle.


Russia’s foreign ministry summoned U.S. Ambassador John Sullivan a week before the election to protest violations of Russian laws by unnamed American tech giants. Just days later, Apple and Google removed an app from their stores which was created by the opposition group supporting Alexei Navalny to promote candidates running against United Russia. It seems likely that the apps were added to the stores with some encouragement from the U.S. Government, but its “democracy-promotion” of course does not count as “interference.”


The biggest problem with the Russian political system is not vote rigging or foreign interference, however. Its elections are at worst no more tainted than our own. Even if it had been conducted under Marquis of Queensberry rules, last week’s Duma bout likely would not have yielded a significantly different result. The public is aware of this and there have been no public protests, in contrast with the aftermath of some previous elections, notably in the winter of 2011-2012.


The main problem with the Russian political system is its excessive dependence on one man, Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin, who will turn 69 next month. After more than 20 years in power—mostly as president and briefly as prime minister—Putin appears to have lost the vigor and strategic sureness of touch which characterized his first decade in the Kremlin, when he presided over Russia’s impressive political and economic recovery after the disastrous Yeltsin years. Putin’s popularity is still over 60 percent. After obtaining constitutional changes in 2020 he is likely to seek reelection in 2024 and win again. If his health holds, theoretically he could remain in charge until 2036.


To what end? The question is legitimate, because the Russian state and nation face enormous challenges and no strategy for dealing with them is on the cards.


  • Russia’s population is shrinking, with a net loss of over half a million people in 2020, and four-fifths of its territory east of the Urals remains virtually unpopulated.

  • Its economy is expected to grow by 4.4 percent this year, after contracting by 3 percent in 2020, but its exports are still heavily dependent on hydrocarbons and raw materials, which is unacceptably high for a developed economy.

  • Since the Western sanctions were imposed in 2014 Russia has tried, with limited success, to reduce its dependence on imported machinery, pharmaceuticals, electronics, and cars.

  • Russia had the fourth largest economy in the world in 1913, but last year it ranked eleventh and it is projected to account for only 2 percent of global GDP for the next two decades.

  • The average wealth per capita in Russia ranked only 92nd in 2019, far behind the United States and most European countries.

  • Russia’s geostrategic position is precarious: it has lost a buffer zone in Ukraine and today its western borders correspond to those drawn by Emperor Peter I three centuries ago.


It is not clear how Putin intends to deal with these and other pressing issues. Over the past decade he has acted more like the CEO of a huge, stagnant company than a strategist with a clear vision for his nation’s future. And yet that vision is vitally necessary to release Russia’s enormous, untapped resources, to halt and reverse its demographic decline, and to manage increasingly complex relations with the U.S., Europe, China, and the Islamic world.


The problem is compounded by Putin’s evident reluctance to groom an heir apparent, and by the absence of clear rules for the transition of power in case of his sudden departure. Three decades after the dissolution of the USSR, the weakness of state institutions and mechanisms remains a defining feature of Russia’s political system. It cannot afford the kind of protracted power struggle which followed the death of Stalin in 1953.


Until August 2007 it looked like the succession could go to Sergei Ivanov, Putin’s first deputy prime minister at the time and the youngest general in the Russian foreign intelligence service. Then it was the turn of Dmitry Medvedev. He even served four years as Russia’s president (2008-2012), but during that time all real power had migrated to the office of the prime minister—Putin himself. Medvedev’s star has been in decline for some years now. He is said to lack authority and he has failed to establish a power base among Russia’s political and economic elite.


In January 2020 Putin replaced Medvedev as prime minister with an obscure tax official, Mikhail Mishustin, a technocrat with no national ambitions and no political base. Some of my Russian colleagues saw that decision as a clear indication that Putin sees himself as de facto president for life. Had he wanted to groom a new face, a younger man, this was the time to do so.


Russia’s fortunes have always depended on the personal qualities of the leader at the top, starting in modern times with Peter the Great, who reformed his giant realm much against the will of his subjects. His foundations of modern statehood were ably used by Tsarina Catherine, who turned Russia into a great European power.


Putin played a significant role at another extremely challenging moment in his nation’s history: a time of Russia’s acute weakness which four successive U.S. presidents had used to expand NATO and to establish the system of unipolar global hegemony. His reluctance to imagine a post-Putin Russia, and pave the way for an orderly succession, is indicative of an unfortunate narcissistic streak which seems inevitable in politicians. It will be self-defeating for Russia if Putin continues to preside on a long road to nowhere until after he turns 80. It will be doubly so if he suddenly leaves the scene, and Russia’s still-unconsolidated political system finds the strain unbearable.


Image Credit: 


The Presidential Press and Information Office, CC BY 4.0


Dr. Srdja Trifkovic, Foreign Affairs Editor of Chronicles, is the author of The Sword of the Prophet and Defeating Jihad.

  • RSS WND

    • For WND, it's 'Judea and Samaria' – not 'West Bank'
      Under the leadership of its founders Joseph and Elizabeth Farah, WND has committed to adhering to the "Biblical Heartland Resolution" passed recently by the National Religious Broadcasters convention, whereby participants pledge to use the terms "Judea and Samaria" when referring to the region in eastern central Israel, rather than the ubiquitous but misleading term "West… […]
    • Anti-Zionists occupy condemned university building, vandalize it with antisemitic graffiti
      (JERUSALEM WEEKLY) – Two blocks south of U.C. Berkeley’s campus, anti-Zionist protesters took over a vacant building owned by the university on Wednesday morning, vandalizing it with swastikas and antisemitic language. “Zionism is Nazism” was spray-painted in black letters on several walls inside the condemned building, which was destroyed in a 2022 fire. Several dozen… […]
    • Hotel abruptly cancels pro-Israel event over 'credible threats'
      (THE BLAZE) – A Nashville hotel is being accused of religious discrimination after abruptly canceling a pro-Israel event. The Israel Summit — a "gathering of pro-Israel supporters who unconditionally support Israel’s right to be sovereign in the entirety of the land of Israel, including Jerusalem, Judea and Samaria, and the Gaza Strip," according to the… […]
    • Aid flows into Gaza over massive U.S. pier
      (NBC NEWS) – Trucks carrying humanitarian aid began moving ashore into Gaza Friday using a temporary pier built by the United States, delivering desperately needed supplies to the besieged Palestinian enclave. The floating dock is part of a makeshift effort to stave off a possible famine in Gaza, where Israel’s military assault has shut off… […]
    • Former Trump attorney, ex-fed prosecutor duke it out over whether Michael Cohen is 'worst witness ever'
      Jason Cohen Daily Caller News Foundation Criminal defense attorney Bill Brennan, who previously represented former President Donald Trump, and former federal prosecutor Shan Wu on Thursday sparred over whether Michael Cohen is a bad witness. Cohen faced cross-examination again on Thursday, with even CNN pundits questioning whether the jury will buy the admitted liar’s testimony… […]
    • Biden policy is reason illegal immigrant accused of murdering teen was out free
      Jason Hopkins Daily Caller News Foundation Federal immigration authorities cited a Department of Homeland Security (DHS) policy directive when explaining their handling of an illegal immigrant who is now charged with the murder of a teenager. Antonio Antonio-Rodas, an illegal immigrant from Guatemala, was arrested and charged with murder last week for a fatal car… […]
    • Top Fauci aide allegedly learned to make 'smoking gun' emails 'disappear'
      Jason Cohen Daily Caller News Foundation National Institutes of Health (NIH) Principal Deputy Director Lawrence Tabak testified on Thursday that a former aide to Dr. Anthony Fauci allegedly violated the agency’s public records policy by disposing of certain emails. Fauci’s senior advisor at the NIH Dr. David Morens allegedly intentionally obstructed the House Select Subcommittee… […]
    • Rudy Giuliani's birthday bash ends in chaos when he's served papers for 'fake electors case'
      (NEW YORK POST) – Rudy Giuliani got more than cake and presents for his 80th birthday bash – he was also served justice. The former New York City mayor was tripping the light fantastic with pals in Palm Springs Friday night when he was intercepted outside the party at the home of top GOP consultant… […]
    • Inflation, not a bug but a feature, of government policies
      [Editor's note: This story originally was published by Real Clear Wire.] By J. Kennerly Davis Real Clear Wire May brings more bad economic news for hard-pressed American households. “Transitory” inflation remains firmly entrenched at rates equal to or higher than those reported at the start of 2024. The Labor Department reports this week that the Consumer… […]
    • State sued for embedding racism in its 'social work' board
      The state of Minnesota has been sued for embedding a racist demand in the qualifications for members of its "Board of Social Work." That group issues licenses to qualified social workers and then takes disciplinary action against those who violate its standards. It has 15 members appointed by the governor, including five who are vetted… […]
  • Enter My WorldView