Russia
Slides Towards Internal Political Crisis (MUST SEE SouthFront video
report!)
A rather harsh criticism of the Russian Government and the Kremlin in this SouthFront analysis. Sadly, I cannot say that I disagree with what they say. In fact,
I think that they are spot on and that all the “loyal” Kremlin-bots who deny that there is a serious problem in Russia are wrong. Supporting Vladimir Putin’s struggle to truly make Russia sovereign again and built a new multi-polar world does not at all entail being blind to all the very real mistakes and even faults of the Russian government.
I can only say that I hope that SF is right and that the current lack of support of the Russian people of the government’s neo-liberal/capitalist policies will force Putin to correct the course and return to the kind of social policies the Russian people clearly want.
It is also high time for Russia to take a harsher stance on the Ukraine, if only because the situation in the Ukraine (political and economic) is a total disaster and because some kind of military escalation in the Ukraine seems inevitable.
All in all, yet another absolutely superb report by SouthFront who sober analysis contrasts favorably with what both flag-wavers and fear-mongers typically produce.
Transcript:
This
is a critical look at the situation in Russia. The video is based on
an article of one of our readers and additional data.
The
Russia of 2019 is in a complicated economic and even political
situation. Smoldering conflicts near its borders amid continued
pressure from the US and NATO affect the situation in the country
negatively. This is manifested in society and in national politics.
The approval rating of the Russian government and personally of
President Vladimir Putin has been decreasing.
According
to VCIOM, a state pollster, in January 2019, Putin’s confidence
rating was only 32.8%. This is 24% less than in January 2018 when it
was 57.2%. At the same time, the confidence rating of Prime Minister
Dmitry Medvedev was 7.8%. The approval rating of his cabinet is 37.7%
while the disapproval rating is 38.7%. Opposition sources show data,
which is far worse for the current Russian leadership.
This
tendency is not linked to the foreign policy course of the Kremlin.
Rather, it’s the result of the recent series of liberal-minded
economic reforms, which look similar to the approaches exercised by
the Russian government in the mid-1990s. The decision to increase
Value Added Tax amid the slowing Russian economy, especially in the
industrial sector, and a very unpopular pension reform increasing the
retirement age were both factors contributing to the further growth
of discontent in the population.
Russia’s
GDP increased by 2.3% in 2018 compared to 1.6% in 2017. However, the
Ministry of Economic Development, in its document entitled “Economic
Picture” stated that this is linked to “one-time factors” and
is not “stable”. The ministry maintained its earlier forecast
stating that GDP growth in 2019 will be 1.3%. It confirmed increasing
capital outflow. In this case, the repayment of funds to Western
creditors by the Russian private sector is one of the causes.
The
Ministry of Economic Development also pointed out that the expendable
income of the population decreased by 0.2%. Statutory charges,
including the increased taxes, are named as one of the reasons. The
document says that statutory charges grew by 14.8% in 2018.
Additionally,
the population is facing an increasingly restrictive administrative
pressure: new fines and other penalties for minor violations in
various fields and additional administrative restrictions limiting
the freedom of actions of citizens. Restrictive traffic management of
big cities, increasing fees for using federal highways as well as
policies that are de-facto aimed at small business and self-employed
persons are among its landmarks.
Meanwhile
the general population has no effective levers of pressure to affect
or correct government policy. The public political sphere has become
a desert. United Russia (Edinaya Rossiya) is the only political party
still de—facto existing in public politics. By now its ideological
and organizational capabilities have become exhausted. Other
“political parties and organizations” are just media constructs
designed to defend the interests of a narrow group of their sponsors.
It is hard to find a lawmaker in the State Duma or the Federation
Council, who is not affiliated with the cliquish top political elite
and oligarch clans.
In
the media sphere, the government has failed to explain its current
course to the population. A vast majority of the initiatives of
Medvedev’s cabinet face a negative reaction from the population. A
spate of scandals involving high and middle level government
officials made the situation even worse. These cases revealed blatant
hypocrisy and the neglectful attitude to duties of some Russian
officials.
Some
of the officials even became heroes of nationwide memes. Probably,
the most prominent of these heroes are Minister of Labour and
Employment of the Saratov region Natalia Sokolova and Head of
Department for Youth Policy in the Sverdlov Region Olga Glatskikh.
Sokolova
advised Russian pensioners to eat “makaroshki” [a derogatory term
for maccheroni] to save money and to thus become able to survive on
the subsistence minimum of 3,500 RUB [about 50 USD] per month.
“You
will become younger, prettier and slimmer! Makaroshki cost is always
the same!”, she said during a meeting of the regional parliamentary
group on social policy in October 2018 adding that discounted
products can be used to create a “balanced, but dietic” menu.
Glatskikh
became a meme hero thank to her meeting with young volunteers during
the same month. Commenting on the possible financing of youth
projects, she told volunteers that the government did not ask their
parents “to give birth” to them. So, they should expect nothing
from the state.
In
the period from 2018 to 2019, there were multiple arrests of
officials caught exceeding the limits of their authority and being
involved in corruption schemes. In comparison to previous periods,
this number had increased by 1.5-2 times. The most recent detention
took place right in the Parliament building on January 30. A
32-year-old senator, Rauf Arashukov, is suspected of being a member
of a criminal group involved in the 2010 murders of two people and in
pressuring a witness to one of the killings. On the same day,
authorities detained his father, an adviser to the chief executive of
a Gazprom subsidiary, Raul Arashukov. He is suspected of embezzling
natural gas worth 30 billion rubles ($450 million).
However,
these actions do not appear to be enough to change the established
media situation. After a large-scale corruption scandal in the
Ministry of Defense in 2012, which led to almost no consequences for
key responsible persons including former Defense Minister Anatoly
Serdyukov, who even continued his carrier in state-linked corporation
Rostec. The general public has serious reservations about any real
success of anti-corruption efforts.
The
aforementioned factors fuel the negative perception of the Medvedev
government and Vladimir Putin as the head of state among Russian
citizens.
The
2014 events in Crimea showed to the Russian population that its state
is ready to defend the interests of the nation and those who describe
themselves as Russians even by force of arms. This was the first case
when this approach was openly employed in the recent history of
Russia. Therefore, the population was enthusiastic and national pride
was on the rise. However, the Kremlin failed to exploit these gained
opportunities and did not use them to strengthen the Russian state.
In fact, up to February 2019, the policy towards eastern Ukraine has
been inconsistent. At the same time, Moscow continues to lose its
influence in post-Soviet states. This can be observed in both the
Caucasus and Central Asia. Even, their close ally, Belarus,
occasionally demonstrates unfriendly behavior and focuses its own
efforts on the exploitation of economic preferences granted by
Russia.
Evaluating
the current internal political situation in Russia and its foreign
policy course, it’s possible to say that the Russian leadership has
lost its clear vision of national development and a firm and
consistent policy, which are needed for any great power. Another
explanation of this is that the Russian leadership is facing pressure
from multiple agents of influence, which stand against vision of a
powerful independent state seeking to act as one of the centers of
power on the global stage. One more factor, often pointed out by
experts, is the closed crony-caste system of elites. This system led
to the creation of a leadership, which pursues its own narrow
clannish interests. Apparently, all of these factors influence
Russian foreign and domestic policies in one way or another.
The
aforementioned large-scale anti-corruption campaign, regarding the
people’s show-me attitude towards its result, could be a sign of a
new emerging trend, which would lead to a purge of the corrupt elites
and to strategic changes in Russian domestic policy.
It
is highly likely that Russia will face hard times in the next two
years (2019-2020) and face various threats and challenges to its
economy, foreign policy course and even to its statehood.
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