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Kommersant, September 10, 2002

Duma to Open Autumn Sesion with Attack on the Communists

by Syuzanna Farizova

Rather than changing the world, Sept. 11 brought to light already existing problems. Mankind was given a clear signal that the key problem of the 21st century must be resolved.

The Duma deputies are back in Moscow. The autumn session of the Duma formally opens on Wednesday, but the Speaker of the Duma Gennadi Seleznyov has already met the leaders of Duma factions and deputies' groups to discuss the legislative agenda for the session. An alliance of centrists, the Union of Right-Wing Forces (SPS) and YABLOKO has proposed a draft law prohibiting referendums in the years of parliamentary or presidential elections. This unexpected initiative may derail the plans of the communists who intend to hold a nation-wide referendum next spring.

In July, the People's Patriotic Union set up a team to organize a nationwide referendum. All 15 organizations which are members of the People's Patriotic Union are represented in the team. Communist

leader Gennadi Zyuganov announced that four questions would be on the referendum: covering the sale and purchase of agricultural land, housing and utilities costs, salaries, and deprivatization of the fuel and energy sector.

Amendments to the law on referendums which would ban referendums "in the year before presidential or parliamentary elections" are being proposed by Unity, People's Deputy, Russian Regions, and Fatherland - All Russia, together with the Union of Right-Wing Forces and Yabloko. According to Russian Regions leader Oleg Morozov, the idea came from the deputies themselves, even though Duma Deputy Speaker Lyubov Sliska was quoted as saying that the initiative had come from the President.

To a certain extent this assumption was confirmed by the statement of the Central Election Commission Chairman Alexander Veshnyakov yesterday. Veshnyakov admitted that he supported the centrist initiative on the whole, but thought that referendums might be banned only in the last six months.

The authors of the draft law emphasize that it was supposed to prevent the simultaneous organization of elections and nationwide referendums. "We should rule out the possibility of misusing campaign advertising, which is almost inevitable when elections and referendums are simultaneous," noted Unity leader Vladimir Pekhtin. Vyacheslav Volodin of Fatherland - All Russia said as much yesterday too. He does not think that "holding a referendum less than a year before the election" is expedient, as "everything would boil down to promotion of a single party. Moreover, referendums are a costly pastime. Each one costs 3.5 billion rubles."

Oleg Morozov says: "If we permit referendums in the years of presidential and parliamentary elections, it would invalidate all bans on campaign advertising during the pre-election period."

Zyuganov has still not responded to the centrist initiative. On the other hand, he said on August 23 that the referendum would certainly be opposed. Zyuganov was quoted as saying the time that "Voloshin and Surkov will do everything they can to make Veshnyakov scuttle the referendum."

Nikolai Kharitonov, Agricultural-Industrial Group leader and another prominent member of the left wing, says: "This initiative conflicts with Article 3 of the Constitution." Article 3 states that "referendums and free elections are the highest expression of the will of the people."

The centrists aren't yet saying when the draft will be debated by the Duma. But even with all possible delays, the lower house will apparently pass it before the end of the year. This means that the referendum which the Communists have planned for spring 2003 will not take place – owing to the parliamentary election scheduled for December 2003.

There can be no doubt that the proposed amendments will be passed, even though amendments to constitutional laws require 300 votes rather than 226. Four centrist and two right-wing factions and groups in the lower house control enough votes to ensure passage of the draft law.

Kommersant, September 10, 2002

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