A number of senior Russian politicians have been
considering the impact of Vladimir Putin's first three years as
president. Quoted on the Gazeta.ru web site, the leader of the Union
of Right-Wing Forces Boris Nemtsov said Putin had done a lot for
Russia's statehood by introducing changes to the tax system and
achieving progress in judicial reform. Liberal Russia leader Viktor
Pokhmelkin praised Putin for his reluctance "to turn the country
back" while Gennadiy Gudkov of the People's Deputy group said
Putin had managed to preserve the integrity of the state. Only Yabloko
leader Sergey Mitrokhin
complained that the President had remained a hostage to the oligarchic
system and had failed to transform Russia into a modern and competitive
state. The following is an excerpt from the report on the Russian
Gazeta.ru web site on 7 May
Nobody would have remembered the third anniversary of Vladimir
Putin's inauguration, if Marching Together had not woven a rug
depicting him... Everyone learned of the existence of Marching
Together two years ago when a crowd of adolescents in Vladimir
Putin T-shirts gathered on Vasilyevskiy Spusk [at the edge of
Red Square]. Since then they have marked inauguration day every
year...
In St Petersburg Marching Together decided to present Putin with
a rug they had woven themselves: They made it in Oriental style,
depicting the President and his actions for the country's good.
It transpired that Russian politicians were not ready for such
exploits to back the President, although almost all the deputies
and expert we polled assess the three years satisfactorily.
"It is interesting," SPS [Union of Right-Wing Forces]
leader Boris Nemtsov told Gazeta.ru. "Marching Together is
funded entirely by the Kremlin and they give Putin presents with
that money. There is no need to comment: Bootlickers and hypocrites
have never been respected in our country. As for the third anniversary,
early Putin, from 1999, did a lot for Russia's statehood: changes
to the tax system, important progress in judicial reform. But
today under Putin the reforms are being sabotaged. The sabotage
of military reform was the height of idiocy.
"We do not support this stagnation and we believe that the
President is now hostage to the secret services and the military
bureaucracy.
"He has still not managed to draw on society's healthy forces.
Maybe he lacks both the spirit and the will. But a high popularity
rating does not do anything for the public: it is time for this
to be converted into specific action. Only the warm breath of
opposition can make the authorities work."
Deputies who support the President are also against giving Putin
rugs. "Rugs take years to weave," Gennadiy Gudkov, member
of the People's Deputy group, told Gazeta.ru. "If Marching
Together are such experienced weavers, the rug should immediately
be given to the Tretyakov Gallery, to the tapestry and carpet
department.
"As for Putin's three years of rule, I consider them a success.
First, the integrity of the state has been preserved. Second,
a serious reform of legislation is in progress and there is evidence
of growth on the domestic market and growth, admittedly slow growth,
in the population's prosperity. On the negative side you have
the president's imbalanced team. Some of his entourage compromise
him."
"Three years after his inauguration the President remains
hostage to the oligarchic system," Sergey Mitrokhin, one
of the Yabloko leaders and seemingly the only person who is displeased
with Putin, took up the theme. "He has done nothing for reform
or the transition to a modern, competitive state in the world.
But toadying to the President has increased markedly. I have observed
this both in the President's apparatus and in society. I do not
think three years of rule is a reason for gifts.
"The toadies will immediately start running off to weave
rugs. If I was in Putin's position I would issue a statement refusing
gifts. Incidentally, costly gifts like this are banned under the
law on state service."
Putin's successes include preventing the disintegration and break-up
of the state.
"I consider one of Putin's merits to be his reluctance to
turn the country back," Viktor Pokhmelkin, co-chairman of
Liberal Russia, said, speaking in favour of the president. "Despite
temptation, he has rejected this idea. He does not adopt punitive
measures, even though this was expected by some of the democratic
public. His blunders include reproducing all the worst aspects
of rule of his predecessor Yeltsin and his regime. This includes
the continuing power of the bureaucracy and the influence of large-scale
raw materials on the country's economy. Incidentally, our citizens'
attitude to the President is similar to their attitude to God.
Gifts, all kinds of rugs - this is not really right. The President
should curtail these impulses."
"Unlike Marching Together, I would not give the president
anything," Konstantin Kosachev, a member of the One Russia
party, unexpectedly told Gazeta.ru. "I would give the three
years of his presidency top marks. I would single out the reform
of the party system as the President's strongest initiative. A
multiparty system is taking shape, amendments to electoral legislation
have been adopted and only political parties will take part in
the elections, not one-day-wonder parties. This will encourage
people to unite around initiatives rather than personalities."
Experts polled by Gazeta.ru responded very seriously to the question
about Putin.
"Putin has managed to resolve the problem of consolidating
the political elite both centrally and locally. Admittedly we
are currently observing significant disagreements and clashes
of elite groups within the government, but in principle what we
are observing today is in no way comparable to
President Yeltsin's era, when the oligarchs controlled significant
blocs in the government and the regional elites were practically
autonomous," Dmitry Orlov, deputy director of the Centre
for Political Technologies, said. "But, unfortunately, the
elite is still the old elite and the bureaucracy has colossal
traditions that date back many centuries."
"What we have now is significantly better than what could
have been expected when Putin came to power," was the view
of Nikolay Petrov, head of the Centre for Political and Geographical
Studies. "Regarding today's favourable situation, that is
not to the credit of either the government or Putin. It is attributable
to the economic environment."
|