MOSCOW - Alexei Kondaurov is among a handful of wealthy
businessmen trying
to reshape Russia's Kremlin-dominated political landscape by injecting
themselves - and their cash - into the picture.
As campaigning kicks off in parliamentary elections slated for Dec.
7, the
role of rich wannabe politicians like Mr. Kondaurov has attracted a
firestorm of controversy.
Many experts believe that it was the political ambitions of Yukos oil
chief
Mikhail Khodorkovsky - including his donations to opposition parties -
that
landed him in jail last month. Incidentally, candidate Kondaurov is a
top
executive of Yukos.
The Oct. 25 arrest of Mr. Khodorkovsky, and the expanding probes into
his
oil empire have unexpectedly focused the campaign on a potentially
explosive, and politically energizing, confrontation between the Kremlin
and big business.
"The election has suddenly become unpredictable," says Boris
Nadezhdin, a
leader of the Union of Right Forces (SPS), one of two liberal parties
that
have received extensive financing from the business community. "Previously
hidden conflicts have emerged into the open, and now there is a real issue
to fight the election on: Will Russia slide back into a police state or
turn decisively toward the European model of democracy and human rights."
The race officially began Friday with candidates from 23 parties and
blocs
jockeying for 450 seats in the State Duma, Russia's lower house of
parliament. But only a few parties are expected to garner more than the
5
percent of votes needed to enter the Duma.
It had been forecast by most observers as the first ho-hum post-Soviet
Russian election, thanks to President Vladimir Putin's "managed democracy,"
the state's use of media control and legal limits on debate to avert
political surprises.
But last month Russia's Constitutional Court, in a rare display of
independence, struck down part of a media law that had banned reporters
from commenting on election campaigns.
"The press was very afraid of that law, and of course it will be
more open
now," says Mikhail Melnik, head of the Center for Extreme Journalism,
an
independent watchdog. Still, he cautions that authorities still have many
tools for pressuring the media. "It's just a small victory,"
he says.
As for the Yukos affair, it is possible that the Kremlin is orchestrating
the prosecution not just to crush a wealthy challenger but to manufacture
a
popular campaign issue as Mr. Putin maneuvers to win a majority for his
United Russia Party in the Duma next month and gain his own re-election
in
March.
A public opinion survey conducted by the ROMIR agency last week found
that
54 percent of Russians had a "positive" reaction to Khodorkovsky's
arrest,
29 percent had "no opinion" and only 4 percent were firmly opposed
to the
police actions. Many Russians angrily recall how the oligarch class got
rich quick in the early 1990s by snapping up state assets in rigged
privatization auctions - while most of the population sank into poverty.
The biggest likely beneficiary of public sentiment against big business
would be the United Russia Party, led by state bureaucrats whose sole
political program is to "support President Putin." With three
government
ministers and 30 regional governors topping its ticket, the party has
reaped daily positive coverage in state TV newscasts and put its campaign
posters in places forbidden to the opposition, such as the walls of Moscow
subway stations.
United Russia last month expelled one Yukos executive, Vladimir Dubov,
who
had been running on its party list. Its leader, Interior Minister Boris
Gryzlov, warned publicly that Russia's natural resources still belonged
to
the state and could be taken back from private businesses that exploit
them
"at any time."
The pro-Kremlin party has also declined to take part in any televised
debates. Yury Volkov, head of United Russia's campaign committee said
it
was "inexpedient and dangerous" to spend time on "populist
speeches."
The leader of SPS, Anatoly Chubais, has appealed to Grigory
Yavlinsky, leader of Russia's more left-leaning liberal party, Yabloko,
to unify amid "dangerous signs" that Russia's fragile democracy
could be unraveling. A merger seems unlikely, but could consolidate mainly
urban and youthful voters who are pro-business and Western-oriented -
a group estimated at about a fifth of the electorate.
The two liberal parties are vulnerable to the rising anti-business mood,
however. Both have accepted huge donations from Yukos, now halted by the
legal action against the firm. Up to half of Yabloko's budget may have
come
from Khodorkovsky, experts say. A police raid last month on a public
relations firm handling Yabloko's electoral strategy included seizures
of
funds, computers and documents that party representatives say were vital
to
the campaign.
Most vulnerable to this line of attack is the Communist Party, which
regularly wins about a quarter of the popular vote. Kondaurov is running
on
the Communist Party ticket. Russian state TV has relentlessly exposed
him,
another Yukos shareholder Sergei Muravlenko, and a few other "red
millionaires" who have been financing the party, suggesting that
the rich
have conspired to buy out the party that claims to represent impoverished
workers.
Last Friday, as Russia marked the 86th anniversary of the Bolshevik
Revolution, the state-owned RTR network reported that hundreds of mainly
elderly Communist Party members were demanding that all wealthy businessmen
be ejected from the ticket. But Communist leaders deny any internal split
over putting rich capitalists on the party ballot. "Wealthy people
like
Alexei Kondaurov join our ranks even though they know the authorities
might
attack their businesses," says Oleg Kulikov, the party's information
chief.
"We're glad to have them."
A former career officer of the Soviet KGB, Kondaurov says that private
money is the only force that can challenge the immense state resources
behind the pro-Kremlin United Russia Party.
"Russian democracy is under threat and something has to be done,"
he says.
"Sometimes people active in business must get involved and work for
change
in the political system."
A rich capitalist's presence on the communist ticket is no contradiction,
he says. The party that once nationalized all enterprises now supports
private property, he says.
"It's not the same party that used to run the USSR," he says.
"It's grown
and deve- loped.... it has a critical role in the work of building
democracy in this country."
See also:
State Duma elections
2003
YUKOS Case
Freedom of Speech
and Media Law in Russia
YABLOKO and SPS
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