The pro-Kremlin United Russia party is getting by far
the widest and most favorable coverage on all the major television channels
ahead of parliamentary elections, monitoring conducted by The Moscow Times
over the past week indicates.
The party's congress on Saturday got top billing on the three main networks
-- Channel One, Rossia and NTV. But even excluding those reports, United
Russia officials were quoted more often than other politicians in prime-time
news during the Sept. 15-22 survey.
Rossia even went so far as to identify Boris Gryzlov as both the interior
minister and a United Russia leader when he was commenting on a recent
explosion in Ingushetia and clearly speaking in his capacity as a police
official.
"In promoting United Russia, any excuse that is not banned by law
is being used," said Andrei Tsitovsky, a television analyst with
the media magazine Sreda.
"When there is an opportunity to show government functionaries
who are also United Russia leaders, they are being shown," he said.
All of the country's main networks are owned or indirectly controlled
by the government, and since the Press Ministry ordered the country's
last national private television channel, TVS, shut down in June, news
coverage has shrunk down to a uniform promotion of the Kremlin's views.
United Russia is openly backed by the Kremlin in its race for seats
in the next State Duma. President Vladimir Putin told the congress Saturday
that he had voted for the party in the previous 1999 election, and he
made it clear that he would like it to win on Dec. 7.
United Russia also seems to have found an unabashed fan in ballerina
Anastasia Volochkova, whose lavish praise for the party made prime-time
news on NTV. Volochkova said she supported the party's program and added
that Duma Deputy Speaker Lyubov Sliska -- a United Russia leader -- was
her ideal of a woman.
"Maybe it's her strength -- strength that is comparable to Catherine
the Great, who with her strength, her wisdom, maybe partly with her cruelty,
but with her power held together our Russian state," Volochkova said.
Sliska returned the compliment. When first meeting Volochkova, "I
liked very much her approach, her ability to evaluate the situation,"
Sliska said.
Not only was the story aired twice -- on Thursday and then again on
the day of the congress Saturday -- but officials from other parties were
interviewed to comment on Volochkova's views of United Russia.
This was in sharp contrast to television coverage of a Communist congress
earlier this month. Then, cameras zoomed in for an unflattering close-up
of Communist leader Gennady Zyuganov's face and then switched to footage
of overweight Communists arriving in Mercedes sedans and of elderly protesters.
Last Wednesday, Rossia aired a segment about how United Russia organized
a Moscow River cruise for disabled orphans. Footage showed children holding
balloons on a ship decorated with a huge "United Russia" banner.
In comparison, Rossia's selection of the main news involving the Communists
last week included a court order for Zyuganov to apologize to the Pensioners'
Party, which he accused of trying to pull votes from the Communists, and
accusations from the mayor of a city in Kamchatka that the regional governor
-- a Communist -- was focusing on his political career instead of ensuring
that homes in the area got electricity and heating in winter.
"There is no doubt that the Communists, rightists and Yabloko will
not be harshly cut off from the airwaves, but the context, subtext and
hints will still be in favor of the 'party of power,'" said Anna
Kachkayeva, a television analyst with Washington-funded Radio Liberty,
referring to United Russia.
As next year's draft budget came up for a first reading in the Duma
on Friday, the networks aired comments from politicians in many of the
main parties, but most often from Zyuganov and Vladimir Zhirinovsky, leader
of the ultranationalist Liberal Democratic Party.
Tsitovsky explained this by saying the two politicians are recognizable
staple personalities who are relied on to provide the "necessary
balance" required by campaign coverage rules.
Zhirinovsky also made prime-time Rossia news by claiming many lawmakers
were engaged in shadowy practices or linked to criminal groups. Then,
other politicians were asked to comment.
"The priorities of all channels are completely obvious," Kachkayeva
said. "It is clear that while the Communists and the rightists will
appear in certain numbers, representatives of United Russia will be shown
at horse races and soccer matches and in orphanages."
The coverage led 100 deputies to sign an appeal Monday challenging the
constitutionality of election-time media rules. NTV was the only network
that reported about the appeal.
Yana Valueva contributed to this report
TV Coverage of the Parties
Chart shows the number of times a political party received airtime
in prime-time newscasts during the week of Sept. 15-22.*
|
|
Channel One** |
Rossia |
NTV |
United Russia |
2- Gryzlov comments on Ingushetia
blast
1- Lawmakers comment on draft budget |
1- Gryzlov comments on Ingushetia
blast
3- Lawmakers comment on draft budget
1- Party organizes river trip for disabled orphans
2- Lawmakers comment on Zhirinovsky's crime accusations |
2- Lawmakers comment on Volochkova's
praise for United Russia
1 - Profile of candidate for St. Petersburg governor
1- Interview with Moscow Mayor Yury Luzhkov |
Communist Party |
2- Zyuganov comments on draft budget |
1- Zyuganov ordered to apologize
to Pensioners' Party
1- Party lists approved
1- Lawmaker comments on Zhirinovsky's crime accusations
2- Zyuganov comments on draft budget
1- Kamchatka governor accused of failing to ensure electricity and
heating supplies |
1- Zyuganov comments on draft budget
1- Zyuganov criticizes Putin for open endorsement of United Russia |
Union of Right Forces |
|
1- Lawmaker comments on Zhirinovsky's
crime accusations
2- Nemtsov comments on draft budget |
1- Nemtsov comments on draft budget
1- Appeal to Constitutional Court to review election coverage rules |
Liberal Democratic Party |
2- Zhirinovsky comments on draft
budget |
1- Zhirinovsky accuses lawmakers
of criminal ties
2- Zhirinovsky comments on draft budget |
1- Alexei Mitrofanov to run for
mayor of Moscow
1- Zhirinovsky comments on draft budget
1- Appeal to Constitutional Court |
Yabloko |
|
1- Yabloko leader Grigory Yavlinsky
urges cut in utility prices
2- Lawmakers comment on draft budget |
2- Yavlinsky comments on Volochkova's
praise for United Russia
1- Appeal to Constitutional Court |
Party of Life |
1- Party plans |
1- Party lists announced |
|
Rebirth of Russia |
|
1- Party lists announced |
|
* Coverage of United
Russia's weekend congress not included
** Channel One has two prime-time newscasts; Rossia and NTV have one
each
|
See also:
the original at
www.themoscowtimes.com
State Duma Elections 2003
Freedom of
Speech and Media Law in Russia
|