Despite the city's 300th anniversary celebrations being
the major event in
St. Petersburg's cultural and
political life this year, local politicians say it was overshadowed by
the
looming presidential elections for
which the October gubernatorial and this month's State Duma elections were
merely dry runs.
A big reshuffle took place within factions in the Legislative Assembly
in
favor of the United Russia party
under the direct orchestration of the president's representative office
to
the Northwest region and the
election of the Kremlin-backed governor, Valentina Matviyenko. The city's
liberal spirit bowed down at the
feet of the presidential administration, the politicians say.
Having completed his task of clearing the political field for Matviyenko
to
be elected as the city governor,
Viktor Cherkesov, her predecessor, left his post in March to head the
National Anti-Drug Committee in
Moscow. On June 16, then governor Vladimir Yakovlev was appointed deputy
prime minister to work on
reform of communal services.
Oksana Dmitriyeva, a State Duma lawmaker and head of the Business
Development party, said the authorities
have yet to understand why only 28.24 percent of voters turned out for
the
gubernatorial elections. If such
an extremely low turn out is repeated at the presidential elections, there
is a risk they will be declared invalid,
she said.
"The main political conclusion of the year is that the authorities
have to
learn from this lesson," Dmitriyeva
said last week at a conference.
Matviyenko's mandate came from only 63.16 percent of about a quarter
of St.
Petersburg's 3.7 million eligible
voters.
"For an ordinary resident in Moscow such a topic is not interesting,"
Igor
Shatrov, head of the Moscow
branch of the information agency Rosbalt, said at the conference. "It
is
interesting for political analysts,
experts and journalists from St. Petersburg."
He said that when Russian journalists visited Switzerland in the late
1980s, they talked to a construction
worker who said he knew who the Soviet president was, but had no idea
who
the president of Switzerland
was.
"He remembered the name of the previous president of Switzerland
because he
worked with him on the same
construction site," Shatrov said. "When we have reached the
stage of
development in our country where
people don't know who the president is, then we will know that everything
will be fine.
"No one will be surprised or worried whether people go to vote
or not," he
added. "They have to live and
work."
Boris Vishnevsky, a member
of the Yabloko faction in the Legislative Assembly, said the results of
the Duma elections both nationally and in St. Petersburg show that people
want to return to the past. The liberal Yabloko party failed to break
the 5-percent barrier to enter the Duma, according to the Central Election
Commission.
"The main result of the year is that the current thaw is finished,"
he
said, alluding to the so-called thaw under
Nikita Krushchev, who relaxed authoritarian role after Stalin's death
before being thrown from power by
forces that wanted a return to a hard line.
"A majority of people went to the polling stations and consciously
voted to
turn the country back [to the
state] it was 20 to 30 years ago," Vishnevsky said last week in an
interview.
"We are witnessing a complete suppression of independent media
and are
living in conditions when any
criticism of the party of power [United Russia] is treated as a crime
against the state," he added. "We are
facing a backlash that many have talked about."
"If the dissidents of the early 90s were told about how things
are now ...
that a former KGB officer would
become president of the Russian Federation, they would have treated it
as a
bad joke," Vishnevksy said.
Yury Vdovin, co-chairman of the St. Petersburg branch of international
human rights organization Citizen's
Watch, agreed.
"The imposition of managed democracy has led us straight back
to the
U.S.S.R.," Vdovin said Monday in a
telephone interview. "The city parliament is distant from voters
and is
just an extension of the [city]
administration.
"Instead of a division of powers, we have one power now ... and
the
journalists have restored a genetic
memory of some kind to defend the administration in any way they can,"
he
added.
"There's one hope left: that hidden forces in the federal administration
will undertake serious liberal reforms
in conditions of a managed parliament, but this is not a big hope,"
he
said. "This a very serious break in the
development of democracy [in Russia], but it cannot be a full stop. The
solid positions of the United States
and the European Union would not allow that to happen and sooner or later
all these [nationalists] are going
to be washed away."
Yelena Babich, head of the St. Petersburg branch of the nationalist
Liberal-Democrat party, said the year had
been exciting.
"The year was so filled up with events that it became a center
for all the
world for the 300th anniversary
celebrations," she said last week. "All the world's attention
was on the
city and its name [is now] closely
linked to the president."
"During the gubernatorial elections attention of all the country
was on St.
Petersburg." Babich added.
"Elections elsewhere were not that interesting for the [national]
public
.. And again, that election was marked
by close ties to the president."
Joseph Diniskin, a Moscow-based political analyst and co-chairman of
the
National Strategy Council, an
analytical structure with close ties to the presidential administration,
said that a council study showed a solid
base for a market economy has been formed in Russian society.
"From 35 percent to 45 percent of the population are not concerned
about
the authorities, but are occupied
with making their own rational choices," he said last week. "Another
15
percent to 20 percent are changing
the way they think and will soon be joining them."
"This way there's a base for a market economy and democracy is
in a state
of formation in the country," he
said. "We have a principally new Russia now."
But Yabloko's Vishnevsky was skeptical about the analyst's conclusion.
"What percent of the population does he think is interested in
the market
economy," he asked. "The
percentage of people not concerned with the authorities, but in making
their own way, was the same in
Soviet times."
See also:
the origianl at
www.sptimes.com
Presidential elections 2004
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