Question: Grigory, today many people feel
that democracy’s prospects in Russia are illusory. However, Yabloko
continues working. Why? What are you hoping for?
Yavlinsky:
These fears are indeed justified. Our country has rich authoritarian traditions,
which tend to return very rapidly, making the prospects for democracy
very hazy.
However, the problem is not so much the political prospects of Yabloko
and Russian democrats as a whole, but rather that the traditional system
in the 21st century will not enable Russia to be a fully-fledged country.
Authoritarianism leads to irreversible backwardness, to the very edge.
If we cross this threshold, there is real threat that Russia will no longer
exist as a sovereign state. This danger and the need to prevent it –
this is the key challenge for Russia in the 21st century.
In order to overcome this threat, it is naturally worthwhile continuing
to work and fight for democracy and oppose the criminal oligarchic periphery
capitalism, represented by today’s authoritarianism, with real democracy.
Question: Can Russian democrats win over the sympathies
of most of the country’s citizens or will they have to expect to
obtain no more than 15% electoral support for a long time to come?
Yavlinsky: In reality Russia has never had a democratic
government. You cannot consider Yeltsin to be a convinced and conscious
democrat. This holds all the more true for Chernomyrdin and most of the
other people running the country in the 1990s. Consequently our citizens
have yet to see how democratic solutions actually work economically and
politically and how they benefit the country.
Many supporters of democrats and democratic transformations at the early
1990s came face to face with pseudo democracy, became disillusioned and
lost their faith in this path. Not that many people today believe that
democracy is the most effective way of running the country. To a large
extent the situation can only change once real democrats are given a chance
to take decisions on key economic and political issues. There is no doubt
that if real democracy was given a chance to work, its support base would
grow rapidly.
Question: How can this be achieved, especially in the current
circumstances?
Yavlinsky: Today it is clear what needs to be done
to maintain such a chance. Despite defeat at the parliamentary elections,
we need to retain and develop the democratic movement. We will only achieve
serious changes sooner or later if we rely on this movement and thereby
obtain greater support than nowadays.
Yes, we are having a hard time at present. And we will have a hard time.
But on the other hand it is harder to create real political leaders in
positive conditions.
The key goal today is not to abandon our work and refuse what we have.
If we give up and permit the destruction of the existing offshoots of
a civil society and democratic movement, there will definitely be no prospects
for a democracy.
Question: What is the democratic movement today? Whom do
you consider to be Yabloko’s allies today? What resources can you
offer to your potential partners?
Yavlinsky: Everybody who believes that the court should
be independent of the authorities and business, that parliament should
represent the interests of the people and not the Kremlin, that the authorities
should represent the interests of society as a whole and not only business,
that believe in the end for public control over the secret services and
the law and enforcement agencies, that the mass media should discuss the
most serious problems: Chechnya, corruption, the situation in the army…
Everybody who believes that this is essential and believes that this is
possible.
A great number of people believe that such a system for organizing the
authorities and its relations with society is correct in principle. Fewer
believe that this is possible to create in the foreseeable future. Consequently,
the number of our supporters is limited for the time being.
However, the time will come and all the pragmatists and realists will
become convinced on their personal experience that nothing will happen
without all the aforementioned. This is our potential support.
Politically we strive to create the widest possible democratic coalition.
But not with those who believe that the extremist methods for reforming
the economy are justified, who believe that the Russian army is being
reborn in Chechnya, who publicly refuse to renounce the Lenin-Stalin heritage,
who refuse to reject bolshevism, nationalism and xenophobia.
Question: What needs to be done to ensure that the parliamentary
elections in 2007 are not transformed into the farce we saw in 2003?
Yavlinsky: We need to do our job. We must fight for
the preservation of the remaining democratic components, attract to our
side people and protect them. There is no universal remedy. Everything
depends on daily work. It is merely absolutely clear that the protection
of the current Constitution is no less an important task than preparations
for the 2007 elections.
Question: Can Yabloko propose an alternative to government
plans in the economy and social sector?
Yavlinsky: Our key proposition – the goal of
our work - is a democratic alternative to the authoritarian periphery
capitalism, a system based on the merger of business and power.
If you are referring to specific legislative initiatives, most of our
proposals remain topical. The fight against poverty is particularly important
today, which presupposes the introduction of a uniform social benefit.
It would be possible in this way to ensure the subsistence minimum for
all the needy. This is the only really effective way to counter poverty.
Question: How do you assess the social reforms which the
government has developed, in particular the replacement of benefits with
cash payments?
Yavlinsky: The public highly distrusts everything that
the government plans to do. That is due to its reputation and style of
work.
It remains unclear how the final decision on benefits will look, as
it changes almost every day. However, when even at the draft stage discussions
begin on the elimination of benefits for war veterans and pensioners,
on the liquidation of child benefit and abolition of free breakfasts for
schoolchildren, and in future the abolition of all housing benefits, you
can’t expect people to grow more trustworthy.
It remains unclear why such austere measures need to be taken when the
macro-economic indices are so favorable.
I also doubt the practical feasibility of the current proposals from
the government. It is unlikely that anyone will prove that trams will
immediately become self-financing once all pensioners are forced to pay
for their rides. As for accessibility to breaks on medicines, first of
all we need to liquidate the monopoly, for example allow hospitals to
buy medicines where they want and not where they are told to go.
In actual fact there are a significant number of benefits available,
which are not only being used by pensioners and the disabled. Our government
obtains a significant number. You have dacha rentals, medical services
and many more. Our government officials happily exploit these benefits.
Nobody is telling them: OK, now we will replace them with cash.
Question: In your opinion, what goals should be resolved
by the July Congress of the Yabloko Party?
Yavlinsky: We will discuss the political line of Yabloko,
relations with the authorities. A great deal depends on our decision on
this issue. The second goal is the development of democracy within the
party and also the creation of a self-financing party system. All this
is related to the introduction of amendments to the charter. And naturally
re-elections of the leadership remain an important issue.
Question: What changes will happen soon in Yabloko in terms
of structure, actions?
Yavlinsky: We believe that it is essential that more
people take part in the decision-making process on key issues. We want
as many people as possible to speak out, propose their vision of things,
so that we can find new impressive leaders. I hope that all the decisions
taken by the forthcoming congress will contribute to these goals.
Regarding strategy, we need to find a reasonable balance of conservative
and modern objectives. Above all we should retain a democratic party,
which continues to be trusted by millions of Russian citizens, which people
continue to join even after electoral defeat. However, this will have
to be done in new circumstances: under an authoritarian political system,
where access to the mass media is even more restricted, where we have
managed elections. In these circumstances, we must attract new young people
and this is only possible provided that we ourselves remain interesting,
necessary and useful, if we find new forms of working, if we keep evolving.
|