How Do Russians View Democracy in Russia?
By Natylie Baldwin
OpEds
(Old) Arbat Street, Moscow; photo by Natylie Baldwin, May 2017
We hear a lot about Russia being a dictatorship under Vladimir Putin. It is said frequently by U.S. media commentators that there is no democracy, free media, or substantive rule of law in the country. The reality is much more complicated. Moreover, what Russians actually think about these aspects of their country and what the historical context of democracy is in Russia is rarely explored in any depth.
The History of Russian Dictatorship and Democracy
A 2015 poll by the western-funded Levada Center revealed that 66 percent of Russians feel free, and 68 percent don’t believe it is likely that Russia will return to dictatorship. Russians have a thousand-year history of authoritarian rule and they know what real dictators act like. Despite the relentless focus most western media has on the travails of a small group of liberal oppositionists (1) who are actually unpopular in Russia, life under Putin represents the most democratic period (however flawed 2) in Russian history, excerpt for very brief periods after the February 1917 Revolution and the perestroika/glasnost period under Mikhail Gorbachev. The former lasted less than a year and the latter about 5-7 years.
Prioritizing Social Justice
Most American politicians and commentators tend to assume that a democracy must be a system similar to what the U.S. has which reflects neoliberal American values. This means a free-market economy with a political system that favors the individual and minimal socioeconomic protections from the state. Russians, however, prioritize values differently and this affects what democracy will look like to them.
Surveys consistently show that Russians value social justice over individual achievement and political rights. In 2014, Russians were asked whether they would rather live in a society that prioritized social equality or individual attainment of success. Over 60 percent chose the former. Another Levada poll from this month revealed that only 16 percent favor a western-style democracy compared to 49 percent who favor a system more like the Soviet one. Furthermore, 62 percent favor an economic system based on state planning and redistribution compared to 24 percent who prefer a free market economy. Russian youth also support a robust socioeconomic system provided by the state. In focused surveys, one of a handful of things Russians across the political spectrum agreed on included the need for strong welfare state programs.
Agreement on these points among traditionalists, Putin supporters, youth and liberals underscores that these values don’t simply reflect a throwback to the communist era – although that is a factor for some older people who have positive memories of the state social programs of that period. There is a long history of valuing the collective good that predates communism. In fact, the collective is mentioned in the Kremlin’s new National Security Strategy as an important traditional value. Though the Soviet lifestyle may have been austere with few consumer goods compared to the U.S., in the context of Russian history, the era represented great material progress for the average Russian who had previously toiled as a peasant.
Sharon Tennison, founder of the citizen diplomacy group Center for Citizen Initiatives, has traveled regularly all over Russia since 1983 and described the Russian ethos on democracy and social justice:
“Most [Russians] are interested in something akin to a social democracy with elected leaders, social services such as free and excellent education for all (including higher education), some form of dependable public health care along with private health care for those who can afford it, and a high level of classical culture nationwide… .Democracy is developing in Russia, but it always will be laced with socialism.” (2)
The Legal System
Until the post-Soviet era, there was not a long tradition of Russians being viewed as citizens with individual rights but they were instead granted some degree of social protections and stability in exchange for acquiescence to authoritarian rule. There was the concept of group rights and duties in the tsarist era up until the 1860’s and then dependent rights in the Soviet era, which meant that citizens were granted socioeconomic rights in exchange for performing their duties to the state.
Russia’s first constitution came about as the result of the Russian Revolution of 1905. But it was effectively revoked in 1917, along with several legal reforms instituted by Tsar Alexander II in 1864, including the right to trial by jury with independent judges overseeing cases.
The current constitution of 1993 resulted from the dramatic showdown between then-president Boris Yeltsin and the parliament. Yeltsin [a US puppet] had dissolved parliament after members refused to continue to allow him to rule by decree, threatening impeachment for abuse of power. The confrontation ended with a military attack on the parliament building, leading to hundreds of casualties. Yeltsin then suspended the existing constitution.
In order to prevent any future such challenge to presidential power, Yeltsin engineered the design of a constitution with a defanged parliament that would essentially serve as a rubber stamp for the president’s prerogatives. This event, along with the economic devastation and criminal chaos that marked Yeltsin’s rule, meant that the period of democratic possibility begun under Gorbachev had largely evaporated.
Though it doesn’t fit with the overly simplistic portrayal in western media, Putin did begin a process of expanding the rule of law and broadening individual legal rights during his first two terms as president.
He oversaw the implementation of the rights of habeas corpus and trial by jury, and increased rights to exculpatory evidence. After certain reforms made by Putin to the criminal code, acquittal rates in bench trials doubled and acquittal rates in jury trials tripled, contributing to a 40 percent drop in the overall incarceration rate and a 95 percent drop in the juvenile incarceration rate since 2001.
He also introduced Justices of the Peace (JP’s) into the system. JP’s act as judges in the lowest tier of courts and preside over approximately 75 percent of civil cases and 45 percent of criminal cases, with most of the latter resolved through plea bargaining. A years-long academic study of Russia’s court system showed that JP’s demonstrate independence and base their decisions on the written law in the vast majority of cases. Exceptions involve the very small percentage of cases that are politically sensitive, particularly to the Kremlin.
There have been setbacks in recent years, especially regarding public protests and foreign-funded NGO’s [this should be cause for celebration, as these orgs frequently meddle in Russia's politics to implement US State Department and CIA goals.—Eds] . However, most civil society work is actually funded domestically. Sarah Lindemann-Komarova, a community organizer in Siberia who studies Russian community activism and funding, explains that the vast majority of civil society groups in Russia are unaffected by the crackdown: “For most community development groups and actually most NGOs it was never an issue. Very few organizations got western support and even fewer now.”
The Media
A few foreign-funded media outlets have been harassed or forced to shut down, and the legal criteria for potentially being labeled a foreign agent as an individual journalist is very broad. The Presidential Council on Human Rights is proposing amendments to soften the law by only allowing the designation to originate from routine government inspections rather than reports from individuals and organizations.
In spite of this, overt censorship in Russia is still fairly limited. A variety of opinion is represented in domestic Russian print media, including criticism of Putin and the government. Even on pro-government Russian TV, which is mostly consumed by older citizens, it is not unusual for a pro-Western viewpoint to be included on political talk shows. And Russians still have access to Western media through both the internet and satellite.
In short, skepticism is warranted when we encounter the overly simplistic manner in which Russia is often portrayed by much of the U.S. political class and establishment media. Russians have their own ideas about what constitutes the kind of society they want to live in.
Notes (by the editor)
1 The "liberals" (liberal oppositionists) in Russia {also called "Atlanticists" for their Western orientation, and to distinguish them from "Eurasianists", those looking to orient Russia toward autarky, Asian customs and alliances) are actually those who facilitated, allied themselves with, and profited from Russia's dismantlement of socialism, and the takeover by proponents of savage capitalism (the Yeltsin period). The Yeltsin regime, boastfully supported by the Western press, and crawling with American and other Western carpetbaggers, was and remains a nightmare for most Russians, as the orgy of free marketism ruined no less than four-fifths of the population, while wiping out their longstanding social supports.
2 Sharon Tennison and the author, to some extent, seem confused about what constitutes "democracy". In Tennison's view (and to some extent, the author) "democracy" is basically the US/Western style of government. Putin's basically democratic government is described as "flawed", despite the fact that by whatever standard we wish to apply, all "capitalist democracies", including those in the most prominent EU nations, are obviously scandalously "flawed". As for the citadel of world "democracy" and capitalism, we know now that authentic freedom of speech and government transparency are—in substance— in short supply and receding fast in America, to the point of negating her elites' very claim of exemplary democracy, despite the periodical elections, the pseudo free press, and other conspicuous "democracy" signaling. (Elections in the US—normally boycotted by half of the population— can be, and are, routinely rigged, from the moment the candidates are selected). In fact, two respected political scientists at prominent universities and with no affiliation to left organizations, pronounced the United States an oligarchy in 2015, with no effective democracy, except the formalities of one to fool the masses. A second point also needs attention. Ms Tennison says, "Democracy is developing in Russia, but it always will be laced with socialism.” She seems to imply that true democracy and socialism are antipodal and mutually exclusive. This implies that socialism is, by definition, undemocratic, which is false. In fact, by any impartial standard, if democracy is any system that "delivers the goods" and does the bidding of the public, protecting and looking out for the masses' interest, then any true socialism is by definition the ultimate form of democracy, far more democratic than anything the bourgeois system of government could ever offer. Please see this BBC report, dated 17 April 2014: Study: US is an oligarchy, not a democracy. It's ironic and noteworthy that, doubtlessly, although the distinguished professors Martin Gilens (Princeton) and Benjamin Page (Northwestern U) probably arrived at their conclusion after wrestling with mountains of data, Marx and Engels reached the same conclusion almost 200 years ago. —PG
The views expressed herein are solely those of the author and may or may not reflect those of The Greanville Post. However, we do think they are important enough to be transmitted to a wider audience.
If you find the above useful, pass it on! Become an "influence multiplier"!
The battle against the Big Lie killing the world will not be won by you just reading this article. It will be won when you pass it on to at least 2 other people, requesting they do the same.
Did you sign up yet for our FREE bulletin? It's super easy! Sign up to receive our FREE bulletin. Get TGP selections in your mailbox. No obligation of any kind. All addresses secure and never sold or commercialised. [newsletter_form] |
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License