Tuesday, April 15, 2008

The Shape of Things to Come in Russia

Vladimir Putin was unanimously chosen by the congress of the United Russia party to become its new leader. Putin will replace Boris Gryzlov. Since United Russia controls a supermajority of seats in the Duma, the lower house of parliament, he in theory now has the ability to amend the constitution or to have legislation passed.

Whether he still needs to become prime minister is therefore questionable. Perhaps the prime minister might remain as the day-to-day figure for keeping the government's trains running on time, leaving Putin as party leader and de facto national leader. Interestingly, president-elect Dmitry Medvedev chose not to join the United Russia party, meaning that he is officially a non-party figure (which means that United Russia does not have two heads, but remains in essence "Putin's party.")

This may still leave open the possibility of the Mexico scenario which I have talked about in the past, or be the next step in constructing a new party-government symbiosis on the LDP model from Japan.

Interestingly, Silvio Berlusconi's first major meeting after winning the Italian elections will be with Putin--this Thursday in Sardinia. Again, it continues to demonstrate that there is a trans-Atlantic "gap" on Russia. First Merkel flew to meet with president-elect Medvedev after the elections, and now Putin goes to Italy.

So the process of transition is underway.

Comments:
Whether he still needs to become prime minister is therefore questionable. Perhaps the prime minister might remain as the day-to-day figure for keeping the government's trains running on time, leaving Putin as party leader and de facto national leader.

I don't know about that, Nick. Presiding over the Cabinet, having ministers and their subordinates report to you regularly, and otherwise wielding the powers of state on a daily basis to make sure that the trains run on time, the tax police goes after the right people, the military keeps the Chechens down, etc., etc. shoud be useful to maintaining control. levers of power for myself. Do you think that Putin would want find yet another surrogate to trust to do that for him?
 
Stalin built his power-base doing the mundane tasks of the Party in 1920s.
 
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