>From the "Putinoid press," owned by Boris Berezovsky.

BBC Monitoring
Russian left-wingers' linkup seen as step towards
manageable opposition
Source: Kommersant, Moscow, in Russian 3 Aug 04

The Motherland faction has announced its plans to
coordinate its actions
with the Communists in the Duma. The Kremlin is
reportedly unperturbed by
the opposition's joining of forces. Moreover,
according to a Russian paper,
this move was authorized by the Kremlin, which regards
it as a step towards
a "manageable opposition". The following is excerpted
from a report by
Russian newspaper Kommersant on 3 August. Subheadings
have been inserted
editorially.

Dmitriy Rogozin, leader of the Motherland faction in
the Duma and of the
party of the same name, yesterday announced his
intention to create a
coordinating council with the CPRF [Communist Party of
the Russian
Federation] faction for joint actions in the State
Duma. The Communists
reacted favourably to the idea, although they regard
the Motherland as a
"Kremlin project". But the Motherland's initiative
will not go beyond the
framework of the level of opposition permitted by the
Kremlin: even united,
the left-wing minority is incapable of obstructing the
adoption of laws
needed by the authorities, but on the other hand Mr
Rogozin himself will be
able to earn political points by demonstrating his
opposition credentials
to voters yet again. [Passage omitted].

Similarities

The Duma Communists proved ready for an alliance -
despite the fact that
since the moment that the Motherland bloc emerged they
have described it as
"the Kremlin's pocket bloc", created to split the camp
of left-wing and
patriotic forces. As Ivan Melnikov explained to
Kommersant yesterday, the
Motherland faction "is a mix of different people, and
many of them are
close to the CPRF faction in terms of their approach,
their assessments,
and their analysis". In Comrade Melnikov's opinion,
this is evidenced by
the results of Duma voting "on basic laws in the last
year and a half". He
therefore feels that "it is logical and natural in
principle to take the
next step - to move from recording that they have
common positions to
coordinated actions".

Differences

But for all the similarity over their approaches and
voting motives in the
Duma, the CPRF and the Motherland have fundamentally
different opposition
credentials. The Communists are opposed to One Russia,
the government, and
the president, where as nobody from the Motherland
leadership has ever
spoken out against the president. Dmitriy Rogozin
himself has always
stressed that his associates have complaints only
against the government.
And yesterday too, when criticizing the government
draft law on benefits,
he preferred to talk about "the astonishing shift of
the parliamentary
majority to an extreme right-wing position", which, in
the Communists'
view, is definitely not astonishing since it reflects
the liberal bias in
President Putin's policy.

The Kremlin's alleged designs

Moreover, during that same February when Mr Rogozin
became the sole leader
of the Motherland party, Kommersant's sources in the
presidential
administration were saying that it was the Kremlin
that had given
Motherland carte blanche to demonstratively display
"tough opposition".
Kremlin spin doctors gave the Motherland the role of
"the number two party
of power", which would win the attention of voters if
One Russia should for
some reason lose its image as "the number one party of
power". And the Duma
examination of the draft law on benefits is the very
occasion when One
Russia is at risk of severely undermining its image as
"the defenders of
the people".

So it is not hard to suggest that Mr Rogozin has also
agreed to an alliance
with the CPRF with the Kremlin's knowledge. The
combined votes of the
Motherland (39 deputies) and the CPRF (51 deputies)
will not, however
outweigh One Russia's constitutional majority, so
there is no threat to
either the benefits law or other laws that the
executive branch needs. On
the other hand, Motherland will be able to demonstrate
to voters that it is
not afraid of speaking out against the authorities and
concluding an
alliance with the Communists, who have withdrawn to a
position of total
opposition. And this will ultimately increase the
Kremlin's chances of
creating a manageable left-wing opposition in Russia.




__________________________________
Do you Yahoo!?
New and Improved Yahoo! Mail - Send 10MB messages!
http://promotions.yahoo.com/new_mail

Reply via email to