The risks of Constitutional Putinism – Meduza

Posted: December 17, 2021 at 11:39 am

Political analyst Tatiana Stanovaya warns that reforms recently adopted by the State Duma to further the centralization of power in Russias federal government could endanger the entire political system by pinning too much on the presidency and the Kremlins subjective and closed insider logic. Constitutional Putinism is supposed to weed out remnants of the destabilizing opportunism elevated in Russias Yeltsin Constitution, Stanovaya argues in a recent essay for the Carnegie Moscow Center, but Putinism could prove to be even more prone to opportunism if it is incapable of accommodating the multiple power centers that would emerge in a serious political crisis (for example, the loss of United Russias parliamentary monopoly or a severe decline in the presidents popularity).

In redesigning much of the relationship between Russias central and regional governments, many of the Kremlins latest political reforms are more meaningful even than last years constitutional amendments, argues political analyst Tatiana Stanovaya. The public administration draft law, she says, isnt just a declaration of the presidents supremacy; it significantly expands presidential prerogatives relative to both governors and regional parliaments, allowing the president to interfere directly in their work more than is formally possible now.

In democratic terms, this effectively gives the Kremlin a veto on voters choices in regional politics. After all, when governors need the central governments approval for their own cabinet appointments, what really is the point of direct gubernatorial elections? The new reforms will expand Moscows command over regional legislatures, as well, requiring the consent of the State Council (which the presidential administration controls) for revisions to a long and classified list of issues designated as the joint jurisdiction of Russias central and regional governments.

The public administration legislation does make some inconsequential concessions on legislative review procedures, and it grants a few new powers to governors, but these reforms come at the expense of Russias municipal authorities, duplicating at the gubernatorial level some of the executive vertical prerogatives granted to the president. This consolidation of the power vertical will also reduce the possibilities for political opposition within the system and tie up mayors and town councils in Moscows deadlock. Stanovaya calls this the executive branchs blitzkrieg against local government.

Federal lawmakers did not compromise on the abolition of the presidential titles in regional governments, continuing Moscows conflict with Tatarstan, where Russias last regional president still holds office. Stanovaya points out that the new public administration law would empower Tatarstans attorney general to initiate a constitutional review within the republic to change the regional leaders title, though abolishing the presidency even in name would require a popular referendum that is doomed to fail among local voters, says Stanovaya.

The justifications for these changes to Russian federalism are based on the same rationale that fueled constitutional reforms to allow Vladimir Putin to seek another two presidential terms: political stability. Ever the Kremlins guiding star, the pursuit of stability motivated the introduction of gubernatorial term limits in 2015. In six years, however, the Putin administration has replaced Russias governor-politicians with governor-technocrats, obviating the need to treat regional heads as potential rivals, and term limits have become a burden on the Kremlin.

For all its apparent vigor, this more centralized federal government is strong and unified today, says Stanovaya, but it becomes a monstrously dangerous system, the moment Russia has a politically weak head of state.

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Summary by Kevin Rothrock

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The risks of Constitutional Putinism - Meduza

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