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Putin addresses the crowd during a rally and a concert on Monday, after his election, which was condemned as unfair and fraudulent. Alamy Stock Photo
Russia
Donnacha Ó Beacháin Putin's sham victory — the winner fakes it all
The politics professor looks at the elections deemed fraudulent in Russia that see Putin clinch another term as leader.
12.15pm, 19 Mar 2024
12.9k
34
UNDER VLADIMIR PUTIN, Russia has transitioned from a competitive authoritarian system, in which meaningful competition was permitted despite the abuse of administrative resources, to a façade electoral regime, thinly disguising an outright dictatorship.
Given that elections are not convened to determine who will govern, one might reasonably ask what the point is of conducting them at all. However, managed elections play an important role in maintaining a veneer of regime legitimacy.
The Kremlin understands that elections are necessary to maintain the fiction that Russia is a democracy and require more than one candidate (an advance on the pre-Gorbachev Soviet era). But power has never changed hands in Russia because of an election. Faking democracy is designed to preserve presidential power in perpetuity.
Rules of the game
Russian presidential elections are conducted under a second-ballot majoritarian system, although the incumbent is invariably elected in the first round. Constitutionally, Putin should have been ineligible to run given that presidents are limited to two terms in total.
The laws of the land, however, are designed to protect the political elite from the people rather than vice versa. Or as Garry Kasparov put it: ‘In chess, the rules are fixed and the outcome is unpredictable, whereas in Putin’s Russia, the rules are unpredictable and the outcome is fixed’.
When Putin first exhausted his two-term limit in 2008, he installed his loyal sidekick Dmitry Medvedev while Putin ostensibly played second fiddle as prime minister.
Medvedev dutifully amended the constitution to increase the presidential term from four to six years so that when Putin ‘returned’ in 2012, he was guaranteed another dozen years in office. Of course, this wasn’t enough for a putative president for life and consequently, a new constitution was introduced in 2020. Although it limited a president to two six-year terms, Putin acted as if his previous decades as president had been annulled, and so from 2024 another 12 years beckon.
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How the ‘election’ works
Prospective independent candidates face Herculean tasks before they can get on the ballot paper. They must first create an initiative group composed of no less than five hundred public figures, before quickly collecting 300,000 signatures supporting their candidacy. No more than 7,500 signatures can be from any one region, which means endorsements must be garnered from throughout Russia, where there are more than eighty federal regions spanning eleven time zones.
Apart from creating a daunting obstacle for would-be challengers, the collection of a vast number of supporting signatures serves another purpose. It conveniently provides the Kremlin with a list of non-Putin supporters.
As in Soviet times, it’s not the candidate being tested at election time but the system. Elections in Russia are elaborate affairs, which require immense organisational efforts, not least because voters are continuously being asked to endorse the status quo.
Elections enable the regime to gauge the efficiency of regional governors in overseeing the mobilisation of the electorate to deliver high turnouts and to fine-tune the regime apparatus. Regional governors in turn oversee their subordinates, down to the level of factory bosses, directors of local state institutions, and university rectors. How well they deliver the vote helps the ruling elite establish who merits promotion or demotion or how best to allocate state resources to reward or repress.
Potemkin campaign
In this election, the political elite constructed a façade of pluralism by running four candidates representing three political parties. The presence on the ballot paper of ‘opposition’ candidates – if only of the most nominal and ephemeral kind – aimed to reinforce the impression that this was a competition.
Given that none of the other candidates had the temerity to criticise Putin, it’s inaccurate to describe them as adversaries.
As in the warm-up gladiatorial acts of old, the role of these faux oppositionists is to provide pseudo-challengers for the star of the stage and expire gracefully in public view. The decisive manner by which they are dispatched emphasises the power of the victor and the impossibility of challenging him. Most real opponents in Russia are either in prison, exiled or dead. When two anti-war candidates tried to get on the ballot paper this year both were barred because of alleged irregularities in their applications.
Lack of real competition sucked any energy from the campaign. This was an election without any debate between the candidates while the Kremlin monopolised media coverage. Neither Putin nor his token challengers felt obliged to produce manifestos.
Impression management
This was the first time in a Russian presidential election that voting took place over three days. Additionally, electronic voting was available to more than a third of the electorate. Both innovations provided additional opportunities to falsify results. After all, in Russia, it’s not so much the vote that counts, but who counts the votes.
Putin manufactured a landslide election victory that completely eclipsed his three handpicked ‘rivals’. Despite being almost a quarter century at the helm, the president’s official popularity ratings officially remain stratospheric with support from almost 90% of his compatriots.
In the occupied Ukrainian regions (euphemistically called ‘new territories’) the Kremlin’s official register of voters, based on the pre-war population, bore little resemblance to reality as so many have been killed or exiled. But, as with the rest of the election, this is not about the accuracy of the vote but the projection of power. Holding elections in these areas – albeit at gunpoint and under martial law – is designed to give an outward impression of normality and effective control.
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Independent election monitoring such as that provided by the OSCE no longer takes place in Russia. Instead, the Kremlin has increasingly sought the flattering assessments of the (Russian-dominated) Commonwealth of Independent States and the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation. More recently, the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, composed mainly of non-democracies, has also proven useful in providing observers to validate elections with glowing reports.
Unsurprisingly, Putin has received congratulations from kindred autocrats around the world. The first to extend congratulations was Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro who without irony described Putin as ‘big brother’. Similar salutations soon followed from the leaders of China, Uzbekistan, Belarus, Tajikistan, Cuba, Myanmar, Syria and North Korea. European Council president Charles Michel was more tongue in cheek when he congratulated Putin on Friday, just as the three days of voting was beginning.
How Putin leaves
Russia’s presidential election took place during what can only be described as a global democratic recession. Only one in eight of the world’s population lives in a liberal democracy like Ireland while around 70 percent live in autocracies.
If Putin lives to the end of this presidential term, he will have surpassed Stalin’s 26 years in power by some distance. Like all dictators, Putin would like to die quietly in his bed after a reign of several decades but knows he risks ending his days ignominiously, even violently.
Only last summer Yevgeny Prigozhin’s rebel army marched on Moscow with virtually no resistance. When the Soviet Union imploded, Boris Yeltsin created a weak, corrupt autocracy before handing over power to Putin in return for guaranteeing his security and fortune. Putin seems incapable of trusting anyone to the same extent. For that reason, if no other, Putin most likely plans to leave the Kremlin horizontally.
Donnacha Ó Beacháin is Professor of Politics at Dublin City University. For more than two decades he has worked and researched in the post-Soviet region and has been published widely on the subject.
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The meteorologists give colour coded warnings and they’re criticised for being alarmist. Then when its percieved thay didn’t give a warning they’re at fault.
They may have slightly underestimated the amounts yesterday, but they did forecast snow in the afternoon. Weather is unpredictable, it’s not possible to be 100% right all the time.
@James Wallace: they forecast snow in the afternoon….when it was already snowing. Ya good work guys. I got caught and it took close on two hours to get from Naas to Newbridge
@ed w: Actually, a red warning advises that nobody travel and to stay safe, even if it’s to go to work. Retail/office staff who are disciplined for missing work during a red warning will have a slam dunk winning case, also, businesses leave themselves open to cases for risking staffs safety and wellbeing for operating during these events.
Warning systems save lives, and undoubtedly they have during the 2 we’ve had in the last 2 years.
I was caught in the M7 delays yesterday, 7.5hrs on a bus from Cork to Dublin with no water and no food. It was horrendous.
AA Roadwatch was poorly updated and updated far too late – they should have put out a do not travel unless necessary notice at 2pm but failed to do so (because it was Sunday I’m sure) and caused thousands and thousands of people to be stranded on dark motorways. The whole thing was a farce and put vulnerable people in an impossible position (there were elderly people and a pregnant woman on our coach who were very stressed).
They knew the snow was coming and did absolutely nothing to mitigate the effects. Embarrassing, incompetent Irish as usual.
@Rachel: AA is not our weather forecasters where were they with there forecast Excuse the pun They were asleep at the wheel
The BBC HAD IN ON SATURDAY NIGHT THAT SNOW WAS ARRIVING IN THE UK SUNDAY Did our people think none would fall here
@Rachel: to the people commenting do ye not have any lives of your own that you have to put pathetic comments on here she was only passing a comment which she is in titled to do.
So if someone travelling from Cork to Dublin had seen a sign that said it was snowing and to expect long delays, that they would what… turn around and go back?
@Reuben Gray: if they were near enough to Cork they might have, and likewise someone travelling South have have turned around and headed home to Dublin
@Reuben Gray: yes or if they had a child, come off at the next exit and find somewhere to stop and wait it out. We were stuck in our car with 2 hungry kids for hours and it was no joke.
@KJmadra.: Your comment is telling of lack of understanding of complex global weather system, local climates and other variables needed to attempt to forecast weather.
It was the worst I’ve ever experienced yesterday. 3:30 mins from kildare shopping village to the ball in Naas. 4 hrs total to get to work.
There were reports of congestion going into Newbridge and Naas so I have another half hour early, but the back roads were also reported to be dangerous & trees down in area.
Im not sure what could of been done to fix it but it would of been a nice touch to have a least one emergency service out with a few cans of fuel as a good few ran out and caused further blockages.
Maybe hand out bottles of water given it was so many hours stuck between 2 exits for hours.
I’ll always keep at least a third of a tank and water in car in future!
@Shayne O’Donoghue: So during sever weather events, you want people to come to your car and offer you a bottle of water and fill your car? Why not instruct your chauffeur to keep a jerry can and a water cooler accessible at all times?
@Cathal Flood: not only are they a private company, they are a self proclaimed political lobby group and as such should not be getting any free air time, especially on RTE which is supposed to be an impartial public service broadcaster. By getting into bed with the AA, RTE is breaching it’s own guidelines. Yet every time we discuss congestion, bus corridors, cycle lanes etc, up pops AA to give their self serving input.
@James Wallace: I’m afraid the AA have always been a political body… they were founded in the UK in the early part of the last century to warn motorists that police were carrying out speed checks ahead . They only started repairing cars later on !
@Ollie Conroy: exactly, they have always been a political body so why are they allowed free reign on the airwaves? RTE are not allowed to promote or favour one political body over another
@Louise O’Connor: agreed Louise I was in the same situation yesterday checked the weather before I left a warning against rain with snow on high ground. Plus the toll plaza was a joke only two lanes open causing huge back logs
@john paul crowley: thanks. And yes toll plaza was something medieval. If guards were onsite, they could have managed the flow much more quickly. There were 6km tailbacks on both sides.
TII is the key to the chaos, you cannot believe how under qualified these people are. Like cervical check, HSE, ran by people not from shop floor, so if you see a cool logo your usually dealing with BS. Another logo the RSA no sign of them condemning because if you saw the number of tips,crashes it is amazing someone wasn’t seriously hurt.
If there is to be snow you hedge, have your gritter ready supporting the motorways the preparation is not to send out a Suit to give positive soundbites. Fact is if you had of supported the road networks with gritters prior then the shutdown would not of happened.
Rem . Nothing works here because of bluffers in suits.
Traveling back from Kilkenny to Dublin when the snow hit. Added an hour or so into the journey. The biggest issue, by a country mile, were the absolute idiots, no, that’s too mild a word, that put their lives and mine in danger as they rushed to get home faster, jumping lanes, creating “3rd” lanes, speeding through drifts. If you are reading lads, F@#K YOU
That what happens when Irish retailer’s told met office to quit the weather warning as it was affecting their business. It was only one afternoon get over it – and now realise who dictates what information is released to the public.
Forecast was for wintery showers turning to sleet and snow for the midlands and that’s what happened the motorways were closed in sections due to accidents leading to Sunday night traffic being diverted through towns and inevitably delays. The ploughs and gritters were out but the volume of snow was horrendous so not much more could be done to prevent the delays
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