Putin the powerful

The wildly popular PM appears to be readying himself for a 2012 presidential run

by Erica Alini on Wednesday, April 27, 2011 10:40am - 3 Comments
Putin the powerful

Shemetov Maxim/ITAR-TASS/AP

From China to Tajikistan, the turmoil that has roiled the Middle East in recent months is spoiling the sleep of authoritarian leaders across the world. Not that of Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, though. The former president’s popularity held up through both a small war, in Georgia in 2008, and a serious recession, in 2008-2009. Now, with his personal approval rating hovering around 70 per cent, he has said he may run for the presidency in 2012.

Putin has certainly remained front and centre in Russian politics. Roughly a decade after first rising to power in 1999, he still enjoys idol status at home. Admittedly, some of his latest sightings among Hollywood’s glitzy posse may have been a little over the top, even for the Russian public—the PM’s uneasy musical rendering of Blueberry Hill before a beaming Sharon Stone and others at a charity event in St. Petersburg last year apparently didn’t sit well with the home audience. But Putin’s carefully crafted macho-man image, which has seen him hunting in Siberia wearing only green fatigues, whitewater rafting, and even demonstrating judo moves in a popular instructional video, hasn’t tired the Russian public yet.

It projects strength, health and self-discipline. And those virtues are nothing short of inspirational for a nation where a former president, Boris Yeltsin, was drunk in public, where alcoholism and addiction have spread like epidemics, and which came terrifyingly close to social and political meltdown only a decade ago, says Edward Lucas, the author of The New Cold War: Putin’s Russia and the Threat to the West. Unlike Egypt’s Hosni Mubarak and Libya’s Moammar Gadhafi, whose images as nationalist heroes faded decades ago, Russia observers say Putin is still riding high on political credit for having rescued the Russia of the Yeltsin years from anarchy and near disintegration.

Putin has also proven to be an autocrat of exceptional foresight and sensibility. The tailspin in the commodities markets in 2008 caught other leaders of oil-rich countries, such as Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran, completely off guard and with barely a penny to spend on stimulus money. In contrast, Putin had set aside a $150-billion stabilization fund with which he shored up the economy. Moscow “spent a huge amount of money on preventing the ruble from collapsing, and seeing Russia through the hard times,” says Tony Brenton, who served as British ambassador to Russia. And, he adds, Putin managed a successful presidential succession, to Dmitry Medvedev (who was formerly PM), just before the recession hit. His decision to not tamper with the constitution—as Mubarak and other Middle Eastern autocrats did—in order to stay on as president in the spring of 2008 past the mandated two consecutive terms, and to switch to the role of PM instead, also seems uncannily prescient in light of the recent Mideast events. “He didn’t want to be seen as a dictator,” says Brenton.

There was widespread speculation that after serving a term as PM, Putin would want the presidency back. But the top government job may have started to appeal to Medvedev, and the run-up to the election has seen Russia’s political couple engage in some theatrical verbal spats. The most spectacular came last month, when Putin evoked the spectre of ancient Christian wars against Muslims by calling military intervention in Libya a “call to crusade”—a comment brusquely rebuked by Medvedev, who then endorsed the United Nations resolution.

That episode, and the fact that both men have said they’re ready to run for president, has some Russia watchers rubbing their hands about a possible split that will favour Medvedev, the more liberal and pro-Western brain of Moscow’s two-headed political creature. To their dismay, though, Putin’s grip on power still looks remarkably solid. And while the president and the PM have some obvious differences of approach, says ambassador Brenton, they are united by a “cold determination to find a stable way forward,” one that will keep away from anything they think may return Russia to a post-Soviet-like mess, including serious divisions at the top.

Also, some recent bold moves by Medvedev, such as the sacking of high-ranking officials in the Interior Ministry, look like attempts by the president to leave behind some legacy, possibly an indication that he is getting ready to step aside, reverting to the PM’s role or some other lofty public office, says Brenton. And even if Medvedev does run again for president, while his political godfather stays on as PM, “it will be a sign that Putin is at least tolerant or perhaps even supports his more liberal approach,” he adds. For its part, Russia, it seems, would be fine to continue on with that set-up: a year before the election, 60 per cent of Russians believe the duo has been effectively leading the country, and two-thirds think the alliance is long-term, according to a recent survey.

It doesn’t hurt that agitation for things such as human rights and freedom of speech is mostly confined to scattered groups of activists. “There is no demand for democracy” in Russia, says Moscow’s Oleg Shevtsov, 27, “so there’s no supply of it either.” Most of his co-nationals are quite content to live under what he calls “a light authoritarian regime,” where people are largely free to talk, write, blog, and go about their business without too much interference. This apathy, he says, stems in part from the collective shock of witnessing the anarchy unleashed by the dissolution of the Soviet Union, a chaos that some at the time were calling democracy. “My parents thought, ‘If this is democracy, we don’t like it,’ ” recalls Shevtsov, an analyst at an NGO that evaluates Russian universities.

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  • Citizen_of_Quebec

    .” Most of his co-nationals are quite content to live under what he calls “a light authoritarian regime,” where people are largely free to talk, write, blog, and go about their business without too much interference. "
    ==========================
    How is this different from G20 summit in Toronto, or Gulag in Cuba?

  • Anonymous

    To read a Russian journalist’s opinion on life in Russia under Putin read Anna Politkovskaya’s books.  She was murdered for speaking out against the atrocities being committed by Putin’s government.  She mentions the people quoted in this article who are well paid to spread pro Putin propaganda.

  • http://www.tokentools.com.au/category8_1.htm arc welder

    I reckon he could kill a bear with his hands. Putin is the Russian James Bond.

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