Federation Council: Political Parties & Elections in Post-Soviet Russia (Part 2) Terms: Medvedev, United Russia

Similar documents
Russia's Political Parties. By: Ahnaf, Jamie, Mobasher, David X. Montes

(Gulag) Russia. By Когтерез Путина, Товарищ основе Бог, Мышечная зубная щетка

Elections in the Former Glorious Soviet Union

STUDY THE ELECTORAL SYSTEM OF THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION

Power as Patronage: Russian Parties and Russian Democracy. Regina Smyth February 2000 PONARS Policy Memo 106 Pennsylvania State University

Russian Political Parties. Bryan, George, Jason, Tahzib

Russia. Part 2: Institutions

Democratic Consolidation and Political Parties in Russia

Institutional Engineering in a Managed Democracy: The Party System in Russia s Regions Since 2003

Russia. Political Situation. Last update: 20 March ,096,812 million (2015 World Bank est.) Governemental type: Federation

Comparative Politics: Domestic Responses to Global Challenges, Seventh Edition. by Charles Hauss. Chapter 9: Russia

Maintaining Control. Putin s Strategy for Holding Power Past 2008

The Fair Sex in an Unfair System

1_1c. On the whole do you approve or disapprove of the performance of the Government of Russia? Approve Disapprove [Don t read] Hard to say/missing

The Duma Districts Key to Putin s Power

Elections in Russia,

Daniel Treisman ELECTIONS IN RUSSIA, University of California, Los Angeles

Part Three (continued): Electoral Systems & Linkage Institutions

Vote for Best Candy...

ELECTIONS IN RUSSIA BACK TO THE FUTURE OR FORWARD TO THE PAST?

BASIC BACKGROUND: RUSSIAN POLITICS 101

Electoral Fraud in Russia: Vote Counts Analysis using. Second-digit Mean Tests

The Political Clubs of United Russia: Incubators of Ideology or Internal Dissent? Thesis. Eileen Marie Kunkler, B.A.

STRATEGIC FORUM. Russia's Duma Elections: Ii _2. Why they should matter to the United States. Number 54, November 1995

Putting an end to Gerrymandering in Ohio: A new citizens initiative

RUSSIA WATCH. Russian Parties are Inching Forward. No. 9, January Analysis and Commentary IN THIS ISSUE:

Russia s December 2007 Legislative Election: Outcome and Implications

Elections in Russia The March 4 Presidential Election

Why are there only two major parties in US? [party attachments below]

Fragmentation of Liberal Parties in Russia

The Full Cycle of Political Evolution in Russia

Russia s Elites in Search of Consensus: What Kind of Consolidation?

Party Formation and Non-Formation in Russia. Michael McFaul. Russian Domestic Politics Project RUSSIAN AND EURASIAN PROGRAM

Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights RUSSIAN FEDERATION. ELECTIONS TO THE STATE DUMA 7 December 2003

Partisan Advantage and Competitiveness in Illinois Redistricting

The Middle Class in Russia: Agent of Democracy or Bastion of the Status Quo. Cameron Ross University of Dundee

BRIEFING PAPER 14 4 December 2007 A COLLAPSING FAÇADE? Sinikukka Saari

CIVIL SOCIETY DEVELOPMENT FOUNDATION. The Putin majority on the eve of the next electoral cycle

Minnesota State Politics: Battles Over Constitution and State House

In Election, Russians Rallied Around Putin

CRS Report for Congress

Parties in Russia: 34 From a pseudo-system towards

Multiparty Politics in Russia

INTERIM REPORT 26 October 14 November November 2011

1 The dual state in Russia

International Perspective on Representation Japan s August 2009 Parliamentary Elections By Pauline Lejeune with Rob Richie

established initially in 2000, can properly be called populist. I argue that it has many

The realities of daily life during the 1970 s

Escalating Uncertainty

Alliances, Russian-style

The Center for Voting and Democracy

THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN LIBERAL OPPOSITION PARTIES IN MODERN RUSSIA AN HONORS THESIS SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF

connect the people to the government. These institutions include: elections, political parties, interest groups, and the media.

Latvia Pre-Election Watch: October 2010 Parliamentary Elections

Mathematics of Voting Systems. Tanya Leise Mathematics & Statistics Amherst College

REFORMING THE ELECTORAL FORMULA IN PEI: THE CASE FOR DUAL-MEMBER MIXED PROPORTIONAL Sean Graham

ЛДПР. Liberal Democratic Party of Russia. always. in the. centre!

CHANGING DEMOGRAPHICS AND IMMIGRATION POLITICS IN COLORADO. June 25, 2014

Insights from a changing country

1. Amendments impacting Voting. 15th - No Racial Discrimination. 17th - Direct election of senators by citizens, not state legislature appointment

WikiLeaks Document Release

What Went Wrong? Regional Electoral Politics and Impediments to State Centralization in Russia,

THE NATIONAL COUNCIL FOR EURASIAN AND EAST EUROPEAN RESEARCH TITLE VIII PROGRAM

The 2010 Election and Its Aftermath John Coleman and Charles Franklin Department of Political Science University of Wisconsin-Madison

PORTUGUESE SOCIAL CLUB PAWTUCKET, RHODE ISLAND EVALUATION OF THE 2006 ELECTIONS July 23, 2007

EXPERT INTERVIEW Issue #2

Elections in Nepal 2018 Presidential Elections

Electoral Reform National Dialogue INFORMATION BOOKLET

Party Politics in the Putin s era: the case of United Russia

Zhirinovsky's Bloc Congress of Russian Communities (CRC) and Yury Boldyrev's Movement Movement of Patriotic Forces - Russian Cause

2014 LATINO ELECTION EVE POLL

Do Russians Want Change?

Domestic Politics of NATO Expansion in Russia: Implications for American Foreign Policy

RUSSIAN ELECTION WATCH

Election 2015: Liberals edge Conservatives as volatile electorate mulls final choice before last campaign weekend

AUDITING CANADA S POLITICAL PARTIES

Media and Political Persuasion: Evidence from Russia

Date Period. Section 2 pg , Russia Under the Czars and The Beginning of Unrest : Group A

Making Progress: The Latest on Women and Running for Office

THE NATIONAL COUNCIL FOR SOVIET AND EAST EUROPEAN RESEARCH

Heading into the Conventions: A Tied Race July 8-12, 2016

A New Electoral System for a New Century. Eric Stevens

Local elections. Referendum on the voting system used to elect MPs to the House of Commons

POLI 201 / Chapter 10 Fall 2007

As you may have heard, there has been some discussion about possibly changing Canada's electoral system. We want to ask people their views on this.

Utah Citizens Initiative Petition

Who s to Blame? Punishing Poor Economic Performance in a Centralized Political System

Health Care Speech Brings Small Rebound for Democrats and Serious Problems for Republicans

Introduction What are political parties, and how do they function in our two-party system? Encourage good behavior among members

Russia s. pressure politics. The Kremlin s uncompromising approach to opponents threatens political stability

Election 2008 Exit Poll David Redlawsk Associate Professor of Political Science University of Iowa

ASSESSMENT OF THE LAWS ON PARLIAMENTARY AND PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS IN THE REPUBLIC OF SERBIA (FRY)

How do parties contribute to democratic politics?

The California Primary and Redistricting

Campaigns & Elections. US Government POS 2041

THE SECRETS OF VOTER TURNOUT 2018

Chapter 9: Political Parties

BCGEU surveyed its own members on electoral reform. They reported widespread disaffection with the current provincial electoral system.

The Fate of Russian Democracy

Russia s March 2008 Presidential Election: Outcome and Implications

Transcription:

Political Parties & Elections in Post-Soviet Russia (Part 2) Terms: Medvedev, United Russia Key questions: What sorts of changes did Putin make to the electoral system? Why did Putin make these changes? To what extent have these changes undermined democracy in Russia? Starting point: Yeltsin-era structure Federation Council: Basic rule => 2 reps for each subject During 1990s: governor and speaker of regional legislature were designated representatives What are the problems with this setup? What changes does Putin make (pursuant to August 2000 law)? Executive rep is appointed by gov of region Legislative rep is elected by regional legislature Why did governors go along with this new law? 1

President Federation Council Appointment Appointment Election Governors Regional Legislatures Voters Election Duma: Original selection system required voters to vote for an individual (SMD) and a party (party list) What were the problems with this system? Political parties were slow to evolve Dual selection systems Capacity to vote for none of the above Putin-led reforms to the party system His critique of system (1993-2001): Driven by personalities not parties Goal => fewer but stronger parties 2 waves of reforms: 2001-02: All political parties required to reregister Must demonstrate broad support across country Elimination of direct elections for governors 2004 (post-beslan): Eliminates single-member districts (all proportional) Threshold raised to 7% Minimum turnout requirements eliminated 2

Putin s response re party development Goal: manageable number of parties Mechanism: Parties have to register w/ the state Parties must show support across country Introduce partial state financing for campaigns Increase threshold for Duma representation to 7% Eliminates ability to vote no to all candidates Longstanding dissatisfaction w/ dualistic electoral system Yeltsin wanted to eliminate party lists -- unsuccessful Putin succeeded in eliminating single-member districts 1993 1999 List SMD List SMD Communist Party 99 58 67 46 LDPR 50 1 17 0 Our Home is Russia 45 10 -- -- Yabloko 31 14 16 4 Unity / United Russia -- -- 64 9 Independent NA 77 NA 114 Reforms opposed by many Communist Party & Yabloko (democrats) were united in their opposition Putin s dominance within the Duma following the 1999 elections made such opposition irrelevant Duma passes series of major bills that had been stuck in partisan bickering for most of the 1990s Ex: tax code & labor code Have we returned to the rubber stamp legislature? The pager Duma 3

Comparison of the 5 legislative elections: vote in PR elections Party 1993 1995 1999 2003 2007 Communist Party (CPRF) [Zyuganov] X (12) X (22) X (24) X (13) X (12) Liberal Democratic Party (LDPR) [Zhirinovskii] Russia s Choice [Gaidar] X (16) X (23) X (11) X (6) X (12) X (8) Yabloko [Yavlinskii] X (8) X (7) X (6) (4) (2) Our Home is Russia [Chernomyrdin] X (10) Unity [Gryzlov alliance w/ Putin] In 2003 United Russia Fatherland [Luzhkov] In 2000 joins forces w/ Unity Union of Right Forces [Khakamada; Nemtsov] rebirth of Russia s Choice X (24) X (37) X (64) X (13) X (9) (4) (1) Motherland / Rodina [Glazyev] X (9) A Just Russia Party [pro-kremlin] X (8) % of PR vote wasted 12 50 18 29 [8] Vote for Putin! Putin announces candidacy for Duma Nov 07: Pro-Putin demonstration Democratic-oriented parties Fail to capture popular enthusiasm Steady decline 93: 24% of PR vote 95: 17% of PR vote 99: 13% of PR vote 03: no party gets over 5% 07: no party gets over 7% Possible explanations: Democratic parties blamed for difficulties of transition Leaders of dem. parties unwilling to compromise Could ve been rep d in 2004 Duma if they had joined together By 2007, combined total was below threshhold Leaders unable to tap into popular issues lack of media access 4

Comparison of the 5 legislative elections: vote in PR elections Party 1993 1995 1999 2003 2007 Communist Party (CPRF) [Zyuganov] X (12) X (22) X (24) X (13) X (12) Liberal Democratic Party (LDPR) [Zhirinovskii] Russia s Choice [Gaidar] X (16) X (23) X (11) X (6) X (12) X (8) Yabloko [Yavlinskii] X (8) X (7) X (6) (4) (2) Our Home is Russia [Chernomyrdin] X (10) Unity [Gryzlov alliance w/ Putin] In 2003 United Russia Fatherland [Luzhkov] In 2000 joins forces w/ Unity Union of Right Forces [Khakamada; Nemtsov] rebirth of Russia s Choice X (24) X (37) X (64) X (13) X (9) (4) (1) Motherland / Rodina [Glazyev] X (9) A Just Russia Party [pro-kremlin] X (8) % of PR vote wasted 12 50 18 29 [8] Parties created on eve of election win support 1999: Unity 2003: Motherland (Rodina) 2007: A Just Russia Putin s dominance Unity & Fatherland morph into United Russia and win 37% of vote in 2003 United Russia has always been perceived as Putin s party Putin effectively neutralized potential rivals, then handpicks his successor Return to one-party state? Public opinion polls: United Russia: 60% Communists: 16% LDPR (Zhirinovskii) 11% Yabloko: 1% 5

2001 2006 Levada Center 2007 2000 Pres. election => foregone conclusion Occurs in wake of Yeltsin s resignation Putin is acting president 11 candidates register Including several repeat candidates from 1996 (Zyuganov & Yavlinskii) Putin won election on the first ballot with 53% of vote Riding wave of popularity thanks to renewed Chechen war Benefited from comparison to Yeltsin 2004 Presidential election: Formally competitive -- 5 challengers to Putin Generational change no repeats from 96 or 2000 In reality none of the challengers could get traction Putin dominated the air waves Criticized by OSCE (election observers) Results: easy victory for Putin on first round of voting Putin 71% Kharitonov (Com Party) 14% Glazyev (Rodina) 4% Khakamada (Union of Right Forces) 4% None of the above 4% 6

The run-up to the 2008 pres election: Constitution bars Putin from running again. BUT majority of Russians support 3d term Putin chooses not to run Why? Putin hand-picks successor: Dmitri Medvedev Where did Medvedev come from? Background? Did Russians think it was constitutional for Putin to pick his successor? Yes: 43% No: 23% Hard to say: 26% 7

Medvedev wins 2008 presidential election Medvedev: 70.4% Zyuganov (Communist): 17.8% Zhirinovskii (LDPR): 9.4% Bogdanov: 1.3% Turnout estimated at 67% The Putin-Medvedev relationship: Most Russians (over 80%) believe Putin still retains same influence in political life Tandem power between two doesn t bother Russians Assessing democracy: Impact of multiple elections where results are believed to be manipulated Do Russians care? Does the world community care? Revival of cult of personality? 8