Sanku wrote:Johann wrote:
There are however important differences between the CPC and United Russia. The CPC after Deng developed an institutional core which allowed party-state leadership to be periodically changed, whereas leadership and power in Russia remains vested in the individual (Yeltsin, then Putin).
Just what remotely is the basis to compare China post hand shake by Nixon and current Russia?
Russia is for better or for worse a full democracy, if it happens to be straddled by a Giant like Putin and thus keeps choosing him how does that become like a controlled One party like CPC?
If anything, Russia today is like India in 50-70s where a IG emerged as Giant and then held on for a long time in a true democracy (she too was much disliked by the west for similar reasons as their ire for Putin I think)
- the legislative is a powerless rubber stamp with token parties (yes thats right the CPC is not the only party elected to the National People's Congress). All power flows from the executive. This model has been described as "Sovereign Democracy" by the Kremlin's chief party-machine architect, Vladimir Surkov
- The only businesses that are permitted to flourish are those with close ties to the bureaucracy and the party, whose leading figures are repaid in cash and kind. If anything these ties are even more cartel like in Russia than China. Owning a small business in Russia is nearly impossible because of these pressures - I know many middle class Russians who would like to start something but are scared of both private muscle and bureaucratic harassment that would follow. This is one of the reasons the Russian economy outside Moscow and St. Petersurg is so underdeveloped. Please look at the reports of the massive protests in Kaliningrad a few months ago.
- Writing about corruption, land-grabbing, etc by the regional party bosses, bureaucracy, and the businesses they support will get you killed or beaten up, just like China. Please see what Reporters Sans Frontiers and the CPJ have to say on this.
Russia is an effectively one-party state, controlled straight from the top. To compare United Russia under Putin (or its predecessor under Yeltsin) to the Congress(I) under Mrs. Gandhi (who was generally liked and respected in the UK btw) is demeaning to Indian democracy, and complete blanking of the Russian political system.
I don't remember a time even in the darkest days of the Emergency when elections for Chief Ministers were permanently abolished and replaced with direct appointments from Delhi.
I don't remember a time when India ranked as one of the most dangerous places in the world for journalists.
I dont remember a time when Indian parliament lacked control over the budget, and no power to bring down the government.
I don't remember a time in India when parliamentary opposition was limited to parties that accepted handouts from the government in exchange for electoral contests whose outcomes are decided by the government beforehand.
Putin is personally popular, but the system he presides over and helped build is despised, a pattern common to many authoritarian societies. Russians would very much like to see improvements, but the avenues that Indians have to demand improvements - namely competitive elections, press freedoms, and the chance to build your own business are simply not available. Those frustrations show in other places, like music and political apathy although amongst the middle class this apathy is increasingly turning in to civil activism.
Russia has chosen a path of full democracy, controlled capitalism (instead of lassize-faire that some would like) and are rebuilding their nation on sound fundamentals, instead of environment destroying natural resource guzzling unstable and paranoid nightmare of a fascist country.
Sanku, Russia's entire economy is largely on natural resource extraction, where stuff is being pushed out the door in to the world market as fast as they can get it out there. Most of this is being done by enormous private corporations. The only sense in which capitalism is 'controlled' is that businesses must demonstrate loyalty to the Kremlin and the local bosses - otherwise its naked, brutal neo-liberalism of a sort most Europeans could never stomach, and one that is *hugely* unpopular in Russia.
To get an idea of just how business and government cooperate to destroy the Russian environment, and the difficulty citizens have in pushing back, look up the Khimki Forest protests over a plan to illegally hand over parts of the Moscow green belt to loggers.