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Politics in Russia Difficult transition from communism

Politics in Russia

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Politics in Russia. Difficult transition from communism. Largest country in the world. Russian population. 14 1,377,752 (July 2007 estimate) comparison larger than that of Japan (127 million) smaller than that of US (301 million) 82% Russian largest minority: Tatars 4% 72% Orthodox - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Politics in Russia

Politics in Russia

Difficult transition from communism

Page 2: Politics in Russia

Largest country in the world

Page 3: Politics in Russia

Russian population

• 141,377,752 (July 2007 estimate)– comparison

• larger than that of Japan (127 million)• smaller than that of US (301 million)

• 82% Russian– largest minority: Tatars 4%

• 72% Orthodox– largest minority: Muslim 6%

Page 4: Politics in Russia

Legacies of the tsarist era

• A millennium of autocratic rule– hereditary monarchy– not constrained by a constitution

Page 5: Politics in Russia

Legacies of the tsarist era

• need of governing a vast territory– modernization of military & economic potential– growth of state power– mobilization and unity to defend country– national feeling based on pride

• in the greatness of the country• in the strength of its people

Page 6: Politics in Russia

Russian Revolution of 1917

• Tsarist regime fell during World War I

• Bolshevik revolution in October 1917

• Vladimir Ilyich Lenin (1870 - 1924)

• Communist Party of the Soviet Union– controlled all levels of govt.– nomenklatura

• party state

Page 7: Politics in Russia

Soviet Union (USSR)

• Joseph Stalin– totalitarian regime– centralized political power– industrial and military might

• staggering human cost– collectivization– purges– World War II

Page 8: Politics in Russia

Stalin’s legacies

• rule of personalities (versus rule of law)• succession crisis (versus regular elections)• reliance on military and police• bureaucratic distortions, resistance, and

inertia• de-stalinization (1950s & 1960s)

– collective leadership– deteriorating economic conditions

Page 9: Politics in Russia

Gorbachev

• General Secretary of CPSU (85-91)– glasnost: openness in political relations– improve economic well-being– contested elections– law-governed state– private enterprises– informal social associations– concessions to US– revolutions in East Europe in 1989

Page 10: Politics in Russia

Collapse of the Soviet Union

• Unintended consequence of Gorbachev’s reforms– communist party rule broke down in the 15

soviet republics

• ascendance of Boris Yeltsin in elections– elected Russian president in 1991 (57% vote)– outlawed the Communist Party of Soviet Uni.

• Gorbachev resigned as president

Page 11: Politics in Russia

Yeltsin as president (1991-1999)

• Yeltsin demanded extraordinary powers from parliament to cope with the country’s economic problems– power to carry out a program of radical

market-oriented reform by presidential decree– named himself acting prime minister– young, Western-oriented government leaders– determined to carry out decisive

transformation

Page 12: Politics in Russia

Reformers versus opponents

• Economic reforms took effect in 1992– prices skyrocketed (inflation rate 2323%)

• political opposition to reform policies

• developments in 1993– Yeltsin dissolved parliament– bombed the parliament– parliamentary election– constitutional referendum

Page 13: Politics in Russia

The Yeltsin Constitution of 1993

• Yeltsin called a “presidential republic”

• President– is directly elected by

voters– can dissolve

parliament– can issue decrees

Page 14: Politics in Russia

presidential power

• head of state

• “guarantor of the constitution”

• appoint government

• choice of prime minister is subject to the approval of parliament

• after three refusals to confirm president’s choice, president dissolves State Duma

Page 15: Politics in Russia

The Parliament

• Federal Assembly

• lower house– State Duma

• upper house– Federation Council

Page 16: Politics in Russia

The Parliament

• submission of draft legislation to State Duma– by government– by president– or by members of the Federal Assembly

• individually or collectively

Page 17: Politics in Russia

Federation Council

• Every constituent unit of the federation is represented by 2 representatives

• populations of small ethnic-national territories are greatly over-represented

• after Putin’s reform in 2000, each governor and each regional legislature is to name a representative to the Federation Council

• after 1996, all governors are elected

Page 18: Politics in Russia

Legislative process

• State Duma => Federation Council => President

• if Federation Council rejects a bill– State Duma may override (by 2/3 vote), or– bicameral conciliation commission

• if president rejects a bill– State Duma may override (by 2/3 vote), or– bicameral conciliation commission

Page 19: Politics in Russia

Limit on presidential power

• President can not dissolve parliament– within one year of parliamentary election– if the parliament has filed impeachment

against president– if president has declared state of emergency– within 6 months of expiration of president’s

term

Page 20: Politics in Russia

Limit on presidential power

• Impeachment of president– 2/3 majority in State Duma– affirmation by the Supreme Court– rule by the Constitutional Court– 2/3 majority in Federation Council

Page 21: Politics in Russia

Constitutional Court

• judicial review by the Constitutional Court

• 19 members are– nominated by the president– confirmed by the Federation

Council

Page 22: Politics in Russia

Constitutional Court

• empowered to consider the constitutionality of actions of– the president– the parliament– lower level government

• ruled on relations– between the 2 chambers– between central and local governments

Page 23: Politics in Russia

Decline and recovery (GDP)Russian GDP Growth % 1993-2008 (Source: IMF)

-15

-10

-5

0

5

10

15

1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008

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