Putin may be the biggest dupe of his fake
election landslide
With official results showing he won nine out of 10
votes, has the Russian autocrat overplayed his hand?
MARCH 17,
2024 11:17 PM CET
BY EVA
HARTOG
https://www.politico.eu/article/russian-election-vladimir-putin-fake-legitimacy-moscow-ukraine/
“The most
important outcome of any Russian election is legitimacy,” Vladimir Putin told
Russia’s top election officials when they gathered at his residence outside
Moscow in November. “That is the foundation of political stability.”
On Sunday,
after three days of voting, those same officials declared a landslide victory
for the president.
Preliminary
results showed Putin had won a record 87 percent of the vote, on a 73 percent
turnout, beating even the most rosy-eyed, pro-Kremlin predictions.
There is no
doubt that Putin will use the outcome as proof of mass support. But such a
distorted election — in which all challengers were crushed and even the dead
may have voted for Putin — risks undermining the political stability he craves.
This
election was a historic low for post-Soviet Russia.
“Over the
years, the presidential administration has created more and more favorable
conditions for itself,” David Kankiya, of independent monitoring group Golos,
told POLITICO. “But this time it reached an unprecedented peak.”
Even
without taking into account the crackdown on the opposition, the vote was the
least competitive in Russia’s modern history: Only three Kremlin candidates
separated Putin from a Stalin-style ballot with one name.
It was also
the least transparent: Never before have there been so few independent
observers with so little access (tellingly, the head of Golos is in jail.)
And in
another first, in some 29 regions, including those most prone to protest,
voting took place electronically, described by independent election monitors as
a “black box” method designed to facilitate vote tampering.
But perhaps
the most flagrant violation in “this landscape of illegality,” says Ekaterina
Schulmann, a Russian political analyst at the Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center in
Berlin, has been a voting army of “dead souls.”
This is
especially true of votes cast from the “new territories” occupied by Russia in
Ukraine, where electoral authorities said there were some 4.6 million potential
voters. That figure is in line with old Ukrainian statistics from peacetime,
but hardly corresponds to the current population.
“It’s
obvious that in times of war, people get killed, they move away,” says
Schulmann.
Pure fiction
“There’s a
war going on there and zero public oversight,” agreed Kankiya, adding that
residents did not even need a Russian passport to vote. “So whatever result the
authorities decided on, they got. We’re entering the sphere of pure fiction
here.”
Then there
were the tens of million of state employees and students who were coerced into
voting.
Paradoxically,
the queues which could be seen outside some polling stations on Friday — the
day most were assigned to vote on, presumably to give election officials more
time to tweak the result to satisfactory levels — were in fact a display of people “stripped of
their voting rights,” said Kankiya.
“Like in
Soviet times, when you were forced to
vote, whether you wanted to or not.”
Across the
country at polling stations people dressed in costume, presumably to infuse the
election with some joy. But no carnival of animals could distract from the
groups of identically dressed factory workers, fishermen and men on horseback
who showed up to cast their ballots at exactly the same time.
“I’m
convinced that an absolute majority of Russians won’t have much faith in the
results of this vote,” said Kankiya.
Although a
glaringly obvious circus, the Kremlin might not care that much.
Rather than
a gauge of public sentiment, elections under Putin resemble a nationwide test of readiness for the state
apparatus. And this time, like last time, it passed.
From state
companies to libraries, universities and factories, superiors instructed their
lower downs how and when to vote and then harassed them for evidence they had
completed the task.
Even at the
highest level, none of Putin’s three supposed rivals dared to even pretend they
were going for the win.
The past
three days of voting have provided Putin with the assurance that the power
vertical is in place and Russians will do as they are told.
For the
Kremlin that is useful confirmation ahead of what many predict will be
turbulent times. Following the 2018 election, Russians were presented with
painful pension reforms. The expectation
now is that Putin might ramp up mobilization efforts.
In weeks
and months to come, Putin will also overhaul the government, most likely to the
benefit of hardliners, writes political analyst Tatiana Stanovaya, adding they
were likely to double down on Russia’s commitment towards a war-time economy
and a war-time morality.
The protesters and the elite
Putin will
be beginning his fifth term on the back of the biggest anti-war protests since
early 2022.
Heeding a
call to assemble “at noon against Putin,” thousands of Russians on Sunday,
scattered across some 95,000 polling stations and cities worldwide, came out in
a show of dissent.
Coming on
the back of queues for anti-war candidate Boris Nadezhdin and more recently for
Alexei Navalny’s funeral, the flashmob underscored that despite unprecedented
repression, Russians’ ability to offer resistance has not completely atrophied.
“The
Kremlin has sustained three blows to its image,” in a matter of several months,
said Nikolai Petrov, a consulting fellow at Chatham House.
“The image
that Putin wanted has been ruined,” he said, although adding that there were
not yet any visible political consequences.
At multiple
polling stations across the country, some people also attempted to inflict
damage on ballot boxes and polling stations, by pouring green dye and ink over
ballots or starting fires.
Although it
is unclear what exactly motivated these people (one version is that they were
duped), many observers saw the sabotage acts as an expression of their own rage
and frustration.
Finally,
many Russians chose to invalidate their ballot by ticking several boxes and
adding their own anti-war messages or writing down the names of opposition
politicians, such as Navalny.
The
messages won’t be read by Putin, but they will go through the hands of of
thousands of election officials — and higher.
“The main
audience for the Kremlin is the elite, it is they who must be convinced that in
the past six years, Putin’s position has not weakened, but has become
stronger,” said Petrov.
But he
added fooling them would be difficult precisely because they have been involved
in the vote rigging and therefore know to what extent the official picture
differs from reality.
Putin,
however, won’t — as his entourage will undoubtedly present him with an
airbrushed version of the past three days.
“This is
where there could be a big rift,” says Petrov. “Objectively, the election has
not strengthened the position of the Kremlin. But subjectively, Putin might be
under the impression that he enjoys total support and he now has free rein.”
Ironically,
more than anyone else, it is Putin himself who might be the biggest dupe of his
own rigged vote.
“If the
elite see that, under pressure from the Kremlin, they are reporting numbers
today that are much different from the real numbers, they’ll draw their
conclusions,” said Petrov. “They’ll be looking around and wondering who they
should be placing their bets on as the next boss.”
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