Too Many Parties? Governing Britain after the Election
By
the time Gordon Brown, Britain’s former Labor prime minister, arrived
at the school in Nottingham where he was scheduled to speak, he was an
hour late and the audience had dwindled to 130 people. Brown’s message
was “Don’t lose hope.” He said Nelson Mandela once told him of a
painting called Hope that he had kept on the wall of his prison
cell in South Africa. It showed a girl wearing a blindfold, sitting on a
globe trying to play a harp with all its strings broken. “[Mandela] was
saying, even in a situation that seems hopeless, there is always hope,”
Brown told his audience. “The Labor movement was built on hope.”
Yet hope is much needed by both the main parties in the
upcoming UK elections. Brown’s speech left the party faithful somewhat
bemused because Labor expected to keep its parliamentary seats in
Nottingham, the historic city in England’s East Midlands. It was in
Brown’s native Scotland that his party faced its greatest danger.
Opinion polls showed the Scottish National Party, the SNP, taking all
but four of the 41 seats in Labor’s traditional stronghold—including the
constituency Brown himself had represented at Westminster from the
early 1980s until his retirement last year.
The loss would cancel out the slight gains Labor was
expected to make against Prime Minister David Cameron’s Conservatives,
leading pollsters to predict that the two main political parties would
end up close to neck-and-neck. Furthermore, projections showed the
Liberal Democrats losing up to half their current parliamentary
strength, thus making a resumption of the current coalition with the
Conservatives numerically impossible.
Related Essay
All of which explains why the May 7th election is
enveloped in a fog of unpredictability like no other in recent British
political history. The era in which “95 percent of the electorate votes
for the two main parties, and 80 percent of the country turns out to
vote” is long gone, says Joe Twyman, head of political and social
research at the polling group YouGov, “but over the last parliament the
change has been most pronounced.”
And Philip Cowley, professor of politics at the University
of Nottingham, describes the coming election as “the first in living
memory where we expect the outcome to be as messy as it might be,” with
the distinct possibility that “a combination of the first- and
third-placed parties will not be able to form a coalition.”
Cowley’s point is that with contending candidates from
eight parties—Conservatives, Labor, Liberal Democrats, the UK
Independence Party (UKIP), the SNP, the Greens, the Welsh party Plaid
Cymru, and the Northern Ireland party Democratic Unionist—plus some
fringe groups such as the anti-feminist Men and Boys Party, which pushes
male rights, a fragmented result was inevitable, and a one-party
absolute majority remained virtually out of the question.
It’s a scenario in which the SNP, having
lost the September referendum for Scottish independence, could become
pivotal to what happens at Westminster. The party’s popularity has
zoomed since the defeat, and pollsters predict that it could siphon off a
combined 46 seats from Labor and the Liberal Democrats in Scotland to
become indispensable to any coalition.
Some argue that the opinion polls don’t take into account
the silent majority—the one that, for example, upset confident
predictions that Scotland would choose independence. Also, says Richard
Rose, professor of politics at the University of Strathclyde, in
Scotland, the polls are “meaningless” in a close-run election because
“seats in the House of Commons are awarded at the constituency level,
not the national level.” It’s also worth remembering that Britain’s
first-past-the-post electoral system is stacked against smaller parties,
and that the number of seats a party wins doesn’t reflect the global
total of the votes it receives.
The elephants in the room
this year are Nigel Farage’s UKIP on the right, and the Greens. UKIP has
emerged as a national political force threatening both the
Conservatives and Labor with its xenophobe campaign against immigrants
from the rest of Europe and its opposition to British membership of the
European Union as the mainspring of its support. In November 2014, UKIP
shook the Conservatives by gaining a second House of Commons seat
formerly held by a Tory. This one was in the cathedral town of
Rochester. Cameron had made retaining it a personal challenge and
campaigned there five times. Even so, there is some question how many
seats UKIP could gain in the election, given the electoral system’s bias
against small parties.
The phrase “hung parliament” is
increasingly heard in political discussions, referring to a situation in
which neither side wins an overall majority and whoever ends up trying
to form a government has to rely on a formal or informal agreement of
support from another party to govern. Depending on the circumstances,
the ensuing negotiations could be lengthy and constitutionally
challenging because, as Catherine Haddon, a fellow of the Institute for
Government in London, told the Financial Times, “Most of the
time it will be clear which party has lost the election even if it is
not clear which has won.” Which is why one scholar suggests that a
multi-party system calls for a redefinition of winning and losing. In
the old system, “winning used to mean that you thumped the opposition,”
she says. “But now the largest party may not be the one to provide the
prime minister.”
None of which stopped the experts from focusing on
possible combinations of seats that would produce a majority government
after election day. According to the Guardian newspaper, a
coalition consisting of Ed Miliband’s Labor and the SNP would have 322
seats—close, but still needing the support of a third party, possibly
what will be left of the shrinking Liberal Democrats or the rising
Greens.
A political alliance of Cameron’s Conservatives, the SNP,
and Nick Clegg’s Liberal Democrats would have 347 seats, and therefore a
secure parliamentary base. But Nicola Sturgeon, the SNP’s
post-referendum leader, has ruled out a coalition with the
Conservatives, while at the same time leaving the way open for a
possible pairing with Labor.
There could be reservations on the Labor side, though,
particularly because the SNP has raised questions about Britain’s
nuclear policy. The Scottish party is unilateralist and opposed to
nuclear weapons: Would the Labor Party risk alienating Britain’s
relations with the United States and its other Western allies by
agreeing to a change in the country’s nuclear defense policy as a price
for the SNP’s political support?
When Cameron was asked if he might negotiate with UKIP to
form a government, he snapped indignantly, “We are the Conservative
Party, we don’t do pacts and deals. We’ll be fighting all out for a win
in the next election.” Given that he had already been forced to
negotiate with his current coalition partners, the Liberal Democrats, in
2010, the comment was little more than an outburst of frustration at
the new and, to many, unwelcome reality in British politics that
Farage’s party represents.
For years, politicians in
the UK viewed with condescension the complex and often lengthy
horse-trading between multiple parties that went into forming a
government after elections in countries like Italy and Denmark. In the
latter, no single party has won a parliament majority since 1919. But
now, despite his bluster, Cameron is likely to have to jump through the
same hoops if he wants to remain in power, and no one appreciates the
irony more than the Europeans. “The increase in the number of parties
[in England] reflects current changes in a society that is becoming more
complex (in other words, more European) and finds it hard to identify
with the rigid mechanisms of the past,” wrote political commentator
Antonio Armellini in the Italian newspaper
Corriere della Sera. But the British are averse to change, he goes on to say, and it is too early to say whether, and in what way, the political system will change to adapt to these new priorities.
Corriere della Sera. But the British are averse to change, he goes on to say, and it is too early to say whether, and in what way, the political system will change to adapt to these new priorities.
Party leaders in Britain have seen the writing on the wall
and know that political alliances loom in their future. But first,
there is a campaign to wage.
Cameron has a good narrative to sell on the economy, given
Britain’s continuing recovery from the 2008 financial crisis. The debt
is under control. Growth at 2.5 percent is the highest in Europe (and as
high as in the United States), unemployment has fallen, and so has
inflation. But while his coalition’s management of the economy is a
strong campaign theme, it’s also a mixed message because Cameron warns
of more austerity ahead, usually coded as “sound fiscal practice,” as
in: “Your jobs, homes, the schools your children go to, the hospital you
go to when you’re ill, the streets we live in, the very stuff that
makes life worthwhile in our country, all things depend on sound public
finances. If we fail to meet the national challenge, the writing is on
the wall: more borrowing—and all the extra debt interest that brings.”
Labor focuses on improving the
health-care service, which has suffered as a result of government
spending cuts, and on education. When it comes to universities, Labor
will not only cut university fees—Miliband has promised to reduce them
from 9,000 pounds a year ($13,500) to 6,000 pounds ($9,000) but also
increase support grants given to college students.
Overshadowing these domestic concerns is Britain’s future
in the European Union. Cameron has made a commitment to hold a national
referendum in 2017 if he wins the election and has left little space for
discussion. Observers say that Euroskepticism has grown among the
Tories, and the referendum result is likely to be a very close call, not
to mention a destabilizing factor in the EU.
If Miliband is the next prime minister, he has said there
would be no referendum because Britain’s exit from the European Union
would be “a disaster.” As Peter Mandelson, a key figure in Tony Blair’s
government and now a member of the House of Lords, put it, “Europe is
too important an issue to be left to the mercy of the electorate.” But
even Labor has its Euroskeptics, although in a minority, and they are
disappointed with Miliband’s decision.
In a year when Britain is marking the 50th anniversary of
the death of Winston Churchill, the scores of events, including a
service in the Houses of Parliament, are making the electorate aware
that the two main political parties have leaders who can hardly be said
to have the same heroic stature. Ed Miliband has had his detractors
inside Labor since having defeated his more popular brother, David, for
the party leadership. According to a recent poll, 44 percent of party
supporters think he would make a bad prime minister. He has been called
disorganized, distant, and is said to have difficulty getting along with
people.
David Cameron has engendered only tepid approval. His
greatest challenge is that he has Boris Johnson, the popular mayor of
London, snapping at his heels now that Johnson is standing for election
in a so-called “safe seat” the Conservatives have held for the past 17
years. Many Tories regard Johnson as potentially more effective than
Cameron—including Johnson himself—and the party is notoriously
unsentimental when it comes to dealing with its leadership.
The 2015 campaign is being described as the most
“Americanized” ever because to reach younger voters and win their
support the parties have copied Barack Obama’s extensive use of social
media in his two successful presidential campaigns. Just as they were in
the US presidential elections, Twitter and Facebook have become the
favorite area for trading insults and doing other mischief.
When Cameron tweeted a very serious-looking photo of
himself holding a telephone in what Downing Street said was a
conversation with President Obama about Russia and Ukraine, it was
immediately parodied by several celebrities, including the actor Patrick
Stewart, who was shown holding a box of sanitary wipes to his ear
instead of a phone. In another image, a woman appeared to be talking
into a banana.
In January, Conservatives tweeted a doctored photo of
Miliband with Alex Salmond, the former SNP leader who led the failed
Scottish independence bid, and Gerry Adams, the leader of the Irish
party Sinn Fein, who was once said to have links to Irish terrorists,
with the caption “Your worst nightmare just got even worse.” Labor’s
retort was, “This is another example of how the Tories intend to fight
this election in the gutter.”
Labor brands the Conservatives as out of touch with the
voters and responsible for the growing income inequality, calling them
“posh”—a reference to the fact that both the prime minister and his
financial minister, Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne, went to
Eton. Taking a page out of the Obama playbook, Labor depicts itself as
“caring,” although the Tories have tried to make competence the hallmark
of the election by questioning Miliband’s fitness to lead. Liam Fox, a
former chairman of the Conservative Party, said in Washington recently
that Miliband was “uniquely unqualified to lead the country in a way
I’ve never known in my 23 years in Parliament.”
Miliband’s wife, Justine Thornton, a lawyer, predicts that
the war in the social media will get worse as polling day nears. “I
think over the next couple of months it’s going to get really vicious,
really personal,” she said in an interview.
But probably not as vicious as it is likely to be for one
or both leaders after the election. On the Monday following the May 7th
polling, the 1922 Committee, the influential group of Tory
back-benchers, is scheduled to hold its election postmortem, and it will
be a day of reckoning for Cameron. If he failed to secure a commanding
lead over Labor, his position as party leader would be in grave peril.
The 1922 Committee has already privately signaled that another coalition
with the Liberal Democrats would be unacceptable, even if it resulted
in a governing majority numerically, seemingly leaving Cameron with two
options—a clear victory or a minority government. In the case of a
defeat for Miliband, the conventional wisdom is that the Labor Party is
not likely to be very forgiving either. In either situation, the
appointment of a new party leader is likely to be a priority over the
process of creating a government out of an indecisive result. It could
be a long summer for the Brits.
The Putin Principle: How It Came to Rule Russia
Probably the most serious international crisis since the
end of the Cold War, and the White House targets individuals? It seemed
an odd response to some observers. But it made sense. At last, after 14
years of dealing with Putin as a legitimate head of state, the US
government has finally acknowledged that he has built a system based on
massive predation on a level not seen in Russia since the czars.
Transparency International estimates the annual cost of bribery in
Russia at $300 billion, roughly equal to the entire gross domestic
product of Denmark, or many times higher than the Russian budgetary
allocations for health and education. Capital flight totaled $335
billion from 2005 to 2013, or about 5 percent of GDP. But then in 2014,
with the ruble and oil prices tumbling, it reached more than $150
billion—a figure that has swollen Western bank coffers but made Russia
the most unequal of all economies, in which, according to Credit Suisse,
110 billionaires control 35 percent of the country’s wealth.
And these billionaires, far from being titans of industry
motoring the modernization of the Russian economy or independent centers
of power pushing for reform, have secured and increased their wealth by
relying on and bolstering the centralized power of the state. The
wealth of the oligarchs and political elites who came to power with
Putin in 2000 has been more stable than in any other Group of 7 country.
Political leaders close to Putin have become multimillionaires, and the
oligarchs around them, according to Forbes, have become
billionaires who understand that their wealth and power will be secure
as long as they don’t challenge Putin politically. Under this return to
state capitalism, the state nationalizes the risk but privatizes the
rewards to those closest to the president in return for their loyalty.
Related Essay
Within weeks of Putin’s coming to power
in 2000, the Kremlin began to erode the basic individual freedoms
guaranteed under the 1993 Russian Constitution. Beginning immediately to
deny citizens the rights of free press, assembly, and speech, Putin was
assisted by very favorable global economic conditions that muted
dissent over what was happening. Indeed, as the price of oil shot up to
more than $140 a barrel, the Kremlin was initially able to provide an
increased standard of living for ordinary Russians and the emerging
middle class while also creating greater social stability.
But in addition to an assist from favorable economic
conditions, Putin also benefited from the existence of a tight-knit
circle that came with him from St. Petersburg and with whom he had
worked for more than a decade. Working together, they sought to
establish a regime that would control privatization, restrict democracy,
and return Russia to great power (if not quite superpower) status. Many
in this circle used public positions for personal gain even before
Putin became president in 2000. The trail leads to the establishment of
Bank Rossiya, now sanctioned by the United States; the rise of the Ozero
Dacha Consumer Cooperative, founded by Putin and others now subject to
visa bans and asset seizures; the links between Putin and Petromed, the
oil company that diverted millions in state funds to build “Putin’s
Palace” near Sochi; and the role in big business of security officials
from Putin’s KGB days in Leningrad and Dresden.
Elections in all new democracies suffer from problems of
weak party stability, loose and fluid electoral laws, and voter
manipulation and fraud. In theory and practice, these problems should
decrease over time, leading to the consolidation of democratic
institutions. In Russia, however, they have only increased, until in the
2011–12 electoral cycle the fraud and abuse were considered so
widespread that popular demonstrations broke out. By the end of 2011,
having come through a thoroughly fraudulent and publicly documented sham
election for the Duma (the lower house of Russia’s Parliament), it
became clear that the ability of opposition activists to seek democratic
change was significantly inferior to the regime’s willingness to
suppress them.
After Putin publicly wept, possibly from relief, when he
was declared the winner of the 2012 presidential elections, targeted
repressions began again, reminiscent of the early 1930s or the late
1960s in the USSR. Nonviolent demonstrators were once again sentenced to
either prison or indefinite psychiatric treatment. With the economy
suffering a downturn—mainly because of elite plundering—the crony
regime’s inner logic was revealed: Putin would use force to maintain his
potentially indefinite hold on power so that his group could continue
to loot the country under the guise of “restoring Russian greatness,”
while the opposition was able only to hold endless Internet discussions
about the bespredel—the limitless and total lack of accountability of the elites.
It is this kleptocratic
tribute system underlying Russia’s authoritarian regime that the US
government sought to expose and punish beginning in March 2014. For the
first time, the White House explicitly referred to Putin’s “cronies” and
targeted their money abroad, exposing the fact that Western governments
have known for some time the broad details of where this group’s money
is, what their private rules are, and what high crimes and misdemeanors
they have committed to establish and maintain their sistema.
Because this system is complex and
clever, full of interesting details and inner rules despite its opacity,
we should conclude that it came about by intelligent design rather than
by chance. Putin is not an “accidental autocrat” or a “good czar
surrounded by bad boyars.” Of course, the boyars—now called
oligarchs—are mainly bad. And of course, not every detail of their
ascent was planned; certainly they met with deep resistance from other
rivals, in both St. Petersburg and Moscow. And Putin’s group could never
have predicted how successful they would be and how little their
acquisition of power would be resisted by Russians and the West. But
what is clear is that the group around Putin today is the same as the
one that brought him to power from St. Petersburg in the 1990s and that
rather than getting lost on the path to democracy, they never took that
path in the first place.
Why did the West not firmly resist “Putin’s project” until
now? Many Western officials stationed in Russia certainly knew from the
early 1990s what kind of operative Putin was and whom he depended upon
to get things done. But he was regarded as a relatively low-level person
in one city in one very turbulent country. And so the eyes of Western
intelligence were wide shut until, after less than two years, Putin rose
from being an out-of-work deputy mayor, whose boss had just lost his
bid for re-election, to the head of the Federal Security Service (FSB),
the modern-day KGB. One year later, in 1999, Putin was prime minister;
six months after that, he was president. Jobless to president in three
and a half years. Only then did Western journalists and policymakers
focus closely on his background and the composition of his circle, but
by then it was too late. According to government leaks at the time to Newsweek,
US government analysis of Putin’s personal involvement in a
money-laundering scheme through a German-based company, SPAG, led in
2000 to Russia’s being placed on an international money-laundering
blacklist: “A key reason, said a former top US official, was a sheaf of
intelligence reports linking Putin to SPAG,” including documents showing
he “signed important St. Petersburg city documents for the company’s
benefit.” The pattern of helping his friends to the detriment of his
people was set early.
The facts of Putin’s rise might have become part of the
West’s critique of his governance, but then, at the Slovenia summit in
June 2001, President George W. Bush looked into Putin’s eyes and saw his
soul, and Putin quickly joined the “war on terror.” Putin was
transformed into a reliable partner in helping the West target Islamic
extremists, especially in Afghanistan, since there were Chechen fighters
in al-Qaeda camps. Only slowly did Putin’s malevolence dawn on Western
governments, especially in light of the Kremlin’s transparently
predatory actions in taking apart Russia’s largest private oil company,
Yukos, and imprisoning its independently minded owner, Mikhail
Khodorkovsky, in 2005.
The following year, at the Group of 8
meeting in St. Petersburg, Bush called for “strengthened international
efforts to deny kleptocrats access to our financial system,” but he
still did not mention Russia by name. The New York Times subsequently
reported that in 2007 a CIA assessment of Putin’s personal wealth
“largely tracked” with assertions made by the Russian political analyst
Stanislav Belkovsky, who claimed that Putin had holdings totaling about
$40 billion in the commodity-trading company Gunvor, the publicly traded
state-majority-owned gas giant Gazprom, and the oil and gas company
Surgutneftegaz. At last, it seemed that the West might start to stand up
against this vast scheme, with its potential to undermine not only
Russia’s development but Western financial institutions, the banks,
equity markets, real estate markets, and insurance companies that were
showing signs of being subverted internally by employees eager to
receive a cut of the Putin circle’s illicit transactions.
But then President Obama decided to push
the “reset” button in US relations with Russia. As a result, Putin spent
only minutes in the penalty box for the 2008 invasion of Georgia before
being embraced at the 2009 G8 meeting of the world’s leading industrial
nations. The meeting was hosted in Italy by Putin’s personal friend,
Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, whom US government cables—through
WikiLeaks—alleged to be “profiting personally and handsomely” from
secret deals with Putin that included the “exchange of lavish gifts.”
From 2008 to 2014, six more years were lost while low-level government
officials in the West gathered materials on Putin’s wealth and
high-level political appointees ignored them.
Clearly, in the 1990s
democracy was in fact both being built and failing, but the more
critical narrative was that there were elites (centered on Putin and his
security cabal, the so-called siloviki)who sought from the
beginning to establish an authoritarian regime in Russia and to kill the
democracy others were trying to build, because it would inevitably
force them to someday surrender power.
When these shadowy figures came to see themselves as the
personal guardians and guarantors of Russia’s future, this only
increased the possibility that they would not only resist the rotation
of elites, critical to a democracy, but actively seek to stymie it. And
they used many methods to achieve this, including engaging in criminal
behavior, controlling the legal system and the media, and, above all,
maintaining group cohesion through combinations of threats and rewards.
Putin and his circle could have passed and upheld laws to
protect, promote, cement, and sustain democratic institutions, but they
chose not to. On the contrary, they have established what they
themselves internally call a sistema that undermines, mocks,
and mimics democracy but that actually serves the purpose of creating a
unified and stable authoritarian state that allows individuals close to
Putin and his associates to benefit personally from the unparalleled
despoliation of Russia’s vast natural resources. To be sure, Putin has
built a legalistic system, but its net effect is to control, channel,
and coerce the middle class and the broader elite while at the same time
allowing the inner core to act in accord with what has been called
Putin’s “vertical of impunity,” according to the adage “For my friends,
anything. For my enemies, the law!”
This is not to say that the Russian ruling elite does not
see the benefits of a robust rule-of-law system. That they do is shown
by their eagerness to park their money in Western banks. The situation
calls to mind American economist Mancur Olson’s idea that in the
transition from dictatorship to democracy, “roving bandits” will over
time gain an interest in laws to vouchsafe their gains and will settle
down, and from their self-interest in the stability and predictability
of the system they control, democracy will emerge. Under Putin, as the
regime has made the transition from “roving” to “stationary” bandits,
inter-elite violence has decreased, and the streets have become safer,
as Olson predicted. What Olson failed to foresee was the extent to which
globalization would allow Russian elites to continue to maximize their
gains by keeping domestic markets open for their predation while
minimizing their own personal risk by depositing profits in secure
offshore accounts.
The story starts with the collapse of the USSR, when, as
the archives of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union reveal, the KGB
moved the party’s vast financial reserves offshore, out from under
President Mikhail Gorbachev’s control, thus further crippling his
regime. The August 1991 coup by Communist and KGB hard-liners failed,
but their aspirations remained. One of the chief strategists of Putin’s
2000 victory, Gleb Pavlovsky, subsequently put it like this, after he
had been sacked by the Kremlin: “Putin belongs to a very extensive but
politically invisible layer of people who after the end of the 1980s
were looking for a ‘revanche’ [seeking the return of lost glory] in
connection with the fall of the Soviet Union.” The 1990s was devoted to
preparing for that moment.
Putin’s early life was spent yearning to join the KGB and
finally being accepted. By his own account, his favorite songs are
Soviet standards, not Western rock. He has been deeply conservative his
whole life. Yet he has also been a keen collector of every possible
trapping of material wealth. When he was stationed in East Germany, he
had the leaders of the German Red Army Faction (also known as the
Baader-Meinhof Group) steal stereo speaker systems for him when they had
a moment free from their terror campaigns. Back in Russia in the early
1990s, Putin acquired a substantial country house, or dacha,
and an apartment in a prestigious section of St. Petersburg within his
first years of working in the city; neither of these could have been
purchased with his meager official salary.
This pattern of uncontrollable greed, of wanting what
rightfully belongs to others, which the journalist Masha Gessen calls
“pleonexia,” has resulted in 20 official residences, 58 planes, and four
yachts. Putin does not “own” any of these, except his St. Petersburg
properties and perhaps his first yacht, Olympia, which was
presented to him as a gift by a group of oligarchs headed by Roman
Abramovich just prior to his becoming president in 2000, and delivered
in 2002. Without the presidency, Putin theoretically would not be
allowed to keep any of these accoutrements of power, except perhaps for
the $700,000 in watches that he routinely sports—six times his declared
annual income, a subject of constant Russian journalistic interest. Thus
his motivation to leave power is reduced to zero. Those who say
politicians can’t be called corrupt unless the police find $20,000 in
small bills in their freezer, or who say, “But the US presidents have
Camp David,” should contemplate how much has been taken from public
funds to finance the construction, maintenance, furnishing, and
round-the-clock staffing of these 20 residences, most of which did not
exist, or at least not in their current gilded state, prior to Putin’s
rule.
The demands of this tribute system have
meant that the cost of doing business in Russia has escalated to such an
extent that Russian and foreign businesses alike wonder whether they
can even turn a profit. The global Swedish furniture chain Ikea
threatened to call it quits after years of trying to run a clean
business in Russia. When the head of Ikea in Russia, Lennart Dahlgren,
left the company in 2006, he revealed that the company had been
subjected to years of legal traps that it sought to solve by meeting
personally with Putin. But a high-ranking official told them that a
meeting with Putin would cost $5 million to $10 million. Not knowing
whether the officials were serious or joking, Dahlgren told reporters,
“I sensed that it would be better not to get into that discussion any
deeper.”
A 2010 cable from America’s ambassador in Moscow, John
Beyrle, to the US secretary of state, released through WikiLeaks,
provided the following description of how money, elections, criminal
activity, and the Kremlin interact:
X. [name redacted by me] stated that everything depends on the Kremlin and he thought that . . . many mayors and governors pay off key insiders in the Kremlin. X. argued that the vertical [“vertical of impunity”] works because people are paying bribes all the way to the top. He told us that people often witness officials going into the Kremlin with large suitcases and bodyguards, and he speculated that the suitcases are full of money. The governors also collect money based on bribes, almost resembling a tax system, throughout their regions. He described how there are parallel structures in the regions in which people are able to pay their leaders. For instance, the FSB [successor to KGB], MVD [Ministry of Internal Affairs], and militia all have distinct money collection systems. Further, X. told us that deputies generally have to buy their seats in the government. They need money to get to the top, but once they are there, their positions become quite lucrative money making opportunities.
Vladimir Putin is both a product and a producer of this
pervasive system of corruption. Of course, he is not the only Eurasian
or Western leader to have collected gifts and tributes. But to have
created, with this clique, an entire system that spans 11 time zones is
by any measure an impressive achievement and one that the West should
take into account as it ponders how to respond to the Russian leader.
