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- <text id=93TT1364>
- <title>
- Apr. 05, 1993: Looking For Mr. Good Czar
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Apr. 05, 1993 The Generation That Forgot God
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- RUSSIA, Page 24
- Looking For Mr. Good Czar
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By JOHN KOHAN/MOSCOW
- </p>
- <p> At a high-rise apartment block in Moscow's Perovsky
- district, residents gather in the parking lot to chat about the
- latest events of a country in seemingly perpetual shock. These
- garage-door gossips have exchanged plenty of heated words about
- Boris Yeltsin--but that was before the Congress of People's
- Deputies put the question of impeaching Yeltsin to a vote. Now
- all of them back the Russian President.
- </p>
- <p> Yeltsin has more than enough enemies. To fanatical
- nationalists he is the Judas who sold his country to the West
- for 30 silver dollars. Russians disgusted with politics claim
- they see no real difference between Yeltsin and his
- parliamentary rivals. Still, the worrisome events at the
- Congress have turned many fence-straddlers overnight into ardent
- Yeltsin supporters.
- </p>
- <p> It is not that life under Yeltsin has been particularly
- good for his newfound fans. Some in the Perovsky district
- cannot make ends meet on the salaries they earn at state-run
- hospitals or research institutes. Most are concerned that their
- life savings will be devoured by hyperinflation and do not know
- what to do with the fancy new vouchers the government gave them
- to help privatize the economy. But they were beginning to
- believe better times lay ahead. Now they fear that without
- Yeltsin as President, the suffering will start over again. Their
- consensus on the Congress: Throw the bums out!
- </p>
- <p> Yeltsin is betting that tens of millions of ordinary
- Russians share these sentiments and will turn out to back him
- at the ballot box. By tradition and temperament, Russians have
- little patience for the parliamentary gab sessions they have
- been watching on television for a year now. They know that as
- long as the talk continues, nothing will be done to fix the
- economy. Moscow commentators have compared events in Russia with
- the corruption scandal shaking the political system in Italy.
- But if you ask Russians, they would gladly endure the turmoil
- going on in Rome--as long as they could enjoy the Italian
- standard of living.
- </p>
- <p> Parliamentary chairman Ruslan Khasbulatov and his army of
- Yeltsin-baiting Deputies may not realize it yet, but they have
- done the President a favor by their vote on impeachment. Before
- the crisis, his popularity was slipping. The moment the Congress
- attacks began, his approval rating began to climb. "Going after
- Yeltsin was like waving a red flag at a bull," says a
- middle-aged chauffeur at the Perovsky garage. "Whatever we may
- have thought about the President before, he now has our 100%
- support. It's in the Russian character to stick up for the
- underdog."
- </p>
- <p> Russians have always had a soft spot for Yeltsin, who
- faced down the tanks of the old regime in August 1991. Their
- enthusiasm began to fade only when he successfully elbowed his
- way into Mikhail Gorbachev's Kremlin office later that year.
- This week the besieged President is a populist hero again. The
- Moscow rumor mill churned out one pro-Yeltsin story after
- another--and no one much cared if they were highly exaggerated
- or totally wrong. How turncoat Vice President Alexander Rutskoi
- pinched a copy of Yeltsin's unfinished decree on "special rule"
- and gave it to the opposition. How Constitutional Court
- chairman Valeri Zorkin brazenly handed the grieving Yeltsin a
- copy of the court's negative verdict at his mother's funeral.
- </p>
- <p> But can the President turn sympathy into solid political
- support? History is on Yeltsin's side. Says Moscow journalist
- Yuri Shchekochikhin: "People are fed up with this sense of drift
- and powerlessness at the top. They want a good czar to put
- things in order." As good czars go, Yeltsin seems genuinely
- committed to democratic reforms--not that his ideological
- leanings seem to matter to supporters who admire him more for
- his combative spirit than his views on market economics. The
- White House may believe it is helping Yeltsin by praising him
- as Russia's sole democratic hope, but he can suffer from being
- identified with the West in a country that has been
- traditionally xenophobic.
- </p>
- <p> Moscow politicians venerate the Russian constitution these
- days as if it were the work of Alexander Pushkin. But it is
- doubtful whether Russia has progressed in its legal thinking
- from the days of the failed Decembrist uprising against Nicholas
- I in 1825. Soldiers protested then under the slogan FOR
- CONSTANTINE AND CONSTITUTION--believing that "Constitution"
- was the wife of their candidate for the throne, Grand Duke
- Constantine.
- </p>
- <p> Yeltsin knows he must hang tough, if he wants the people
- to support him. Throughout Russia's troubled history,
- compromise has always been considered a sign of weakness. In
- 1905 Czar Nicholas II bowed to public pressure and established
- a duma, but the nominal parliament proved so rebellious that he
- dissolved it twice and finally altered election laws to keep out
- radicals. The communists took a no-nonsense approach to the
- Constituent Assembly popularly elected in November 1917. After
- the first day of debate ran into the early hours of the morning,
- a sailor, fed up with the proceedings, sent the Deputies home
- with the comment, "The guard is tired." The communist leaders
- never allowed them to meet again. As parliamentary leader
- Ramazan Abdulatipov observed, "When Russians say they have
- reached an agreement, what they really mean is that the other
- side has accepted their position."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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