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- <text id=93TT1537>
- <title>
- Apr. 26, 1993: The Last Hurrah?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Apr. 26, 1993 The Truth about Dinosaurs
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- RUSSIA, Page 36
- The Last Hurrah?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>No matter how many votes Yeltsin gets in next week's referendum,
- he will not have a mandate
- </p>
- <p>By BRUCE W. NELAN--With reporting by David Aikman/Moscow, Ann
- M. Simmons/Kaluga and Yuri Zarakhovich/Nizhni Novgorod
- </p>
- <p> Kicking off his campaign for a national vote of
- confidence, Boris Yeltsin stepped briskly before a restless,
- questioning crowd of students and instructors at the Moscow
- Aviation Institute last week. After a brief introduction, he
- jumped straight into his speech, speaking loudly and with no
- emotion. At one point, the head of the institute started
- chatting with colleagues sitting at a table behind Yeltsin,
- prompting the Russian President to interrupt his reading and
- glower at them. The mood lightened only when Yeltsin, 30 minutes
- into his speech, practiced a little pork-barrel politics and
- promised the students better living stipends and free trips
- home. A smattering of applause. Then Yeltsin pledged to increase
- the subsidy to the student cafeteria. A little more clapping.
- "If there is scant applause to this, that means food is no
- problem," said Yeltsin. "Or perhaps you are so undernourished
- that you are too weak to applaud." Finally, laughter filled the
- room.
- </p>
- <p> It was a rare moment of humor in a listless campaign in
- which both candidate and voters have acted as if a week in the
- Gulag would be preferable to enduring one more speech. To break
- his deadlock with the nay-saying parliament, Yeltsin has
- organized a national vote on April 25 that will ask Russians
- whether they trust their President, whether they approve of his
- economic reform policies and whether they favor holding early
- elections for both President and the 1,033-member Congress of
- People's Deputies. Yeltsin is determined to win yes votes on all
- four points.
- </p>
- <p> Even if he does, it isn't going to matter.
- </p>
- <p> When the votes are counted, Yeltsin will still be
- President, and his foes in the Congress of People's Deputies
- will still be bent on ousting him and watering down his reforms.
- To make matters worse, both sides will probably claim victory
- in the referendum. Yeltsin is likely to win a majority on the
- first question of the four on the ballot, which asks simply if
- Russian citizens support him. A tidy majority would be a
- personal triumph for him.
- </p>
- <p> But he will not be overcoming the hurdle that parliament
- set up when it approved the poll: a requirement that he win a
- yes from a majority of all eligible voters in Russia. That adds
- up to more than 53 million of the country's 106 million
- qualified adults--an impossible feat for any politician in a
- democracy. By the Russian parliament's standard, no U.S.
- President could have made it to the White House. When he ran for
- President in 1991, Yeltsin captured 60% of the votes cast--but
- even that landslide represented only 43% of the electorate.
- </p>
- <p> Yeltsin suspects his supporters' Constitutional Court
- challenge to this requirement will not succeed, because the
- Chief Justice, Valeri Zorkin, has joined forces with the
- parliamentary camp in earlier struggles. If his suspicion is
- correct, he will issue a decree dismissing the new majority
- provision as "a crude violation of the constitution and the law
- on referendums." In other words, if he gains the approval of a
- simple majority of those who vote, he will raise his own hand
- as the winner. Once that is done, he says, he intends to be
- "more decisive" in pursuing a "whole package" of initiatives to
- overcome the parliamentary opposition.
- </p>
- <p> Parliament and its aggressive leader, Ruslan Khasbulatov,
- will be mounting an attack of their own. When Yeltsin does not
- come up with the required 53 million votes, they may demand his
- resignation or try again to vote him out of office, as they
- almost did last month. The Constitutional Court's Zorkin could
- rule that the President should resign in favor of the Vice
- President, Alexander Rutskoi, another anti-Yeltsinite.
- </p>
- <p> All of these possibilities point to a gloomy future of
- more governmental paralysis and more clashes between the
- executive and the legislature. "It's an agony of the political
- system," says Alexei Yablokov, a senior presidential aide. "I
- think Yeltsin will choose a new constitution with a new
- parliament. It's the only way." The sides may come to a
- tentative agreement about holding elections this year, ahead of
- schedule, but stall them by continuing to disagree over whether
- to rewrite the constitution.
- </p>
- <p> Though Khasbulatov is still his main foe, Yeltsin landed
- his heaviest blows last week on Rutskoi. Charging that the Vice
- President "is categorically not in agreement with reform,"
- Yeltsin said he intends to dismiss him from his position as
- supervisor of agricultural programs. Rutskoi has also discovered
- that his armored Mercedes has been replaced with an old Volga
- sedan, his security detail cut back sharply and his personal
- physician dismissed.
- </p>
- <p> Despite his displays of combat fatigue last week, Yeltsin
- took his campaign to the Kuzbass, a mining area of western
- Siberia that has been a strong power base for him in recent
- years. He found that the miners are still on his side, but their
- ardor has cooled. He seemed almost apologetic when he asked them
- to help him break the stalemate in Moscow. "Our policy
- squabbling at the highest level," he said, "is a crime and
- should be stopped."
- </p>
- <p> His reception in the region's meeting halls was mixed, and
- at one gathering of 400 in Novokuznetsk, some in the audience
- grumbled aloud. An elderly woman, a pensioner, followed him
- around asking insistently, "How can you live on 6,000 rubles
- [$9] a month?" Yeltsin agreed life was hard, but the woman
- would not relent. Finally, exasperated, he fired back, "Don't
- vote. That is your right."
- </p>
- <p> TIME correspondents traveling around Russia last week
- found the voters mostly pro-Yeltsin but often unenthusiastic,
- weary of politics, preoccupied with everyday problems. "I'll
- support Yeltsin now," said Alexei Svetlichny, a member of the
- Nizhni Novgorod city council, "but this will be the last time."
- Lyudmila Yakutin, a bank inspector in the city, was more firmly
- for Yeltsin: "The President must have the power, not those
- windbags" in parliament, she said. Yes, agreed economist Yevgeni
- Kozlov, Yeltsin may not be the ideal choice, but he is
- definitely "preferable to that chaotic Congress."
- </p>
- <p> In the city of Kaluga, residents also felt that on balance
- Yeltsin was better than parliament, but he has another opponent:
- apathy. "We're talking about the provinces here," said Igor
- Babichev, editor of a business weekly. "If the weather is good
- on election day, people will be out in the countryside
- collecting potatoes." And quite a few Russians probably agreed
- with 21-year-old Natasha Leshiner, a sales assistant, who
- believed, "We should do away with the whole government. We have
- the same bureaucrats we had in the past."
- </p>
- <p> A sweeping purge of that kind might sound appealing, but
- it is not going to happen. The members of parliament and
- officials of the executive branch are far too attached to their
- prestige and perquisites to give them up easily. Even early
- elections, probably the best solution Russians can hope for, are
- not a certainty, no matter how the country answers its questions
- next week.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-