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- <text id=93TT0563>
- <title>
- Nov. 29, 1993: A Parliament Of Poets, Pop Stars...
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Nov. 29, 1993 Is Freud Dead?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- RUSSIA, Page 42
- A Parliament Of Poets, Pop Stars And Priests
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>At the ballot box, Russians will choose from a bizarre array
- of big-name and no-name candidates
- </p>
- <p>By Kevin Fedarko--Reported by Ann M. Simmons/Moscow
- </p>
- <p> As campaign songs go, these lyrics would be, to say the least,
- original: "Everything has been confused and intertwined." "In
- our house there are remains from the rotten truth." Nevertheless,
- Oleg Gazmanov, 42, hopes to woo Russian voters with his soulful
- music. The hip-swiveling pop star is running for parliament
- next month on the Russian Democratic Reform Movement ticket
- and believes his sexy image and chart-topping hits will attract
- "ordinary people" who otherwise might not vote. "I sing in order
- to unite people," he says. "I see it as my civic duty to be
- a candidate."
- </p>
- <p> So do a long list of aspirants, including a movie star, a ballerina,
- a poet, an Orthodox priest, a dress designer, a 55-year-old
- grandmother and a former Olympic weight-lifting champ. Not to
- mention a participant in the aborted coup of 1991 who spent
- nine months in prison for treason. Russians have no experience
- in democracy, so it is hardly surprising to see the ballot studded
- with celebrities who believe their charisma is more important
- than their political know-how.
- </p>
- <p> This smorgasbord of candidates will confront Russian voters
- on Dec. 12 in the country's first parliamentary elections without
- a Czar or communist overlord. It is a landmark the historic
- import of which is exceeded only by the confusion that surrounds
- the array of parties elbowing one another for a place at the
- table. On the same day voters choose their new representatives,
- they will also pass judgment on a draft constitution that dramatically
- strengthens the power of the President and opens Boris Yeltsin
- to the charge that he is less interested in building democracy
- than in consolidating his own power.
- </p>
- <p> It is a bewildering task, since few Russian voters will be able
- to decipher from the draft constitution's 66 pages and 137 articles
- what parliament's role will be, what procedures it will follow,
- or how the 450 members of its lower house, the Duma, and the
- 176 delegates of its upper chamber will coordinate with the
- executive. No one even knows where the Duma will meet, although
- one proposed site, on the outskirts of Moscow 10 miles from
- the Kremlin, suggests the importance the new parliament will
- command in Yeltsin's estimation.
- </p>
- <p> The result is a cacophonous mix of candidates bumping up against
- one another in improbable coalitions and alliances, not all
- of which were able to collect the 100,000 signatures necessary
- to qualify for the ballot. One of the more exotic hybrids was
- formed by Lyudmila Vartazarova, a grandmother of four whose
- strategy involved merging her Socialist Party of the Working
- People, based in Moscow, with a group of Cossack monarchists
- from the south, a loose coalition of oil executives from western
- Siberia and a group from the northern republic of Karelia. The
- resulting clash of ideologies ignited dissent among reform-minded
- supporters, eventually robbing Vartazarova's Fatherland Alliance
- of a place on the ballot.
- </p>
- <p> She has plenty of company: more than 35 parties submitted petitions,
- but 22 were disqualified for failing to garner enough signatures,
- including the Christian Democrats, a conservative group pushing
- the candidacy of Yuri Vlasov, a former weightlifting champion
- in the 1960 Olympic Games who earned the title of the world's
- strongest man; he now distributes anti-Semitic literature and
- blames the collapse of the Soviet Union on an international
- Jewish conspiracy. Also eliminated was the nationalist group
- backing writer Yuri Bondarev, who once likened Gorbachev's reforms
- to the German invasion of Stalingrad.
- </p>
- <p> But the final ballot still offers voters a colorful bouquet
- of choices. The Liberal Democrats are actually an ultranationalist
- group led by Vladimir Zhirinovsky, who once promised to reconquer
- the 14 other former Soviet republics and use some of them as
- nuclear dumping sites. His platform is only slightly more extreme
- than the Communist Party of the Russian Federation, whose leader,
- Gennadi Zyuganov, has promised to wreck the Yeltsin reform program.
- For support, Zyuganov can look to the Russian Agrarian Party,
- a conservative rural group whose candidates include Vasili Starodubtsev,
- one of the leaders of the August 1991 putsch against Mikhail
- Gorbachev. Arrested at the Moscow airport still carrying a key
- to the Kremlin office he had appropriated for himself, Starodubtsev
- spent nine months in jail while supporters raised 68,000 rubles
- to bail him out. He claims he was involved in the failed coup
- "by chance."
- </p>
- <p> Among the 44 candidates from the Women of Russia alliance are
- actress Natalya Gundareva, 45, the grande dame of Russian stage
- and screen who says that the roles she has played over the years--wife of a deceived husband, director of a children's home,
- a string of aristocratic ladies--enable her to understand
- people from all walks of life. "If actors want to make life
- better," Gundareva explains, "they can do this better than any
- economist, journalist or politician."
- </p>
- <p> The most potent of the blocs--Yeltsin hopes--is Russia's
- Choice, a group of high-profile government officials led by
- Yegor Gaidar, Economics Minister and disciple of "shock therapy"
- who has served as the spark plug to market reform. The politicians
- are counting on help from well-known candidates like Iren Andreyeva,
- 60, a clothing designer who hopes her fashion sensibilities
- will encourage other legislators to dress more tastefully. "People
- are attracted by my clothes," she says, "and because of this
- they listen to what I have to say."
- </p>
- <p> But Russia's Choice is hardly the only reform party. In the
- absence of a hostile parliament, Yeltsin's supporters have split
- into several factions. One of the best organized, the Russian
- Democratic Movement, is led by Moscow's former mayor Gavriil
- Popov and the popular mayor of St. Petersburg, Anatoli Sobchak,
- who have both clashed with Gaidar. They have given the chest-baring
- singer Gazmanov a prominent spot on their list. The fragmentation
- has prompted former presidential adviser Gennadi Burbulis to
- predict that the splintered democratic movement will produce
- "a shaky coalition torn by struggle for government posts."
- </p>
- <p> While Russia's Choice, which has more influence over the national
- media than any other organization, seems likely to win the most
- seats, the group will probably have to share power with sizable
- blocs of communists, nationalists and fringe candidates. The
- plethora of parties does not make it easy for voters to vest
- authority in a solid majority. And since the campaign will be
- brief, the winners--just as in more practiced democracies--will inevitably be the candidates with the best-known names.
- Like actresses, pop singers, fashion designers--and perhaps
- even the occasional politician.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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