Well, yes, I've never claimed he was a good ruler. But not as bad will do, especially when people have lived through such a crisis as that which took place in the 1990s.That is meaningless as all Putin did was ride the oil bubble and steal ever more as time goes on. Putin hasn't done anything meaningful to reform the underlying rot in Russia's economy and actively made it worse by eliminating the rule of law.
Oh, I know it applies almost everywhere, otherwise anyone who can get his wife and children to vote him gets a seat in Parliament -imagine a wife punishing you by making you a politician!That's pretty standard in PR systems. Germany uses the same cutoff, for instance. Reading about this, it appears Russia went to a 7% cutoff for a couple of election cycles. I would suspect the goal for raising it then was to keep liberal parties like Yabloko out, but now they poll so low that there's no reason not to just revert it back to 5%.
There's a lot of apathy if 20-30% of the electorate don't show up to vote andBootstoots said:From what I can see, it seems that Western-style liberalism really does have an approval rate in the low single digits in Russia, thanks to the fallout from the 1990s and Putin's grip over the propaganda machinery. It is kind of interesting to see an electoral system where voting for a liberal party is like voting for a third party in the US, for all the chance they have of getting any representation. Illiberal democracy at its finest!
Also, a liberal economy, i.e. selling state resources dirt cheap and running them into the ground, was introduced to them in the 1990s. Russia is not the only place where liberalism is not welcome -see large chunks of South America and Africa as examples.
Are you treating all former Soviet citizens as Russians when discussing the Communist period?Bootstoots said:It's also interesting to see how the Russians finally figured out how to make good propaganda. My impression, which could be wrong, is that Soviet citizens rarely actually believed Pravda or other communist propaganda. Now it appears that state-owned or aligned media are believed in general by most Russians today, to a much greater extent than they believed the Communist propaganda.