Addressing lawmakers, ministers and other high-ranking officials on Wednesday, Russian President Vladimir Putin outlined a number of changes to the country's constitution concerning the executive, legislative and the judicial branches which would give more powers to the Russian parliament and limit the president's prerogatives.
Shortly after the president's speech to the Federal Assembly Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev announced that the government will be resigning.
'Elegant Solution' That Will Reinforce the Checks & Balances System
The proposed changes triggered a lively debate in foreign media which often seeks to depict Russia as an autocracy with the president possessing much of the power. The Western press often places emphasis on the fact that Vladimir Putin has remained at the helm of the country either as president or prime minister for nearly two decades. Citing the Russian president's latest address CNBC even went so far as to allege that it is aimed at "circumventing or scrapping" the rule that prevents someone from serving more than two consecutive terms as president, given that his fourth term is due to end in 2024.
But the recent shift of power to parliament appears to be a game changer that could dramatically alter this perception.
"What we talk about there - is the classic democratic system with three pillars of government - judiciary, the government and executive", says Ben Aris, political analyst, editor-in-chief of Business News Europe. "So he is talking about a classic democratic government. This is not what we hear normally in the press about 'Putin's Russia' and his personal control. This is about constructing a long-term stable political system with checks and balances where the bits of the government play the proper role as defined by the constitution, which is not the case now".
Alexey Pushkov, a senator from Perm Krai and former head of the Foreign Affairs Committee in the State Duma, emphasises that "those are important changes" which will give more possibilities to the head of the government, who will be less dependent on the president.
"It will be a public debate, definitely; the workings of the Constitutional Assembly will also be public because then there will be some kind of referendum or vote for these changes. And so, I think it just shows that Putin is thinking about the democratisation of political power in Russia and the political system in Russia", Pushkov says.
Parliamentary Democracy: Why Putin's Critics Were Wrong All Along
Joe Quinn, a Paris-based political commentator and author, says that Russia is now on track to embrace a system "more like that of European parliamentary democracies". According to the political commentator, Putin's move indicates that the president "is confident that Russia's position as an independent global leader has been secured and with it the future, independent, trajectory of the country."
"By transferring more power to the Duma, Putin is signalling his belief that the Russian political class can be trusted to continue the work that he himself has undertaken to make Russia's national interests the primary focus of all government policies, both domestic and foreign, for the foreseeable future," Quinn underscores.
Andy Vermaut, Belgian human right activist, echoes Quinn's stance, stressing, however, that "in very few European countries the parliaments have a lot of power."
"It's great to bring the power closer to the parliaments," Vermaut says. "After all, it is the people who are elected by the people who get the power to approve who is the prime minister. Putin thus strengthens the democratic legitimacy... So you can see that all critics of President Putin are wrong. You see he's really trying to work to strengthen democracy in his country."
The Belgian activist suggests this move will "help refine democracy in Russia" stressing that even in the West "not many state leaders dare" to make such a bold step.
'It's Premature to Draw Conclusions How New System Will Work'
However, Gilbert Doctorow, a Brussels-based independent political analyst holds a different stance stressing that it's too early to leap to conclusions of how the changes will play out.
"I think it is premature to draw conclusions about how this will work because the president's proposals of having a parliamentary republic within what will remain a presidential republic hardly seems like the end game," the political analyst stresses. "A cabinet that is nominated by the Duma and merely appointed by the President (or removed by the President for nonperformance) cannot be expected to take its marching orders from the President, as Putin is proposing. You have it one way or another."
Moreover, one should think twice about Putin's intent to give all of the Duma parties greater responsibility in forming the cabinet, Doctorow notes. Though sounding like power-sharing or, in other words, a coalition government, this solution "is not always very good at getting things done, and it easily leads to incompetence," he believes.
"What is clear from today, and especially from the resignation of the entire cabinet which followed Putin's speech, is that we are entering a transition to the post-Putin era," Doctorow suggests.
Aydin Sezer, head of Ankara-based think tank, the Turkey and Russia Centre of Studies, also sees the development as preparations for what will happen next after the 2024 Russian presidential elections. According to Sezer, to adopt this new model the country will have to undergo a transition which will last until the new elections.
Reader Comments
But he IS a politician (and his PR is run by Unicorns .)
Well, dumbsh*t, that is simply because the bastards in those country's parliaments sold out both their countries' sovereignties, and their own souls, when they agreed to become 'high class serfs' to NATO and the CM/EU.
R.C.
Very true R.C. In the small Balkan nation of Croatia they joined natos "partnership for peace" in 2004. Several years later a US navy vessel sailed straight up to the most northern part of the Adriatic Coast frying land based electronics (modems) as it passed, if local sources are to be believed. Today the nation is an eu & nato member and the countries independence has been surrendered to dc and brussels.
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this guy is NUTTs
does he even have a choice with surname like that?
Not!
(Joking. "Extreme skiing" = you fall, you die.)
R.C.
Effectively Russia is now in a long period of interregnum and one filled with potential peril (as they always are). Putin knows that the 5th column and their allies around the world have been biding their time, allowing him the space to rebuild Russia so that she is perfectly poised as the highly effective, resource rich jewel in the crown that they have long lusted after. Having discovered they could not conquer her over his dead body they have waited patiently for his inevitable political passing before making their move. Hence his plan to weaken the presidency and bolster the legislature, hence his 25 year Russians only rule, hence his call to the people to approve. But he is - as Niall said elsewhere - effectively a dying king walking, a condition that may only become more apparent as the next period roles by; hence I suspect his urgency to push this through now whilst he still holds authority with the majority of the Russian people. Expect domestic problems to increase and levels of public pockets of propagandized discontent over his presidency to increase. They will want to have these proposals neutered or at least significantly watered down. However I suspect this issue has been in the forefront of his mind for many years now and I just hope the master still has the support and strength of enough in the administrative/state sectors to out whit them and push them through. His appointment of such a PM suggests he is rewarding the core system for what he has brought to them and now looking for their support against the 5th column within the walls of Troy. Good luck Mr President.
But, he deserves a break. Similar to the author, and Seeker, I fear he's ultimately irreplacable. I sure hope the Russians know that folks who are outside of Russia, & not programmed by the Western MSM, recognize his amazing efforts on the part of their 'Mother Russia.'
R.C.
In such a manner we are all likely to maintain peace and stability. The warmongering degenerates can be sidelined and reduced to the sick joke that they are. They are already being exposed day by day.
Looks like old empires are losing their status and new ones are being formed.
It's not about democracy, just adjustments to the control system.
Contrast his efforts with liberal, pro-west degenerates who salivate at the thought of privatizing all national resources and industry to the exclusive benefit of a very select minority.
The alternative is unimaginable. Pro-western scum, working out of Moscow to divide and destroy the work accomplished in the last several decades.
Russia currently has low external debt to GDP, several sovereign wealth funds, record foreign exchange reserves, positive demographic trends, low unemployment etc.
These efforts must not be transferred to dual passport holders and other traitorous elements from the nations capital. The oligarchic order of the 90's has already been dismantled. Many Russians are returning to a spiritual or religious lifestyle in which the traditional family is observed.
Realities such as lgbt, GMO pesticide laden food products, new age religions and various other satanic concepts should be abhorred and eliminated from Russian society. Precisely why they are hated by establishment elements in the west.
Shortly after the president's speech to the Federal Assembly Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev announced that the government will be resigning." Anyone notice any incongruency?






The americans are a "democracy" only in propaganda terms. The two party system is beholden to lobbyists and special interest groups including the obvious foreign interests such as the saudis and zionists.
The western MIC shareholder class runs the show in merica. They determine war or peace.
The orange puppet is a distraction, nothing else.