By Moon Of Alabama
January 16, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" -
A curious 'regime
change' happened in Russia today as the
Prime Minister Dimitry Medvedev and his
whole cabinet resigned.
This morning President Vladimir Putin
held his yearly speech to the Federal
Assembly of Russia (English
transcript). Putin spoke about Russia's
demographic situation, its weaponry and the
celebration of the upcoming 75th anniversary
of its second world war victory.
But the most important part was about
constitutional changes. A
summary via TASS:
Putin has suggested a putting up a
package of constitutional amendments for
a plebiscite. At the same time, the
Russian president stated that he sees no
grounds to adopt new constitution in
Russia.
Putin also suggest stipulating the
supremacy of the Russian Constitution
over international norms in Russia.
“The time has come to make some
changes to the nation’s fundamental law
that would directly guarantee the
priority of the Russian Constitution in
our legal space. What does this mean? It
means that requirements of international
law and decisions of international
bodies can only be enforced in Russia to
such an extent that does not violate
human and civil rights and freedoms and
does not violate our Constitution,”
Putin emphasized.
It seems that the
European Court of Human Rights has
pissed off Russia once too often. The court
is associated with the Council of Europe
which has 47 member states including Russia.
It has several times judged in the favor of
renegade oligarchs in exile and the
'western' supported wannabe opposition in
Russia.
Putin then proposed additional changes to
the constitution.
These were probably the points that led
to Medvedev resignation:
Putin agrees that the same person should
not hold the post of the head of state
for more than two consecutive terms.
"I know that our society is debating
the constitutional provision that the
same person should not hold the office
of President of the Russian Federation
for more than two consecutive terms. I
do not believe that this question is of
fundamental importance, but I agree with
this," Putin said.
The TASS interpretation that
Putin 'agrees that the same person should
not hold the post of the head of state for
more than two consecutive terms' is not
supported by Putin's statement.