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.
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Currently the Russian constitution does include a
two consecutive terms limit. Does Putin want to keep
it or lift it? The
official English transcript of the speech also
has a slightly different wording:
I know that people are discussing the
constitutional provision under which one person
cannot hold the post of the President of the
Russian Federation for two successive terms. I
do not regard this as a matter of principle, but
I nevertheless support and share this view.
What exactly is the view Putin is supporting
here. A term limit, as TASS seems to imply,
or none, as the New York Times
rumors? If the term limit is lifted then Putin
could run again for a third consecutive presidency.
Medvedev, who was said to have hoped to again become
president, would probably dislike the second
interpretation.
More
from TASS:
The president has also suggested complementing
Russia’s Constitution with a special requirement
that a candidate running for the post of head
state should be a resident of Russia for no less
than 25 years and have neither foreign
citizenship nor an overseas residence permit,
not just at the moment of the election, but
never before in the past.
Under the Constitution today, any Russian
citizen who has lived in the country for no less
than ten years can be elected as Russia’s
president.
That a presidential candidate should never have
had a resident permit in a foreign country is a
curious restriction. Putin has lived in east-Germany
between 1985 and 1990. He was an officer of the KGB
at that time but I am sure that the KBG took care to
have resident permits from the host country for its
undercover officers. However, the change would not
effect Medvedev.
Additionally to the above Putin proposed to amend
the constitution to expand the powers of parliament
and the federal state council, which currently has
little to say. From his
speech:
What is the situation like now? In accordance
with articles 111 and 112 of the Russian
Constitution, the President only receives the
consent of the State Duma to appoint the Prime
Minister, and then appoints the head of the
Cabinet, his deputies and all the ministers. I
suggest changing the procedure and allowing the
State Duma to appoint the Prime Minister of the
Russian Federation, and then all deputy prime
ministers and federal ministers at the Prime
Minister’s recommendation. At the same time the
President will have to appoint them, so he will
have no right to turn down the candidates
approved by the Parliament. (Applause.)
All of this means drastic changes to the
political system.
The move would give any future President less
power than Putin currently holds. But why would
Putin weaken the position of the president if he
would want to run for another term?
The resignation of Medvedev as prime minister was
completely unexpected and seems politically
unnecessary. Media
connected it to the constitutional changes Putin
proposed:
Before announcing the resignation of the
cabinet, Medvedev met with Putin to discuss his
state-of-the-nation address, which took place
earlier on Wednesday, the Kremlin’s press office
said.
In his address, Putin proposed several
amendments to the constitution.
Medvedev explained that this cabinet is
resigning in accordance with the Article 117 of
the Russian Constitution, which says that the
government can offer its resignation to the
president, who, in turn, can either accept or
reject it.
“In this context, it is obvious that, as the
government, we must provide the president with a
capability to make all decisions,” which are
required to implement the proposed plan,
Medvedev said.
Putin accepted the resignation and announced that
a new position for a Deputy Chairman of the Security
Council would be created and that Medvedev would
take up that position. The Russian national security
council is chaired by the president himself and
includes the prime minister, the heads of the
federal council and state duma, the ministers of
defense, foreign and internal affairs, as well as
the heads of the security services.
Medvedev is thereby not sidelined but gains a
position in which he is Putin's deputy in important
internal and external affairs.
In the evening Putin announced that he appointed
Mikhail Mishustin, the head of Russia's Federal Tax
Service, as the new Prime Minister. The 53 year old
native of Moscow is practically unknown to the wider
public. He is a curious and surprising choice.
Even Russian analysts near to Putin seem not to
know if Putin and Medvedev had planned today's
'regime change' or if it was a totally spontaneous
move by a pissed off Medvedev. They also seem unsure
if Putin wants to leave in 2024 or if he wants to
stay for another term.
We are thus left to make our own bets.
This article was
originally published by "Moon
Of Alabama" -
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