San Francisco Chronicle

Putin begins new 6-year term

- By Jim Heintz Jim Heintz is an Associated Press writer.

MOSCOW — If Vladimir Putin fulfills the goals he’s set for his new six-year term as president, Russia in 2024 will be far advanced in new technologi­es and artificial intelligen­ce, many of its notoriousl­y poor roads will be improved, and its people will be living significan­tly longer.

There’s wide doubt about how much of that he’ll achieve, if any of it. Analysts assessing the prospects of his term that begins with Monday’s inaugurati­on often use the expression “neo-stagnation.” And less than half of the population really trusts him, according to a state polling agency.

Putin won the new term, which will extend his rule in Russia to a quarter-century if he completes it, with an official tally of 77 percent of the vote in March. Although there were complaints of ballot-stuffing and other violations, his support was clearly high. Yet, when state pollster VTsIOM asked Russians a month later which politician they trusted to solve the country’s problems, only 47 percent chose Putin.

The apparent discrepanc­y between the vote total and his trust rating suggests that Putin is important to Russians not so much for what he accomplish­es but for what he is — the embodiment of their national identity.

“In this dichotomou­s world, the symbolic Putin is omnipotent, like St. George slaying the Western dragon, but the flesh-and-bones Putin is barely capable of solving Russians’ everyday problems or preventing tragedies,” Carnegie Moscow Center analyst Andrei Kolesnikov wrote last month.

Putin’s strong suit is in projecting Russian power. The technology and life span improvemen­ts that he foresaw in his state-of-the-nation address shortly before the election didn’t attract as much attention as his claim that Russia had developed an array of new and allegedly invincible nuclear weapons.

He is sure to continue to assert Russia’s role on the world stage, apparently committed to military involvemen­t in Syria until the bitter end and showing no signs of backing down from Moscow’s support for separatist rebels in eastern Ukraine.

Although painful sanctions have been imposed on Russia for its annexation of Crimea, its involvemen­t in eastern Ukraine and its alleged interferen­ce in the U.S. presidenti­al election, Putin appears to be willing to pay the price, especially because rising world oil prices have restored some revenue. The economy has partially recovered from the depths of 2015-16 when the ruble lost half its value, but concerns persist about long-term prospects, especially if Russia is unable to boost its manufactur­ing sector and wean the economy off its overwhelmi­ng dependence on oil and gas exports.

The government reportedly is raising the age for state pensions as a way to cut expenditur­es. Deputy Prime Minister Arkady Dvorkovich is floating the prospect of raising income taxes by a couple of percentage points.

Putin’s most prominent foe, anticorrup­tion campaigner Alexei Navalny, is calling for nationwide protests on Saturday, two days ahead of the inaugurati­on.

But Russia’s opposition forces are likely to remain marginaliz­ed — routinely banned from holding demonstrat­ions and all but ignored by the dominant state news media.

 ?? Michael Klimentyev / Associated Press ?? Vladimir Putin’s new term will extend his rule to a quarter-century if he completes it. He is sure to continue to assert Russia’s role on the world stage.
Michael Klimentyev / Associated Press Vladimir Putin’s new term will extend his rule to a quarter-century if he completes it. He is sure to continue to assert Russia’s role on the world stage.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States