The Opposite of a Power Grab
Politicians Flee Decisionmaking and Blame
The only major activities of the Party of Regions-dominated Parliament these days have had to do with getting rid of watchdogs and slowing down development. Most significantly it has dismissed Lutsenko (after first getting Lutsenko's former party, the Socialists, on board by promising they can keep his position). It's also trying to push Tarasyuk from power for too actively promoting Ukraine's integration with the West.
At best, Tarasyuk was just an annoyance, but the loss of the last government official interested in cracking down on corruption is a big one.
Mr. Yanu Goes to Washignton
All of which gives Yanukovych's visit to Washington a rather ironic quality. In general, he was there to steal a beat on Yushchenko and say a few things to make the West like him. Among his statements was his new line about democratic change becoming irreversible in Ukraine, as if he'd been part of the protest movement and not contemplating quashing it with police and military force.
For his efforts, he got Western media attention and some corruption-fighting money to disappear somewhere. (Who would investigate now that Lutsenko's been removed?) The Washington Post went so far as to make the ludicrous statement that the Orange Revolution has been kindest to Yanukovych. It seems a pretty odd statement to make, considering the body of the article is about how Yanukovych got taught a lesson by the protest movement, and has adjusted his behavior to compensate. (image: VOA, Yanukovych meets Senator Lugar)
The one thing Yanukovych didn't get was an interview with, as Ukrainska Pravda memorably puts it, President Jorge.
As has long been common in Ukraine, there was petty squabbling around Yanukovych's visit. Initially, Yanukovych neglected to submit the proper paperwork to Yushchenko. So Tarasyuk cancelled the visit in retaliation. After some arguing, it went ahead anyway. Why the harsh, and rather petty, response from the Foreign Minister? Tarasyuk's response is most likely due to two factors:
- Backlash against Yanukovych for his last foreign visit--in which he snuck off just recently to Russia ahead of his US visit. Yushchenko didn't even learn about that one until Yanukovych was practically on the ground in Moscow shaking hands.
- It is also likely involved a more general strike at Yanukovych, since the purpose of the visit was to wrest more foreign policy power from Yushchenko.
These kinds of squabbles are probably inevitable: Yushchenko clearly does not assert himself and his political power, so PoR and Yanukovych will nibble away what they can get and Yushchenko's subordinates will continue to exceed their mandates to stop this by acting on behalf of their unauthoratative chief.
Political Inaction Committees
Why are NU and now BYT trying to fiddle with constitutional law from the opposition? They must know they don't have the votes to succeed. Why is BYT spending the rest of its time trying to a call a referendum to dismiss Parliament and hold new elections? Why is Taras Kuzio talking about the 2009 election in 2006 in his article on the two-year anniversary of the Orange Revolution?
As frequent poster IIU said, "I don't believe that ANY political fraction is currently interested in a working and functioning government," going on to point out that PoR is busy making Ukraine safe for shady business deals again (take a look at this great article translation by Levko of Foreign Notes for an example), NU and BYT are quibbling, but certainly don't want to government to succeed at anything, and the Socialists and Communists are just sitting around hoping someone will need their votes for something.
If you're looking for reforms, don't bet on seeing many of them.
On the other hand, inaction is not always a bad thing; it's all a question of what the alternatives are. If PoR continues to just coast along trying to hide more and more money in their shadow businesses, but does not significantly push Ukraine towards autocracy, the country may well do better than its neighbors.
Right now, Ukraine and Moldova are the only CIS countries to make it out of the hybrid (democratic/undemocratic) category in the Economist Intelligence Unit rating and into the "flawed democracy" category. As long as politicians engage in petty squabbling and timewasting, they're not asserting themselves by undemocratic means.
Weak Governments Sometimes Pay More Attention to Public Opinion
If there is enough government disunity to stop major shifts, citizen interest may help tip certain issues. Take the new investigation of the Krivoryzhstal privatization money. To begin with BYT cried that the money from the privatization was being appropriated and called for an investigation.
In the Kuchma years, or under Yanukovych 2004, the government would have seen no point in an investigation. Now it has not only heard Tymoshenko's cries, but even created an investigation team to try to deflect the criticism.
What PoR did was start with the BYT initiative, cut the timeframe from six to two months, and put a Communist in charge. Now they're just waiting for him to gleefully decry all privatization, find evidence of wrongdoing, but be strangely unable to find culprits for this particular failing. BYT refused to vote on the final initiative.
Is this investigation going to help? Not by itself, but if citizens stick to their guns, this one-off investigation could become a habit. After that it would become something citizens expect and eventually become something they expect and get angry about if an investigation has clearly been a farce.
I'm not saying weak government is all good, but against as bleak a backdrop as the FSU, it may not be far behind the lead. On the other hand this lack of authoritative leadership doesn't help some other big issues, like AIDS, for instance. And I shudder to think how much more shadowy the economy will get after three more years of PoR's incremental advance.

Reader Comments (32)
And Ukraine is flooded with propaganda from Russia, in all sorts of forms, which states, in no uncertain terms, that Ukraine should not be a democratic country.
The latest version of this is something I saw on another web site, from a pro-Russian, pro-Putin proagandist: "if Ukraine turns democratic, then you will have nothing but gay marriages and homosexuals all over the place."
Indeed, Russia has made it well known that it does not wish any sort of workers for democracy, or the slightest hint of opposition or criticism, in its midst.
Thus, another piece of evidence linking Putin and the Russian government to the murder of Litvinenko, and to the murder of assorted journalists.
And the assorted crazy "arguments" defending Putin - "it couldn't have been us, because Berezovksy is a Jew" (also from another web site).
even more so, in view of what Tymoshenko pointed out so effectively - the perks and privileges (пільги) that the VR voted to spend on itself.
http://www.kyivpost.com/nation/25777/
It seems the tourism business is taking off!
dlw
Leader of Tartar group killed in Simferopol. He had founded a youth group and newspaper - goal to get Tartars into the Crimean parliament. (Crimea is a potential hot spot in like of extremist Russophiles.)
In Govt news still not letting Tarasyuk in the the Cabinet Ministers mtg. And Lutsenko held a press conference. Rumours were true - he is going to make political waves. (I wonder how soon Yulia will begin her attacks.)
At least, it will help with the heating bills in Ukraine.
dlw
http://foreignnotes.blogspot.com/2006/12/bad-day-for-everyone.html
I hope to get a teaching job for this coming year. Maybe, I will fly to Ukraine this summer to celebrate if I am successful.
dlw
Yep, Foreign Notes rocks!
(check out molode.com.ua to brush up on UA music)
This being one of them.
elmer: "the Soviet Union is that it created some people who will say anything, and do anything, and not mean it"
urep: "The SU did not create these people. This is true of politicians everywhere."
Ok, this I agree with. Politicians are politicians everywhere. If they didn't change their words to match voter polls, they would get voted out. It would be nice if people didn't vote that way, but they do.
"Thousands of innocents have paid with their blood, killed by the "leaders of the free world", yet you are here spouting about the death of one man, and not an innocent man at that....To his bedside accusation (which by the way, seems strange that somebody in agony on his deathbed would produce such a lucid statement), I would counterpost that his own wife contradicted him and said it could not be Putin that ordered the killing. Not that either statement has any meaning because both are based on speculation."
Ok, so leaving aside American politics so I don't have to waste time arguing with you about it, #1: there are no innocent people. This is humanity we're talking about. And the following Washington Post article says it better than I could:
http://action-ukraine-report.blogspot.com/2006/12/aur795-dec-11-yanukovychs-usa-visit.html#a17
If you want truth from a man, his deathbed is usually a good place to find it from him. And furthermore, he was investigating Politkovskaya's murder before getting killed, so you're already up to two journalists who are enemies of the government more than anyone else. You've got motive, and a government immune to prosecution, and thus every reason to make the hits brazen, the better to keep people in line.
Is that enough evidence to condemn Putin personally? No. Am I going to come right out and accuse him of the murder? No. However, is this case, or the Politkovskaya case, or any case against any journalist in Russia for probably the next five years at least, ever going to come to a just conclusion? No. And that I can blame him for. It is an undemocratic state that allows high-placed persons opposing the government be murdered brazenly and those that ordered the hits rest assured of never being prosecuted. At the very least, Putin's government will be guilty of aiding and abetting those murders, the same way the Ukrainian government is guilty of aiding and abetting the murders of Gongadze. (of which I don't mean the "werewolves" I mean the bosses)
"Russia's assets were sold for a song in corrupt dealings under that buffoon Yeltsin. Of course the West couldn't get enough of him because their greedy little fingers were all over these dealings, such as the PSA's in Sakhalin."
Couldn't get enough of him? A drunk in charge of a government close to disintegration and sitting on a huge pile of nukes? I don't remember anybody every having much particularly positive to say abot Yeltsin. Of course Westerners were happy when Communism fell: the main authoritarian threat to the advanced nations suddenly no longer authoritarian: who wouldn't be happy? To the extent that we saw what happened to the country later on, we were mostly nervous.
Hence the relative cheer that greeted Putin early on in his term in office. More authoritarian, but at least he's got some control, went the thinking. I read a favorable WSJ article from back then, and it characterized a lot of coverage of him. Things just haven't gotten any less authoritarian since then, so Bush isn't staring deep into the man's eyes anymore, and neither are any other Western leaders.
Dan, I think you missed one very important thing - accountability and responsibility of government.
In democracies, politicians will almost say anything.
It is unthinkable, for example, that a candidate for President would call an entire segment of the population "goats" and "beasts of burden," as Yanukovych did, or "narcomaniacs," as his wife did.
In democracies, politicians will react to constituents, because constituents, in one form or another, are keeping track of what the politician does in office. In other words - accountability.
In Ukraine, there were many nice things said during the televised debates. That's where it ended.
Look at what Moroz did after the elections. Your have posted your own posts about Yushchenko's failed promises.
What were the elections, presidential or parliamentary, really about? We are going to be "pro-Russia," and the other bums are not "pro-Russia," and you will turn into narcomaniacs and homosexuals, and slaves of Bush. We will continue to have elevated status and privileges for Russians in Ukraine - or you can vote for the slaves of Bush, and your Russian language will be taken away, and you will be forced, forced, to speak - ugh, Ukrainian. And we, the PoR, have the political machine and the power, including a Mafia, to "get things done."
Of course, when one of our guys beats up journalists (Kalashnikov, as I call him), we have to be a little bit more careful.
In Crimea, a young man just got killed, because he was a Tartar, was working to get Tartars into government, had just gotten a media license, and the Russians think that Crimea is theirs.
Your own post is the proof in the pudding - in Russia, things haven't gotten any less authoritarian, notwithstanding the "email your questions to Vlad" shows, and all the other PR that is put out to try to make a silk purse out of a sow's ear.
And immunity doesn't help that aspect of it at all, as you pointed out. Whether in Ukraine or in Russia.
However, I don't think I'd go so far as to say the US presidential debates are, in contrast, a wonder to behold, and the promises made there particularly lasting. :) I remember hearing a funfact that President Polk was the last, first and only US president to ever keep all his campaign promises.
In my post on the judiciary, one I've liked for quite some time, I mentioned that lack of judicial might is a major contributing factor to the shrillness of accusations in Ukraine. Without a just mechanism for prosecuting slander, politicians can use inflammatory language with impunity, and this is subject to escalation. Sadly, it also works.
A comparable situation is the inevitable escalation of negative campaigning in US political races.