48 Europe The Economist October 30th 2021
Russia
The new Communists
E
katerinaengalychevanevergother
badge showing Leninasachild.The
weekshewassupposedtojointheOktia-
briata(“littleOctobrists”,a referencetothe
revolutionof1917),asallSovietchildren
didattheageofseven,theSovietUnionfell
apart.But 30 yearslaterMsEngalychevais
a memberoftheCommunistPartyanda
Moscow city councillor. She campaigns
againstVladimirPutin’scronycapitalism;
Leninwouldnodoubthaveapproved.But
hewouldhavebeenhorrifiedbyherother
demands:forfairelectionsandimpartial
justice.Shehasbeendetainedandfinedfor
protestingagainstthejailingofAlexeiNa
valny,Russia’soppositionleader,andre
centlyhadtobarricadeherselfinheroffice
whilepolicewaitedoutsidetoarresther.
Sheisfarfromthestereotypeofa Com
munist.Sheisnota redflagwavingpen
sioner,anddoesnotcareaboutStalin.Nor
doesshefeelanyattachmenttotheSoviet
eraCommunistswho“betrayedourcoun
tryandourpeople,switchedsidesandset
tledinUnitedRussia”(thevehiclethrough
whichMrPutinnowcontrolstheRussian
parliament).Sheisnotbotheredthatthe
CommunistPartytodayisledbyGennady
Zyuganov,a StalinpraisingformerSoviet
ideologue.Whatmatters moreto her is
thatthepartyisshowingsignsofbecom
inga genuineopposition.Andthisismak
ingtheKremlin,andindeedMrZyuganov
himself,nervous.
MrZyuganovfoundedhispostSoviet
CommunistPartyin1993,aimingtobenefit
fromsomeoftheresentmentandnostalgia
broughtonbytheSovietUnion’scollapse.
Itwasinfacta nationalistandimperialist
party,whichthatyearwasinvolvedinan
unsuccessful armed revolt againstBoris
Yeltsin’sdemocraticgovernment.In1996,
whenMrZyuganovchallengedYeltsinin
presidential elections, Russian liberals
andbusinessmen,fearfulofa Communist
revanche,threwalltheirresourcesbehind
theailingpresident.“Iwouldratherelecta
deadYeltsinthana liveZyuganov,”onetv
executivesaidatthetime.
MrZyuganovlost,butforthenexttwo
decadeshispresenceallowedtheKremlin
to frame politicsas abinarychoicebe
tween democracy and Sovietstyle
communism.TodaymanyRussiandemo
crats,desperatetogetYeltsin’ssuccessor
outoftheKremlin,findthemselvesvoting
fortheCommunists.
Theyarewellawareoftheirony.But,as
YevgeniaAlbats,a firebrandofRussia’sop
positionmedia,says,“thisbitchofa gov
ernmenthasleftusnochoice.”Withnearly
allformsofpoliticsbannedandMrNaval
nybehindbars,theCommunistPartyhas
becomethemainbeneficiaryofhis“smart
voting”strategy.HeurgedRussianstovote
forwhichevercandidatewasbestplacedto
beatUnitedRussia’s.Hadthevotesbeen
countedhonestly inparliamentaryelec
tions in September, the Communists
wouldhavegotroughlythesamenumber
asUnitedRussia.Evenafteralltherigging
it won19%ofthevote,upfrom13%in2016.
ThissuccesshasdiscombobulatedMr
Zyuganov.Financedandcontrolledbythe
Kremlin, he has enrolled his party in Mr
Putin’s system of “managed democracy”,
which presents an illusion of choice while
reinforcing the Kremlin’s control. “Smart
voting” has spoiled that game. Not only did
it boost the Communist vote, it gave its
younger deputies a sense of power.
It is not only protest votes that are bu
oying the Communist Party. Several young
politicians running on the party’s ticket
are using it as a platform from which to
launch their own leftwing agenda. Many
of them would fit comfortably into a Euro
peanstyle social democratic party.
Consider Mikhail Lobanov, a 37year
old maths lecturer at Moscow State Univer
sity. He ran a Westernstyle campaign,
crowdfunding and canvassing doorto
door, in a relatively affluent part of Mos
cow. He ditched ideological clichés to fo
cus on urban activism and social welfare.
“I believe in the left idea as a way of re
straining the excesses of capitalism
through equal opportunities and access to
universal health care and education,” he
says. The Kremlin’s blatant rigging robbed
him of victory, but not of his appeal.
With leftism advancing in much of the
rest of the world, it is striking how long it
has taken to come into vogue in Russia,
particularly given the inequality that Mr
Putin’s rule has entrenched. An obvious
explanation is that it takes time for people
to forget the Soviet attempt to enforce
equality, the millions who were murdered
in its pursuit, and how catastrophically it
failed. Now, however, six years of falling
incomes have prompted many Russians to
reconsider the politics of the left.
The Communists’ current shift is large
ly a reaction to Mr Putin’s policies. By an
nexing Crimea in 2014 he stole the party’s
previous nationalist agenda, leaving it to
make a choice, explains Gregory Yudin, a
sociologist. “They could either move fur
ther to the right and become extinct, or
they could step out of their ghetto and shift
to the left.”
Valery Rashkin, a Communist mp and
head of the party’s Moscow branch, decid
ed to experiment. At the September elec
tion he backed a number of young candi
dates such as Evgeny Stupin, a 38yearold
former police investigator who had served
in the Urals but quit his badly paid job
(along with the obligatory membership of
United Russia) and moved to Moscow to
look for work. The injustice and corruption
that he encountered there led Mr Stupin to
the Communists.
The Kremlin is now directing Soviet
style repression against young Commu
nists, and trying to paint them as Stalin
ists. Meanwhile, the Communists are
standing up for human rights, for example
by demanding investigations intoreported
torture in Russia’s prisons. Mr Putin’sRus
sia is indeed a lookingglass world. n
MOSCOW
Russia’s once-tame Communist Party is becoming an unexpected opposition force
Confusingly, young Communists are often democrats now