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TIME: Almanac 1995
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1994-03-25
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<text id=93TT1364>
<title>
Apr. 05, 1993: Looking For Mr. Good Czar
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Apr. 05, 1993 The Generation That Forgot God
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
RUSSIA, Page 24
Looking For Mr. Good Czar
</hdr>
<body>
<p>By JOHN KOHAN/MOSCOW
</p>
<p> At a high-rise apartment block in Moscow's Perovsky
district, residents gather in the parking lot to chat about the
latest events of a country in seemingly perpetual shock. These
garage-door gossips have exchanged plenty of heated words about
Boris Yeltsin--but that was before the Congress of People's
Deputies put the question of impeaching Yeltsin to a vote. Now
all of them back the Russian President.
</p>
<p> Yeltsin has more than enough enemies. To fanatical
nationalists he is the Judas who sold his country to the West
for 30 silver dollars. Russians disgusted with politics claim
they see no real difference between Yeltsin and his
parliamentary rivals. Still, the worrisome events at the
Congress have turned many fence-straddlers overnight into ardent
Yeltsin supporters.
</p>
<p> It is not that life under Yeltsin has been particularly
good for his newfound fans. Some in the Perovsky district
cannot make ends meet on the salaries they earn at state-run
hospitals or research institutes. Most are concerned that their
life savings will be devoured by hyperinflation and do not know
what to do with the fancy new vouchers the government gave them
to help privatize the economy. But they were beginning to
believe better times lay ahead. Now they fear that without
Yeltsin as President, the suffering will start over again. Their
consensus on the Congress: Throw the bums out!
</p>
<p> Yeltsin is betting that tens of millions of ordinary
Russians share these sentiments and will turn out to back him
at the ballot box. By tradition and temperament, Russians have
little patience for the parliamentary gab sessions they have
been watching on television for a year now. They know that as
long as the talk continues, nothing will be done to fix the
economy. Moscow commentators have compared events in Russia with
the corruption scandal shaking the political system in Italy.
But if you ask Russians, they would gladly endure the turmoil
going on in Rome--as long as they could enjoy the Italian
standard of living.
</p>
<p> Parliamentary chairman Ruslan Khasbulatov and his army of
Yeltsin-baiting Deputies may not realize it yet, but they have
done the President a favor by their vote on impeachment. Before
the crisis, his popularity was slipping. The moment the Congress
attacks began, his approval rating began to climb. "Going after
Yeltsin was like waving a red flag at a bull," says a
middle-aged chauffeur at the Perovsky garage. "Whatever we may
have thought about the President before, he now has our 100%
support. It's in the Russian character to stick up for the
underdog."
</p>
<p> Russians have always had a soft spot for Yeltsin, who
faced down the tanks of the old regime in August 1991. Their
enthusiasm began to fade only when he successfully elbowed his
way into Mikhail Gorbachev's Kremlin office later that year.
This week the besieged President is a populist hero again. The
Moscow rumor mill churned out one pro-Yeltsin story after
another--and no one much cared if they were highly exaggerated
or totally wrong. How turncoat Vice President Alexander Rutskoi
pinched a copy of Yeltsin's unfinished decree on "special rule"
and gave it to the opposition. How Constitutional Court
chairman Valeri Zorkin brazenly handed the grieving Yeltsin a
copy of the court's negative verdict at his mother's funeral.
</p>
<p> But can the President turn sympathy into solid political
support? History is on Yeltsin's side. Says Moscow journalist
Yuri Shchekochikhin: "People are fed up with this sense of drift
and powerlessness at the top. They want a good czar to put
things in order." As good czars go, Yeltsin seems genuinely
committed to democratic reforms--not that his ideological
leanings seem to matter to supporters who admire him more for
his combative spirit than his views on market economics. The
White House may believe it is helping Yeltsin by praising him
as Russia's sole democratic hope, but he can suffer from being
identified with the West in a country that has been
traditionally xenophobic.
</p>
<p> Moscow politicians venerate the Russian constitution these
days as if it were the work of Alexander Pushkin. But it is
doubtful whether Russia has progressed in its legal thinking
from the days of the failed Decembrist uprising against Nicholas
I in 1825. Soldiers protested then under the slogan FOR
CONSTANTINE AND CONSTITUTION--believing that "Constitution"
was the wife of their candidate for the throne, Grand Duke
Constantine.
</p>
<p> Yeltsin knows he must hang tough, if he wants the people
to support him. Throughout Russia's troubled history,
compromise has always been considered a sign of weakness. In
1905 Czar Nicholas II bowed to public pressure and established
a duma, but the nominal parliament proved so rebellious that he
dissolved it twice and finally altered election laws to keep out
radicals. The communists took a no-nonsense approach to the
Constituent Assembly popularly elected in November 1917. After
the first day of debate ran into the early hours of the morning,
a sailor, fed up with the proceedings, sent the Deputies home
with the comment, "The guard is tired." The communist leaders
never allowed them to meet again. As parliamentary leader
Ramazan Abdulatipov observed, "When Russians say they have
reached an agreement, what they really mean is that the other
side has accepted their position."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>