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TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
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TIME, Almanac of the 20th Century.ISO
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1990
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91
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apr_jun
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0610003.000
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<text>
<title>
(Jun. 10, 1991) Kissing Hands, Shaking Babies
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
June 10, 1991 Evil
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
WORLD, Page 31
SOVIET UNION
Kissing Hands, Shaking Babies
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Russia's first presidential election is at hand, but the
candidates haven't got the art of campaigning quite right
</p>
<p>By John Kohan/Moscow
</p>
<p> Boris Yeltsin insisted that he was only going to the
Arctic region of Murmansk on a "business trip" last week, but
he certainly looked and acted like a man running for office. The
Russian populist donned a white coat to inspect a high-tech
laboratory, reviewed black-uniformed columns of sailors and
promised the crew of the nuclear missile cruiser Kirov that he
would do everything possible to improve their living conditions.
Meanwhile, former Prime Minister Nikolai Ryzhkov toured the
Siberian city of Krasnoyarsk, lending a sympathetic ear to the
problems of defense workers at a chemical factory. Back in
Moscow Kremlin adviser Vadim Bakatin talked to cossack leaders
about what he called his "common sense" politics.
</p>
<p> Welcome to the Russian presidential campaign, which got
off to a breathless and stumbling start last week--and with
good reason. The Congress of People's Deputies approved the
Yeltsin-sponsored plan to create a strong executive office only
two weeks ago, and the election, in which more than 100 million
Russians are eligible to vote, will be held on June 12. That
leaves little time for the six registered candidates to do
anything but go through the motions of a campaign. In fact, the
three "unknowns" in the race--Vladimir Zhirinovsky, Albert
Makashov and Aman-geldy Tuleyev--tried without success to get
the vote postponed until the fall. But such problems in no way
diminished the fact that for the first time in history, Russians
will be able to choose their leader in a democratic ballot.
</p>
<p> There are no flashy campaign posters, no sound trucks
blaring out slogans. Nor is there likely to be much
Western-style razzle-dazzle, given a severe paper shortage and
the miserly sum of 200,000 rubles that authorities have granted
each candidate. The closest thing to television ads was
endorsements tucked away in evening news reports. The Russian
news show, Vesti, for example, showed a Muslim cleric from the
North Caucasus announcing that his people were "praying to the
Almighty" for a Yeltsin victory.
</p>
<p> The candidates, in fact, could have learned a lesson or
two from the old pro, Mikhail Gorbachev. Even though he is not
running for anything, the Soviet President managed to capture
the limelight during a visit to Kazakhstan last week, where he
donned a sporty cap to pose for cameras in a wheat field. Though
Gorbachev has made fresh peace with Yeltsin, he has refused to
endorse any candidate in the race.
</p>
<p> Yeltsin would seem to be a shoo-in for the Russian
presidency. Opinion polls consistently give him more than 50%
of the vote. He also enjoys the advantages of the incumbent in
his post as chairman of the Russian parliament. Campaign manager
Gennadi Burbulis intends to exploit Yeltsin's position by
depicting him constantly on the job, meeting with local leaders
across Russia. Yeltsin's campaign slogan may not be very catchy,
but the emphasis is on substance: "Russians, Unite in Realizing
in Practice the Radical Reform of Russian Life."
</p>
<p> While Yeltsin tries to look presidential, the verbal
slanging has been left to his choice for vice president,
Alexander Rutskoi, a gruff air force colonel who was captured
during the war in Afghanistan and given his country's highest
award for valor, Hero of the Soviet Union. A leader of the
Communists for Democracy reform movement, Rutskoi told reporters
last week that he simply could not understand "why Ryzhkov would
even consider running for president after what he managed to do
during five years as prime minister."
</p>
<p> Ryzhkov, who was replaced as prime minister in January,
thought he had pocketed the military vote when he chose General
Boris Gromov as his running mate. An articulate hard-liner,
Gromov served as the Soviet commander in Afghanistan before
becoming Deputy Interior Minister in December. But even if
Rutskoi does win votes from enlisted men and reform-minded
Communists, Ryzhkov has earned the support of the
military-industrial complex and the party bureaucracy through
his attacks on economic "shock therapy" and his defense of the
country's "socialist choice." Because Ryzhkov and Gromov are
counting so much on local party machines and military discipline
to secure votes, they have been accused in the press of waging
a campaign of "limousines with flashing lights and gleaming
generals' stars."
</p>
<p> The race has a dark horse: Bakatin, the former Interior
Minister and now member of Gorbachev's Security Council. If
Yeltsin has the support of radical reformers and Ryzhkov the
backing of hard-line generals and party hacks, Bakatin insists
that he is an "independent" candidate. Speculation that he is
really the Kremlin's man has been so intense, however, that
Bakatin felt compelled to note last week that "I've said no to
Gorbachev many times." Bakatin shrewdly chose as his running
mate Ramazan Abdulatipov, an ethnic Muslim who is chairman of
the Russian parliament's Council of Nationalities. Opposition
to Yeltsin's sovereignty campaign has been particularly fierce
in Russia's ethnic enclaves. Bakatin's reputation as a reformer
is also sufficiently solid that he might draw enough moderate
votes from Yeltsin to force a runoff election, which will take
place if no candidate receives 50% of the vote.
</p>
<p> The election has already sparked spirited exchanges on the
streets. In Moscow last week, a young man got into a verbal
brawl after he asserted that Yeltsin had been "dishonest"
because he had backed down in public on private deals he had
made with Gorbachev.
</p>
<p> "All the communists care about is slurping down black
caviar and Napoleon brandy," said a slightly inebriated
listener. "That goes for Ryzhkov--and Bakatin too."
</p>
<p> "Listen," a bespectacled intellectual interrupted. "These
elections will not only decide the fate of Russia but the entire
country. Yeltsin needs our support."
</p>
<p> If passion is any indication, Yeltsin should prevail. A
recent item in the Personals column of a Moscow newspaper
suggested the depth of feeling for him among average Russians.
A "charming" woman wanted to meet a "man under 35 for the
purpose of setting up a family." She set only one other
condition: "Persons who do not share the political views of
Yeltsin need not apply."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>