Medvedev Appointed United Russia Chair
Published: May 30, 2012 (Issue # 1710)
MOSCOW — Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev called for United Russia to be “rebuilt from scratch” at a convention that elected him party leader over the weekend.
But many old party hands also landed leadership posts at the convention, casting doubt on whether significant changes were in the offing.
Former State Duma Speaker Boris Gryzlov was appointed head of the party’s supreme council, while Sergei Neverov, a conservative known for his tough stance against opposition protests, was named head of the party’s general council.
Medvedev promised to reform the party by introducing primaries for mayors and governors and raising the share of lower-ranked members in the party’s ruling bodies by up to 20 percent.
The desire for change, expressed by many regional party members, has revealed problems in the mammoth party, known for lacking an ideological agenda and often used as a toothless force for senior leadership to push laws through the parliament.
“In private conversations, all of you have said it’s impossible to work like this and we don’t mean anything for the party,” Deputy State Duma Speaker Oleg Morozov said at a round table on the eve of the convention, shortly before being named head of the presidential administration’s department for domestic politics.
United Russia, which has held a parliamentary majority for a decade, has been accused of manipulating elections and harboring corrupt officials among its ranks. Critics have dubbed United Russia “the party of crooks and thieves.”
“Everything connected with United Russia I have spurned from my life forever,” former senior United Russia official Lyubov Sliska said by telephone when commenting on the party’s future.
But Sholban Kara-ool, a United Russia member who heads the Tyva republic, said he was excited that the party had a say in the formation of Medvedev’s Cabinet. “The party is really becoming the force that is forming the government,” he said.
But Medvedev’s promises for party reform were met with caution by Duma Deputy Vladimir Dolgikh.
“We need to develop mechanisms and people for it,” said Dolgikh, a United Russia member who held senior positions in the Soviet Communist Party.
The lack of new members that can assume leadership positions is visible in the composition of the party’s general council.
Among the few new people elected to the council was Valery Trapeznikov, a former Uralvagonzavod worker-turned-Duma deputy. He will oversee relations with trade unions.
Trapeznikov said party members should “unite to physically beat the party’s enemies,” referring to opposition leaders Alexei Navalny and Ilya Yashin, Kommersant reported Saturday.
Ural Mountain-based Uralvagonzavod became a support base for Putin during his re-election bid in March.
Former United Russia Deputy Sergei Markov said the party could have demonstrated a desire for change during the convention by proposing other candidates for the chairmanship alongside Medvedev.
He noted Medvedev would not have full control over the party. “The party remains the party of Putin,” he said.