1 / 16

Political Parties and Elections

Political Parties and Elections. “Floating” Party System Political Parties come and go. (43 on ballot in 1995) Voters do not develop party loyalty Little enduring “party identification.” 3 Consistent Parties since 2000 United Russia Communist Party of the Russian Federation (CPRF)

marsha
Download Presentation

Political Parties and Elections

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Political Parties and Elections • “Floating” Party System • Political Parties come and go. • (43 on ballot in 1995) • Voters do not develop party loyalty • Little enduring “party identification.” • 3 Consistent Parties since 2000 • United Russia • Communist Party of the Russian Federation (CPRF) • Liberal Democrats

  2. United Russia • Party of Power • Promotes interest of current leadership • Not defined by ideological position on issues. • Putin’s Party • Merger of “Unity” & “Fatherland-All Russia”

  3. Communist Party of the Russian Federation (CPRF) Peaked in 1990s as anti-reform (anti-Yeltsin) More central planning Less economic reform

  4. Liberal Democrats Vladimir Zhirinovsky Extreme Nationalism Anti-Semitic Sexist

  5. Russian Billionaire Announces Plan for Political Party Mikhail Prokhorov • Oligarch • Owner of the Brooklyn Nets • Leader of new party “Right Cause” Questions • According to the author, why was this party created? • What usually happens to oligarchs who get involved in politics? • Why do you think Prokhorov would agree to lead the party?

  6. Cult of Personality Use of mass media and propaganda to create an idealized, heroic, even god-like public image.

  7. “End of the Bromance?”

  8. ParliamentLower House: The Duma • 450 Seats • Representatives chosen by popular vote. • 5-year terms (starting 2011) • Before 2005: • Mixed Member Proportional Voting • After 2005: • Proportional Voting

  9. Before 2005: Mixed Member Proportional System • 225 FPTP Single-Member Districts (SMD) • 225 Nationwide Proportional • Party List • 5% Threshold Minor Parties • Benefitted from SMD • In 2003: 100 SMD went to Independent or Minor Parties • Strong regional support

  10. After 2005: Proportional System • No more SMDs • Single Nationwide Constituency Proportional Vote • Changed Threshold to 7% • **Impact on Minor Parties** • Virtually ended their chances of gaining seats. • 2009 Threshold Change! • If party wins b/n 5%-6%, they get ONE seat. • If party wins b/n 6%-7%, they get TWO seats.

  11. Duma Election: 2011

  12. CONSTITUTIONAL POWERS OF THE DUMA Limited in comparison to President President can rule by decree Most legislation originates with President or Prime Minister No realistic chance of impeaching/removing President, or removing Prime Minister with a vote of no confidence.

  13. CONSTITUTIONAL POWERS OF THE DUMA Approves presidential appointments Approve Prime Minister Can override veto (2/3) Approves the budget Signs bills into law

  14. Upper House:Federation Council • 178 Members • 2 from each of the 89 sub-units • Appointed by local governor and local legislature • Role: represent the regions • *Less power than Duma • Can only delay legislation

  15. Federal Court System • Communist era had no independent judiciary • 1993 Constitution created a: • Constitutional Court • Appointed by President • Power of Judicial Review (in theory) • Careful not to cross Putin • Supreme Court • Final court for civil and criminal cases

  16. Bureaucracy • Inherited a large bureaucracy from USSR • Overseen by a Cabinet • POWER MINISTRIES • Key advisers; shape public policy • Defense, Foreign Affairs, Interior & State Security Bureau (FSB)– previously the KGB.

More Related