RUSSIAN ARK

(Editor's note: Today's entry is by…..a guest blogger! It is breaking new ground for ginandtacos. Three things struck me. First, it would be relevant and interesting to say something about the recent Russian election. Second, I know dick about Russia. Third, I know people who know a lot about Russia. So with little further ado, enjoy what my colleague (and regular commenter) Brandon Wilkening has to say about it. Incidentally, I'm more than willing to let regulars do guest posts! If there's a topic you feel particularly keen to write about, feel free to let me know via email.)

The Democratic presidential candidates earned some mild criticism in their final debate last week when they were unable to identify the future Russian president by name. When Tim Russert asked the candidates what they could say about him, Barrack Obama looked somewhat nervously at Hillary Clinton, who proceeded to butcher his name, before giving up and exclaiming “Whatever!” I just want to make a couple of points about this. First, the moderate rebuke that they did receive in the blogosphere (particularly among Russia watchers) was entirely justified, as I consider the failure to be able to name the soon-to-be president of the world’s largest country right up there with some of Bush’s early foreign policy misstatements (not to imply that either candidate is at Bush's level of ignorance). Second, Hillary’s exasperated “Whatever!” was particularly cringe worthy and reminded me of Sean Hannity’s ignorant dismissal of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s name.

That said, perhaps the most disappointing thing for me about that short debate was lack of any substance in what they had to say about the presumptive victor. Hillary largely dismissed the man, Dmitry Medvedev, as Putin’s handpicked successor and essentially a stooge, and Obama largely echoed her points. Okay, yes, he is Putin’s handpicked successor in the sense that whomever Putin endorsed to be his successor was almost guaranteed to be able to ride Putin’s popularity to an easy victory. And I understand the almost reflexive need for American politicians to criticize Russia’s backsliding on democracy, a criticism with which I largely agree. Nevertheless, Putin’s exit from the presidency and the ascendance of Medvedev, who easily won this past Sunday with nearly 70% of the vote, both offer an opportunity for the next U.S President to forge closer and more constructive ties with Russia. While Medvedev can hardly be described as an eager puppet for American interests, he sounds like somebody with whom the U.S. and its Western allies can work, making it all the more disappointing that Clinton and Obama were so casually dismissive of the man.

First, a multitude of x-factors seriously complicate the exercise of trying to predict Russia’s political future. The first concerns Putin's future role. What is known is that he will become Prime Minister, which has led to speculation that Putin will enhance the power of that position and thereby retain his dominant role in Russian politics. Under Russia’s strong presidential system, the PM position has long been a thankless administrative job. If Putin were to remake the position into a serious locus of power, it would represent a transformative change. Frankly, a more serious counterweight to the president (especially since the Russian Duma has largely been transformed into a rubber stamp parliament) might not be a bad thing for Russia. The worry, of course, is that the newly empowered PM would be Putin, who has increasingly played an assertive geopolitical role, often times challenging American and Western interests. There is also speculation that PM Putin and President Medvedev would split responsibilities, with the former concentrating on domestic tasks and the latter on foreign policy, or possibly vice versa.

The other big x-factor concerns Medvedev himself. Assuming that he does inherit the vast powers of the Russian presidency and is able to make his mark on Russia’s political future, what will be his governing style? Here I believe there is some room for optimism. The first thing to note is that Medvedev and Putin come from utterly different social milieus. While the latter rose through the ranks of the KGB, Medvedev is an academic. His primary responsibilities as one of Putin’s top deputies has been the implementation of a number of national projects, including education, agriculture, health, and housing. He appears to favor a less ideological, more technocratic governing style. In recent speeches, he has publicly repudiated the official state ideology of “sovereign democracy” by arguing that Russian democracy should not be preceded by adjectives. His campaign speeches (uncontested, since the Russian campaign did not feature debates with the largely marginalized opposition) lacked the nationalist and anti-Western rhetoric recently ascendant in Russian political discourse, instead largely focusing on the solution of economic problems. Finally, his rather amiable public persona presents a sharp contrast to Putin’s often icy style.

Of course, all of this will be irrelevant if he turns out to be a mere figurehead assigned to do Putin’s bidding. But let's not jump to that conclusion. First, Medvedev didn't reach this position by accident. His name has long been mentioned as a possible successor, but for several months prior to the official announcement many assumed that Putin would name Sergei Ivanov, Russia’s former Defense Minister. Given his military background and nationalist credentials, Ivanov would have been the obvious choice to continue a legacy of state centralism, nationalist rhetoric, and anti-Western foreign policy. That Putin did not choose Ivanov or one of his other cronies from the intelligence services, but rather a brainy technocrat suspected of having reformist sympathies is intriguing to me. Your inner cynic argues that Putin knew he would be able to control Medvedev more easily. I this argument unconvincing. If Putin was looking for a stooge, there is certainly no shortage of them in contemporary Russia. Instead, he chose Medvedev, somebody with a prominent public role and nationwide name recognition.

My analysis is rosier than most, and I don’t mean to gloss over the real challenges both in U.S.-Russian relations and the state of Russia’s domestic politics. The election campaign was definitely a farce. Opposition candidates faced indifference from the national media, new electoral laws present nearly insurmountable hurdles, and an electoral commission used technicalities to bar many candidates from running. In addition, I don’t expect U.S.-Russian relations to improve overnight, as the two countries will continue to clash over Kosovo, missile defense, and American involvement in Russia’s backyard – especially post-Soviet countries such as Ukraine and Georgia. In addition, a McCain presidency would be particularly disastrous for U.S.-Russian relations, as McCain, rightly or wrongly, has been a harsh critic of Putin and is largely reviled in the Russian political establishment. Nevertheless, I feel somewhat vindicated in my optimism after attending a talk at Indiana University on Tuesday by Oleg Kalugin. Kalugin, a former KGB general and later reformist, has essentially been in political exile in the United States since publicly criticizing Putin. If anybody has reason to be pessimistic about Russia’s future, it would be him. On the contrary, he sounded optimistic that Medvedev would reduce the role of the security and intelligence services in Russia and represent a decisive break with Putin’s style of governance. I don’t expect that break to be quick or clean, but I firmly believe that this opening provides an opportunity that the next American president would be foolish to pass up.

AND THE POPE WEARS A FUNNY HAT

The sky is blue. Water is wet. Fast food is bad for you. And Americans, especially younger ones, are dumber than a goddamn bag of hammers. These are all things we know. Every few months the media trot out a remarkably similar story: organization conducts poll of basic political, historical, or general-knowledge information.
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Respondents do terribly. Media wrings hands. Fingers are pointed. Blame is assigned and rebutted. No consensus is reached. Story fades away.

People are "stunningly ignorant," as this new entry on Slate claims, and they appear to be getting dumber. This linked article tells me nothing I haven't heard before and nothing that isn't confirmed on a daily basis in my work.
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The author seems remarkably eager, though, to assign blame to No Child Left Behind. There are some basic logical problems with that premise.

First of all, has performance in these areas suffered since NCLB was passed? If I recall correctly, people were this stupid 10 years ago too. Absent some supporting evidence that performance has actually declined, these facts are irrelevant to her conclusion. Second, her supposition that NCLB is to blame (for the decline she doesn't show) is a pure leap of faith. Correlation = causation at its finest.
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People are dumb and NCLB exists. Ergo NCLB makes people dumb.

Education is the sole policy area in which I qualify as a legitimate conservative. I know that teachers don't like NCLB, and I'm not qualified to comment on whether it is a good policy.
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What I do know is that the basic premise of the law is appropriate. Yes, NCLB focuses on math and language skills at the expense of arts, humanities, and social science. But I submit that knowledge of the arts, humanities, and social science is useless in the hands of people who can't write a paragraph in grammatically correct English to save their souls, understand how interest rates work, or make a simple written argument with supporting facts.

Every day I deal with undergraduates who simply can't write. At all. They can't write, they can't express themselves in anything other than text-message slang and sentence fragments, and they find utterly foreign the idea of having to prove what they assert to be true. Let's say NCLB disappears and an emphasis returns to humanities and social science. Great. So we'll have generations of high school graduates who can find El Salvador on a globe….and can't fucking write. What does that accomplish?

Factoids, history, and social science can be taught to a reasonably smart 19 year old. Teaching an adult how to write is a lot more difficult. Call it narrow-minded, shortsighted, or just plain wrong, but if we aren't effectively drilling the basics into our high schoolers then any other facts they manage to learn are just lipstick on a pig.

WHAT'S PITIFUL IS THAT THIS IS PITIFUL

John McCain has been the butt of some humor lately on account of his comparatively spartan fund-raising in February. In that month the Clinton campaign raised about $35 million, Obama raised an undisclosed amount "significantly more" than that, and McCain pulled up the ass-end of the parade with $12 million. Bad news for McCain, you say, showing a stunning mastery of the obvious. It certainly isn't good news (although it's less daunting than it appears.*) I'm more amazed at how completely we have managed to ignore the fact that raising $12 million in 29 days is now considered laughable.

I am very repetitive in my criticism of the exponentially rising cost of our elections. It's just absurd, and I don't think most Americans realize just how absurd it is.

  • In 1996, the Dole-Kemp campaign raised a total of million in the general election period, beating the Clinton-Gore team by million.
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    Twelve years later, two Democratic candidates raised comparable or greater amounts in a single month of the primary season.

  • In 2000, George W. Bush dropped jaws by showing up to the primaries with $47 million on hand. Clinton and Obama both had million on hand by 1/1/08, and several other candidates (Romney, Edwards, Giuliani, McCain) have neared or surpassed million by now.
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  • In 1992, Clinton and Bush spent a combined $123 million in the general election period – or about 75% of what Barack Obama has raised before the primaries are even finished. And Hillary is not far behind him.

    If the increase in campaign costs was linear, each presidential election would be 10 or 20 percent more expensive than its predecessor. Instead the costs are essentially doubling every four to eight years. After Bush and Kerry combined to spend half a billion dollars in 2004 (!!!

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    ) I've been telling everyone who will listen (and students who have no choice but to listen) that this is going to be our first billion-dollars-on-the-books* election. With the three major candidates jacking up $100 million in fuckin' February, my billion-dollar estimate is probably going to be very wrong. That is pretty damn common, but I didn't think I'd miss low on this one.

    *Clinton and Obama are spending huge portions of that to battle one another, so in practice a lot of this money "cancels out" money raised by the opponent. Nonetheless, in the abstract McCain has to be terrified that the combined Democratic fund raising in one month was seven goddamn times his total. As in McCain = x, Democrats = 7x. Ouch.
    **That's actual "hard money" raised directly by the campaigns and on the books with the FEC. Counting the various soft money and "independent expenditures" by other groups, more than $2 billion was spent in 2004 and I'd expect $5 billion to be spent this year.

  • POLL SMOKIN'

    It has been a while since we spoke about the presidential election, mostly because we need the break. The key to maintaining sanity until November is to pace oneself. Nonetheless I have a pair of related questions that need answering.

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    Please note that they are not rhetorical.

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    1. With every indicator suggesting that the Democratic candidate should have a decided advantage in the general election, why does current polling show McCain ahead or in a dead heat?

    2. What exactly is McCain's appeal?

    On the first point, if you read this website regularly you are well aware of how I feel about public opinion polling in general and mass media-conducted polling in particular. At its top-dollar best it is wildly inaccurate, unstable, and susceptible to enormous variance from factors as prosaic as question order and syntax. At its worst it is flat-out misleading.
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    This general skepticism aside, I do believe that polls measure something and therefore have value. And despite the fact that Democratic primary turnout has dwarfed GOP turnout in nearly every state, often by lopsided margins, the statistically insignificant portion of the electorate that is polled seems evenly divided. I am not overly fond of the media trope about how well McCain appeals to "moderates" and "undecided" voters, as any such appeal would logically be offset by what he loses in far-right evangelical Christian support. Have McCain and his pandering sluts in the media successfully programmed Americans into thinking that he is some sort of ideological maverick / pragmatist / magical shaman? How so many Americans could claim to want the war to end while professing support for this guy is beyond me.

    Second, what is McCain's appeal? I struggle to think of a major presidential candidate who is or was a worse public speaker. He looks like he's delivering his speeches off of index cards – and at gunpoint. He talks into his chest, he appears to be dangerously close to falling asleep during his speeches, he has that Al Gore 2000-style pedantic tone of voice, and the only things he says with any conviction are that A) torture is bad and B) we need to start a few more wars in the middle east. He's not attractive, he's not young, he's not energetic, and his "message" is a pastiche of ideas taken from the past 30 years of GOP candidates. Most importantly, he's not appealing to the hardcore conservative base.

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    To whom is this bag of fluid appealing? And how?

    Mysteries, at least to me.