Russia’s New Constitution: What You Need to Know

by | Jul 19, 2020 | Newsletter | 31 comments

Remember way back three lifetimes ago (a.k.a. the beginning of this year), when I wrote about Russia’s possible regime change?

If you don’t remember (or just need a refresher), Russian President Vladimir Putin kicked off 2020 with some bold moves, using his annual address to the nation’s Federal Assembly to “propose a number of constitutional amendments for discussion.” These “amendments” were not just administrative, either, but touched on some core issues, like forbidding top-level government officials from having foreign residence or citizenship and, infamously, repealing the clause limiting the president to two consecutive terms.

And then, even more spectacularly, Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev and the entire Russian cabinet resigned after the speech (although Putin’s key cabinet officials were reappointed a week later).

As you can imagine, there was much speculation at the time about what was going on, precisely. Perhaps unsurprisingly, Western pundits’ opinions converged on the idea that this was some sort of ploy by Putin to basically stay in power for the rest of his life (or at least a good chunk of it).

You might also recall that I was less sure of that conclusion, going so far as to state “it seems most likely that Putin will step down as planned in 2024 and the next president will have less power to shape the course of Russian politics single-handedly.”

Well, silly me. Looks like I was wrong. Maybe. You see, the Russian government held a referendum on the proposed constitutional reforms earlier this month and they passed with 77.8% support.

So what do the reforms state, specifically, and how will they impact the Russian Federation going forward?

Interested in the latest Russian constitutional reforms? Read all about them and get James’ analysis about what they really mean in this week’s edition of The Corbett Report Subscriber.

For free access to this editorial, please CLICK HERE.


The Corbett Report Subscriber
vol 10 issue 23 (July 18, 2020)
Russia's Constitution: What You Need to Know

by James Corbett
corbettreport.com
July 18, 2020

Remember way back three lifetimes ago (a.k.a. the beginning of this year), when I wrote about Russia’s possible regime change?

If you don’t remember (or just need a refresher), Russian President Vladimir Putin kicked off 2020 with some bold moves, using his annual address to the nation’s Federal Assembly to “propose a number of constitutional amendments for discussion.” These “amendments” were not just administrative, either, but touched on some core issues, like forbidding top-level government officials from having foreign residence or citizenship and, infamously, repealing the clause limiting the president to two consecutive terms.

And then, even more spectacularly, Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev and the entire Russian cabinet resigned after the speech (although Putin’s key cabinet officials were reappointed a week later).

As you can imagine, there was much speculation at the time about what was going on, precisely. Perhaps unsurprisingly, Western pundits’ opinions converged on the idea that this was some sort of ploy by Putin to basically stay in power for the rest of his life (or at least a good chunk of it).

You might also recall that I was less sure of that conclusion, going so far as to state “it seems most likely that Putin will step down as planned in 2024 and the next president will have less power to shape the course of Russian politics single-handedly.”

Well, silly me. Looks like I was wrong. Maybe. You see, the Russian government held a national vote on the proposed constitutional reforms earlier this month and they passed with 77.8% support.

So what do the reforms state, specifically, and how will they impact the Russian Federation going forward?

Well, let’s look at some of the 206 amendments that have just been made to the existing Russian constitution, which represent the fifth set of reforms to the document since it was first adopted in the post-Soviet tumult of 1993.

  • Article 79 and Article 125 have been amended to state that international law and the decisions of international organizations cannot override the Russian constitution.
  • Article 125 has been amended to prohibit constitutional challenges to existing laws until “all of the other domestic judicial remedies have been exhausted.”
  • The Russian State Council—established as a presidential advisory body by decree of Putin in 2000—will take on a greater role, including determining guidelines for domestic and social policy and setting economic development priorities.
  • Changes to Article 67 allow for the creation of federal territories out of land areas that do not formally belong to any of the country’ s 85 federal subjects.
  • The amendments create a federal minimum wage of about $170 per month and guarantee that federal pensions will be adjusted annually to take account of inflation.

But, unsurprisingly, it is not these kinds of reforms that are being highlighted in much of the coverage in the unanimously anti-Russian Western establishment media. Instead, the reforms you are most likely to read about include:

  • An amendment defining marriage as a “union between a man and a woman,” effectively banning gay marriage.
  • A constitutional description of Russians as a “state-forming people” who are endowed with “faith in God” and unspecified “ideals.”

The changes that have received the most attention of all, meanwhile, are the ones pertaining to the term limits on a sitting Russian president.

Before these amendments passed, the president was constitutionally obligated to step down after serving two consecutive terms in office, but he was allowed to return after sitting out a term. This, of course, is exactly what Putin himself did, stepping down in 2008 to sit out the constitutionally-mandated term before retaking the presidency in 2012. If the constitution had not been amended, Putin would have had to step down again in 2024 when his second consecutive term in office ended. But the latest amendment will “reset the clock” allowing Putin to run for two more six-year terms before bumping into the constitutional limit in 2036.

If you haven’t seen the headlines yet, you can already imagine them:

Russian democracy is a farce. Putin wants the same fate for America

Vladimir Putin Sheds the Last Pretenses of Legitimacy to Extend His Rule

Putin’s Constitutional Tsarism

Et cetera, et cetera.

To those for whom “democracy” is still a synonym for political legitimacy, it doesn’t matter that the reforms were approved by 77% of the voters. No, as George Will will tell you in the pages of The Washington Post, the referendum was “preposterous.” Just take his word for it.

And now, as if on cue, Russia’s eastern hinterland of Khabarovsk is currently being “rocked” by protests, the Old Grey Presstitute herself tells us, echoing virtually the exact phrase employed by CIA mouthpiece Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty.

Oh sure, the protests are ostensibly about the arrest of Sergei Furgal, the regional governor who is suspected of multiple murders, but, the New York Times assures us, this also has something to do with the “rigged” national plebiscite on constitutional reforms. Trust the Times.

Now, readers of this column know that I’m no fan of Putin (or any political misleader) and no fan of the mystical ability of a majority of the public to impose their will on the minority of the public. But anyone with two brain cells to rub together can see that, after the last four years of unhinged hysteria over the supposed Russian menace—from the Russiagate nonsense to the latest debunked Afghan bounty story—we all know that each and every claim about Russia in the Western establishment press is a lie. So it’s natural to take these claims about Putin’s thuggery and the people’s anger with a gigantic grain of salt.

Then what’s really going on here? Is there somewhere we can turn for a more balanced critique and analysis of the situation?

You might remember in my article on the constitutional reforms back in January I cited Gilbert Doctorow’s analysis. Let’s turn back to Doctorow. He’s an independent political analyst who has pushed back on the lazy “Putin as tyrant” tropes that the MSM has been using ever since Putin started badmouthing the US-led world order (the “wrong” sort of world order) back at the 2007 Munich Security Conference. And what’s Doctorow’s take on these latest developments?

Regarding the protests “rocking” Russia’s Far East:

I believe that the crackdown on Furgal is one more move by United Russia to establish a stranglehold on Russian politics ahead of the 2021 State Duma elections.  The leadership of United Russia was surely behind the changeover of the constitutional amendments from a redistribution of power between the three branches of government, the clear intent of Vladimir Putin when he announced the initiative on 15 January 2020, into a ratification of Putin’s eligibility to stand for election again in 2024 and 2030, which is what the 1 July referendum was all about in the end.  Surely the leadership of United Russia was also behind the removal of the leaders of the opposition parties in the Duma from nearly all television and media appearances for approximately three months this spring, till just before the referendum.

And regarding the results of the constitutional amendment plebiscite, which herald a turn into a more pronounced “cult of personality” surrounding Putin:

Indeed, one would have to be blind to miss the changes in Putin’s behavior since the start of the year, to miss the evidence that he is less in control of his entourage and the rival factions vying for influence over policy, more a captive of his supporters than ever before.  The result is a pandering sort of populism that appeals to the lowest common denominator in the general population.  When I say this is off-putting to Thinking Russia, I have in mind not the young, brash and me-me-too professional classes of Moscow and Petersburg who all have one foot in the West, but true patriots who have served their country well, are of a certain age and remember all too well what is a “cult of personality.” Moreover,  I speak here not abstractly, but with the faces of my friends and acquaintances in Russia before me with whom I exchange thoughts on current politics from week to week.

Doctorow’s main point regarding the recent constitutional reforms is that, more than simply ensuring a Putin presidency for the next 16 years (providing he can win two more elections and maintain his health and faculties for the duration of his term), they bring two real worries to the fore: Firstly, that Putin is increasingly relying on a cult of personality that he himself is playing more and more into. And secondly, that these reforms simply kick the can down the road on the incredibly important question of presidential succession. Rather than giving clarity and establishing a path for some sort of stable transfer of power, Putin is merely increasing the likelihood that he will not even live out his term and a haphazard emergency succession will have to be cobbled together.

As usual, the reality of these constitutional changes is more complex than the flashy clickbait headlines of either the MSM or the alternative press would have you believe. Yes, these reforms are significant, assuming you’re a statist who believes in the magical democratic rituals and sacred pieces of paper that supposedly govern our lives or you’re an anarchist who recognizes that we live in a statist world where such things have importance whether they are legitimate or not. And yes, there are elements of Russian society that are displeased with these developments. But, as always, there are a host of domestic political factors at play, meaning that these issues are being used to pit elements of the population against each other for the benefit of this or that political party.

In the end, none of this changes the core truths:

  1. That the neo-neocons now have their arch-bogeyman (Putin) safely installed for the foreseeable future, making a perfect foil as we descend into the (phony, fake, staged and manipulated) Cold War 2.0.
  2. And that Putin is another puppet and arch-globalist of the neo-globalism variety who plays along with the coronavirus scamdemic and every other key globalist objective when need be.

Still, the political puppet show makes for entertaining soap opera, doesn’t it?

Recommended Reading and Viewing

Recommended Reading

UK gov’t (finally) admits Covid statistics are inaccurate
BOE Governor: Central Bank Digital Currency is Coming
How The Comedy Of Manners Foretells The Future

Recommended Listening

Episode 434: Behind The Scenes At Google/YouTube w/ Christian Gruber

Recommended Viewing

Twitter Hack Reveals Internal Blacklist Tool
IPFS Archive of Deleted Press For Truth YouTube channel (including Into The Fire)
Top 10 Influential Libertarians – Keith Knight & Sal The Agorist

Just For Fun

Akira Kurosawa’s List of His 100 Favorite Movies

 

To access this week’s edition of The Corbett Report Subscriber, please  and continue reading below.

Not a Corbett Report member yet? Sign up to BECOME A MEMBER of the website and read the full newsletter or ACCESS THE EDITORIAL FOR FREE on my Substack.

31 Comments

  1. Corbett says: “the reforms were approved by 77% of the voters”
    The linked NYT article says: “A respected electoral researcher estimated that more than 20 million votes, more than a quarter of those cast, had been falsified.”
    I guess NYT would be more persuasive if they identified that researcher, so we could all respect them.
    The linked antiwar.com article in turn links to https://www.dw.com/en/russias-putin-wins-referendum-on-constitutional-reforms/a-54018337 which asserts considerable “irregularities” in the voting.

  2. I appreciate Corbett keeping us updated on this Russia stuff.

  3. it would very naive and silly of him to have one! You’ve got watched your back, especially in Russia which is a real jungle. I hope he has one who will slow down the globalists’ agenda as he seems to have been doing.

  4. Good balanced discussion James. The reason for the 78% yes vote is that the Russian People know Putin has their back and because there is no successor in sight. The Russian People are used one leader for long periods of time so they want him in place thru 2030 but I don’t see him staying after that. He would be 77 then and a successor will be found by that time. There is no leader of any other country that is equal to him in any way. He wipes the floor with all of them. It will be the same with his successor. It was that way with the Czars as well. The analogy to him and Trump is Luke Skywalker and his sidekick Han Solo.

  5. The other issue is that the Russian People are used to having the same leader for many years at a time so they are comfortable with him for the next 10 years. The Pentagon and NATO are just figuring out that Russia, China and Iran have a Geostrategic Alliance and there isn’t a damn thing they can do about it so they are running around like chickens with their heads cut off doing Naval and Military Exercises to “Stop the Russian threat” but they never define what this “threat” is or what the “China threat” in the South China Sea is so 90% of Americans live in fear of not one but two invisible “threats”. They can’t see how stupid it would be to go to War with China over a Sea named for China. More and more Doctors are realizing COVID is not the threat it’s cooked up to be. Wait till you see what happens when all sports are called off for the next year or two because their “plan” will shut it all down in less than 3 weeks.

  6. Are many of these Covid deaths actually caused by Sepsis infections?

    EXCERPTS
    …Sepsis is common, affecting at least 1.7 million Americans every year and leading to 270,000 deaths.
    In hospitals, 1 in 3 patients who die have sepsis, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and it’s a major contributing factor to influenza deaths.

    Not only is sepsis a leading cause of deaths overall, it’s also an important contributor to the death of COVID-19 patients — one that’s been flying largely under the radar…

    …(Dr. Karin Molander)…“our experts here in the U.S. are finding that sepsis is a leading, if not the number one, fatal complication of COVID-19.”

    …According to Sepsis Alliance, “the elderly, very young and people with chronic illnesses or weakened immune systems” are most at risk of sepsis…
    …it is often misdiagnosed in the beginning…

    The Cytokine Storm Connection
    …The symptoms of cytokine storm are indicative of severe illness…

    …The symptoms of sepsis may be confused with those of a bad cold or flu…
    …Sepsis is a medical emergency….

    MERCOLA.COM – July 21, 2020 via LewRockwell.com
    Why Are so Many COVID Patients Dying of Sepsis?
    https://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2020/07/21/why-are-so-many-covid-patients-dying-of-sepsis.aspx

    • Good luck finding inject able Vitamin C since CV19 even veterinary grade is impossible to find . I am down to 50 ml and have treated virus 3 times with what I had purchased for treating my wife’s cancer last year . I have some ordered now but its from Thailand and not sure I’ll ever see !
      CV19 has mutated since Mar the first time I was exposed and took 10 days to overcome with home therapeutics , 2 ml C in morning and evening alternating muscles , liquid D3 , Cal Mag Zink , Sauna to elevate body temp and shower to clear head then chest . Second time I started to get head , throat and chest symptoms it took 3 days to overcome and I figured my bodies immune had adapted , then I was exposed and caught again on 16 and symptoms hit harder than ever the 19 I added mint honey tea and gargling to routine and back to 90 % today . Virus is mutating and no Vaccine can adapt as fast as human body .

  7. Pretty sure he has realized that his core supporters are less then impressed with him these days. He has about an even chance this election I’d say… personally I think Maxwell is only being kept alive until it starts so they can off her as a distraction

  8. The “Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations” of the “Committee on Energy and Commerce” held a remote hearing on Tuesday, July 21, 2020, at 10 a.m. via Cisco Webex.
    The hearing is entitled:
    “Pathway to a Vaccine: Efforts to Develop a Safe, Effective and Accessible COVID-19 Vaccine.”

    Former Director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and
    Administrator of the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR)
    …psychopathic child murderer and sadist, Julie Gerberding, testified for MERCK.
    (It is well known that Merck has made Julie Gerberding a millionaire for helping to destroy CDC scientific study documents which painted the corporation’s VACCINES in bad light.)

    QUEUED VIDEO
    https://youtu.be/tnWwJPe7p2A?t=2490

  9. It’s hard not to admire Putin for his ability to rule communist Russia with his Technocratic skills and as he allows construction and the Christian communities to grow and thrive contrary to Communist doctrine I wonder if he is positioning himself or views himself as the great leader of the revelations ? He has demonstrated that Technocracy is not a product of Socialism, Communism , Socialism, Communism is a product of a evolving Technocracy !
    The World order that Putin is referring to as a alternative is a the UN Bush model is currently being implemented under a world wide Medical Technocracy this undetected system has demonstrated that all of the current governments and institutions of government are basically irrelevant ! https://www.technocracy.news/the-technocratic-coup-is-advancing-rapidly-is-this-the-america-you-want/

  10. (H/t to Derrick Broze via his Twitter)

    Thursday – July 23, 2020
    Bill Gates interviewed by CBS News about Vaccines & their side effects,
    people will likely need repeated vaccines,
    conspiracy theories, tracking and ‘misinformation’ on social media.

    (29 minutes)
    https://youtu.be/pF752acTijY

    Bill Gates is wearing a dress shirt with pull-over sweater in hot July.
    Either Seattle is cool or his A/C is cranked up…or he is trying to mimic Mister Rogers.

    Several times, Bill Gates mentions that he and Dr. Fauci often communicate together.
    Masks are pushed and mentioned as an important deterrent to spreading the virus.

    • Bill Gates (above) and Dr. Fauci colluding.
      Both with a MASK propaganda agenda in order to achieve “a uniform call” by society.

      This propaganda campaign would remove the onerousness of “authoritarian mandates and force”.
      The agenda is to “marginalize by public opinion” (not by force) those who do not socially conform towards socially accepted health protocols.

      onerousnessunwelcome burdensome difficulty. burdensomeness, oppressiveness, heaviness. difficultness, difficulty – the quality of being difficult; “they agreed about the difficulty of the climb”

      Bill Gates implies this agenda above in the CBS interview.
      Dr. Fauci states it here in this interview, and in previous interviews.

      July 23, 2020 Thursday David Axelrod interviews Dr. Anthony Fauci AUDIO only
      https://www.cnn.com/audio/podcasts/axe-files?episodeguid=d4ba4c2d-6208-423c-822b-ac010162ea90

      37 minute mark – MASKS & “a uniform call” by society
      40 mark – Hate mail and threats
      45 mark – The “social responsibility of individuals”. Individuals who do not conform harm others.
      50-51 mark – At the earliest, “real normality” (a broadly distributed vaccine) would not occur at least one year from now.
      No “normal” for at least one year.
      Then Fauci lies about “safety is not being compromised” on vaccine development.
      (53 mark)BUT…Fauci admits that recourse on future Covid vaccine liabilities are no different than current vaccines.

  11. MASKS MASKS MASKS
    Exemptions for wearing masks

    This activist goes to a Kroger grocery store…

    July 22, 2020
    VIDEO (9 minutes)
    Are you religiously immune (exempt) from Face Mask/Covering Mandates?
    https://youtu.be/RM-lK1gTBCs

    • Too bad he resorted to calling the older woman “sheeple”; as if things weren’t incendiary enough.

      • Pearl,
        I hear ya. It’s just plain bad manners and does not enlighten anyone.

        I have repeatedly had older women (actually, women close to my age) tell me that I need to be wearing a mask.
        I would just kind of ignore them or mumble something about masks not being required or that they don’t help.

        From now on, I will use the line:
        “My personal Doctor, Dr. Russell Blaylock, emphatically warned me about masks.
        He stressed that masks dynamically can lower a person’s immune system and make people more susceptible to getting sick.
        He also told me that masks do nothing to prevent the spread of a virus per all the respected scientific studies.
        I trust him. I have never had to be put on any type of prescriptive medication.”

        Anyway, I will try something like this the next time someone makes a statement about being maskless.

        Here is that May article by Dr. Blaylock
        www technocracy.news/blaylock-face-masks-pose-serious-risks-to-the-healthy/

        I thought this was a good article with sources…
        Masks & Science – No efficacy against virus
        https://www.sott.net/article/437838-Mask-erade-COVID-1984-and-evidence-free-compulsory-masking

    • MASKS
      Does Wearing a Mask Cause Diagnostic Tests to Read False-Positive for COVID?

      By Jon Rappoport
      https://www.lewrockwell.com/2020/07/jon-rappoport/does-wearing-a-mask-cause-diagnostic-tests-to-read-false-positive-for-covid/
      EXCERPTS
      …A person wearing a mask is breathing in his own germs all day long. He breathes them out, as he should, but then he breathes them back in.

      It seems evident that this unnatural process would increase the number and variety of germs circulating and replicating in his body; even creating active infection.

      Along with this, a decrease in oxygen intake, which occurs when a mask is worn, would allow certain germs to multiply in the body—germs which would otherwise be routinely wiped out or diminished in the presence of an oxygen-rich environment.

      Here’s the key: Both the PCR and antibody tests are known for registering false-positive results, since they cross-react with germs which have nothing to do with the reason for the test.

      If wearing a mask increases the number and variety of germs replicating in the body, and also increases the chance of developing an active infection…then the likelihood of a false-positive PCR or antibody test is increased.

      In other words, masks would promote the number of so-called COVID cases. This would, of course, have alarming consequences….

  12. The year 2020 is the year the world goes weird…

    Burger King Ad sings: (Texas style)
    “When cows fart and burp and splatter,
    well it ain’t no laughing matter.
    They’re releasing methane every time they do.

    And that methane from their rear
    goes up to the atmosphere
    and pollutes our planet,
    warming me and you….”

    (Greta Thunberg’s little friends go on singing)

    2 minute video brought to you by Burger King who likes to sell you a whopper with fake meat.
    https://twitter.com/BurgerKing/status/1282978244329967617

  13. OilPrice.com
    July 24, 2020 Friday
    Article by Christian Moore
    New Social Distancing App Scores 500,000 Downloads In One Month
    https://oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-News/World-News/New-Social-Distancing-App-Scores-500000-Downloads-In-One-Month.html

    EXCERPTS
    As coronavirus infections reach new heights, with the United States leading the pack with a record 4 million cases, a Canadian social distancing app aimed at keeping people connected and socially engaged has announced a major growth spurt, reaching 500,000 downloads in a single month.

    HiRide, a subsidiary of Canadian Facedrive (TSXV:FD,OTC:FDVRF), launched the HiQ social distancing app just a month ago as a “socialization and gaming mobile application that intends to make social distancing more bearable.”

    “In the last few weeks, we have seen our HiQ community grow internationally.
    It has been exciting for us to reach this incredible milestone and further drive social interaction between users while practicing social distancing.
    We are always working on developing new features, and will continue to improve our product and customer experience,”
    Akshat Soni, CEO of HiRide, said in a press release.

    The app uses proprietary tech and algorithms to match users with shared interests, as well as for cash prizes and weekly trivia challenges that come along with rewards.
    The app’s virtual wallet allows users to cash their rewards earned by playing trivia games every 100 points collected.

    The app, which is available on both the Apple App Store and the Google Play Store, soared to 500,000 downloads as of July 23rd, highlighting the heightened demand for innovative new ways to stay safe while socializing during a global pandemic.

    So far, according to parent company Facedrive (TSXV:FD,OTC:FDVRF), the trivia element of the HiQ app has been the most popular, thanks to HiRide’s AI-based gamification technology.

    HiQ now boasts a Top 5 ranking in over 50 countries among trivia apps, with 45,000 daily active users and indications after only a month that it continues to grow virally, internationally….

Submit a Comment


SUPPORT

Become a Corbett Report member

RECENT POSTS


RECENT COMMENTS


ARCHIVES