This book focuses on the intricacies of elections within Russian ethnic republics and political loyalty in these regions. Many of the ethnic republics support the Russian president and the ruling party to a significantly greater degree than the national average and serve as crucial regional pillars in maintaining the stability of electoral authoritarianism in Russia. Why are non-Russian voters so supportive to the Russian president? How does the ethnic factor contribute to the situation and what are the specific mechanisms involved? Through a comparative analysis of five ethnic republics – Tatarstan, Bashkortostan, Komi, Chuvashia, and Yakutia – the author addresses these questions and uncovers the specific mechanisms of electoral loyalty alongside some erosion of electoral support for the authorities in recent years. This volume will be of interest to readers seeking to improve their understanding of contemporary Russia’s political regime, the logics of its sustainability, and potential points of vulnerability, as well as academic scientists and students of modern authoritarianism, ethnopolitics, elections, and Russian politics.
There are many intricacies of elections within Russian ethnic republics and political loyalty in these regions. The ethnic republics support the Russian president and the ruling party to a significantly greater degree than the national average and serve as crucial regional pillars in maintaining the stability of electoral authoritarianism.
CHAPTER 1
The First Step Towards Theory Building: Expert Interviews
CHAPTER 2
Chained by One Chain: Mechanisms of Electoral Mobilization at the Local Level
CHAPTER 3
The Ethnic Factor, Patronal Networks, and the Logic of Electoral Choice:
Theory and Hypotheses
CHAPTER 4
The First Shock: Language Reform and the 2018 Russian Presidential Elections
CHAPTER 5
Who Is to Blame? The Attribution of Responsibility as a Factor in Titular
Ethnic Groups Electoral Behavior
CHAPTER 6
Varangians and the Old Guard: Causes of Patronal Network Weakening
Conclusion
Appendix
Stanislav Shkel is Professor of Political Science at HSE-University (Saint-Petersburg, Russia). He previously authored Post-Soviet Authoritarianism in Comparative Perspective (2014, in Russian). He has also written articles for Demokratizatsiya: The Journal of Post-Soviet Democratization, Communist and Post-Communist Studies, Problems of Post-Communism, Russian Politics, East European Politics, as well as non-academic outlets including PONARS and Republic.