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Russian Federation

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Revision as of 23:13, 30 November 2022 by Forte (talk | contribs) (Added info on state sanctioned LGBT discrimination in Russia)
Russian Federation
Российская Федерация
Flag of Russian Federation
Flag
Coat of arms of Russian Federation
Coat of arms
Location of Russian Federation
Capital
and largest city
Moscow
Dominant mode of productionCapitalism
GovernmentFederal semi-presidential republic
• President
Vladimir Putin
• Prime minister
Mikhail Mishustin
History
• Proclamation of the Russian Empire
2 November 1721
30 December 1922
• Establishment of the Russian Federation
12 December 1991
Population
• 2021 estimate
146,171,015

The Russian Federation is a bourgeois republic established in 12 December, 1991, during the counter-revolution in the Soviet Union.

History

The Russian SFSR declared sovereignty on December 12, 1991[1], even though 73% of the population had voted to remain in the Soviet Union earlier that year.[2] On December 25, Gorbachev resigned and the Soviet Union was dissolved the next day.[3]

Economy

After the fall of the Soviet Union, the Russian economy was in deep turmoil, during which time it was exploited by Western imperialist parasites.[4]

Vladimir Putin's presidency marked a turning point in the Russian economy, his ascension was preceded by an academic paper he wrote where he proposed that Russia use its vast natural resources to restructure and revitalize the economy around major state-owned enterprises.[5] It was only after Russia again asserted its economic independence that it became demonized by Western bourgeois media yet again, in a fashion reminiscent of Cold War histrionics.

In 2022, US sanctions against Russia backfired against the US, resulting in immense gains for the Russian state-owned oil and gas sector.[6]

Less than a quarter of the Russian population supports capitalism and 62% prefer a centrally planned socialist economy.[7]

Politics

The ruling party of the Russian Federation is the nationalist party United Russia, which has the majority of seats in the parliament. Vladimir Putin was formerly a member of the party but is now an independent.[8] Other major parties are the Communist Party of the Russian Federation, the social democratic party A Just Russia – For Truth, and the far-right Liberal Democratic Party.

18% of Russians prefer the current political system and only 16% support a Western-style liberal democracy. Almost half (49%) prefer the Soviet system with a vanguard party, including 62% of Russians aged 55 or older.[7]

LGBT discrimination

In November 30, a law prohibiting "LGBT propaganda" was unanimously approved by the Russian Federal Council after the bill was passed in State Duma.[9][10] The bill implicitly associates LGBT people with pedophilia and introduces a ban on "propaganda of non-traditional sexual relationships."[11]

Infrastructure

The Russian Federation inherited a well-developed infrastructure network from the USSR, with air and rail travel now forming the backbone of the Russian infrastructure and economy. Though the Russian railways are state-owned, the main air carrier, Aeroflot, was privatized by Boris Yeltsin in the 1990s, leading to a significant drop in service quality and carrying capacity.

Demographics

Culture

See also

References

  1. "Постановление Верховного Совета РСФСР от 12.12.1991 № 2015-I" (1991-12-12). Сейчас.ру.
  2. "Sowjetunion, 17. März 1991 : Weiterbestand der UdSSR als Föderation gleichberechtigter und souveräner Staaten" (2020-10-07). Database and Search Engine for Direct Democracy. Retrieved 2021-12-29.
  3. Zbigniew K. Brzezinski (1997). Russia and the Commonwealth of Independent States: Documents, Data, and Analysis (p. 50). [PDF] London: Center for Strategic and International Studies. ISBN 1563246376
  4. Darya Sinusoid (2021-08-25). "Russia’s Shock Therapy: Neoliberalizing Russia"
  5. "What did Putin bring to the Russian economy after 20 years in office?".
  6. Richard Medhurst (2022-06-15). "Russian Oil Revenue SOARS After Sanctions" Richard Medhurst.
  7. 7.0 7.1 "What Do Russians Think Russia Should Be Like?" (2021-10-05). Levada-Center. Archived from the original on 2022-04-28. Retrieved 2022-08-01.
  8. "Vladimir Putin quits as head of Russia's ruling party" (2012-04-24). The Telegraph.
  9. "State Duma passes bill banning LGBT, pedophilia propaganda" (2022-11-23). TASS Russian News Agency.
  10. "Federation Council unanimously approves law banning LGBT propaganda" (2022-11-23). TASS Russian News Agency.
  11. “The law introduces a ban on propaganda of non-traditional sexual relationships, pedophilia and the dissemination of information about LGBT people in the media, the Internet, ads, literature and movies. It also bans calls for gender transition among teenagers: on the Internet, in the media, books, audiovisual sources, movies and advertisements.”

    "Federation Council unanimously approves law banning LGBT propaganda" (2022-11-23). TASS Russian News Agency.