However, was Putin really this a-ideological pragmatist he pretended to be? Another
author wrote: “It seemed entirely natural when, asked at a town meeting ‘What do you
love most?’ Putin instantly replied: ‘Russia.’”[18] Russia? It might seem strange for a man saying he loved Russia more than his wife
and daughters. On another occasion Putin declared that “Patriotism must become the
unifying ideology of Russia,” adding that “patriotism will be vital, when we, citizens
of Russia, can be proud of our country today.”[19] Meeting with representatives of the youth movement
A very interesting document in this context is Putin’s programmatic declaration, published
on the website of the Council of Ministers on December 29, 1999. At that time Putin
still was Yeltsin’s prime minister. The timing was important: two days later Yeltsin
would appoint him to be his successor as acting president of the Russian Federation.
At the time of publication the declaration had the status of a prime ministerial document
presenting the government’s program for the coming year. As such it would have been
no more than a swan song. Yeltsin’s prime ministers were, as a rule, short-lived.
Even if Putin could have stayed on to the end, his career as prime minister would
have ended anyway a few months later when the presidential election took place. Putin’s
appointment as acting president on December 31, 1999, changed everything fundamentally.
The program he had presented was no longer the program of an ephemeral government
shortly before being dismissed. Suddenly it became the
The title of Putin’s programmatic declaration, “Russia on the Verge of the Millennium”
(
Putin’s “Russian Idea”: State, State, and More State
So, what should be done? Putin came up with three ingredients for the “Russian Idea”
that were expected to promote this consensus: patriotism, “great power” status (