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Authors: Voting for Hitler,Stalin; Elections Under 20th Century Dictatorships (2011)
all make the right motions and noises to assuage the ego of the insecure
ruler, sensitive to any signs of disaffection lest it signal the end of his relationship with the people.
So why hold elections in post-Soviet Central Asia? For much the same
reasons that they were held in Soviet times. Elections are for ratifying and
gratifying. However, the Central Asian leaders did not slip back to com-
munism; this had been discredited and could not provide legitimization.
Instead, they maintained a slimmed down version of Soviet authoritarian
rule, not a Stalinist model but certainly more despotic than the practices of
the late Gorbachev era, when a variety of diverse interest groups and
movements bloomed.
Western bewilderment at blatant acts of rigging, manipulation and plain
theft should be tempered by an appreciation of the fact that Central Asian
autocrats, schooled in Soviet style democracy and eager to establish a tow-
ering place in their nation’s history, cannot think of any other way to
achieve their ambitions. With a desire for unbridled power comes a fear of
the repercussions should they lose an election. Unlike their Western coun-
terparts, who are merely condemned to lecture tours, writing memoirs and
spending more time with their family, ousted Central Asian presidents
know they risk death, exile, and loss of enormous wealth, not to mention
F A K I N G I T : N E O - S O V I E T E L E C T O R A L P O L I T I C S
225
their place in history should they be unceremoniously dislodged.26 For that
reason, most prefer their personal life expectancy rather than the electorate
to determine presidential terms of office.
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III Dissent and Loyalty