It was impossible to pinpoint the exact moment of the transformation, but by the time Russian President Dmitri Medvedev left the podium after his first big press conference on Wednesday, he had morphed into a lame duck. The problem was not so much that he failed to state his plans for re-election next year, but, as some members of his own circle now admit, the President seemed to be courting a constituency of just one man Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, who will alone decide whether Medvedev stays or goes.
That is not how the dynamic between them has recently been judged. Perhaps naively, many of Medvedev’s supporters had started to believe that the President was not only an independent leader but a possible rival of Putin in the presidential race. They based this view on a series of increasingly heated spats between them, with the fiercest one coming on March 21, when Putin lashed out at the West for the bombing of Libya.
That same day, Medvedev donned a leather jacket with the emblem “Commander in Chief” and went before the cameras to defend the opposite point of view. Top ministers quickly fell into line behind him, and a rift seemed to show in the political elites as officials began listing toward one or the other leader. By that time, members of Medvedev’s camp had already made their vision of the 2012 vote clear. Igor Yurgens, a presidential adviser and the chairman of a think tank headed by Medvedev, said in January that Putin should not even run, as “everyone is tired of looking at the same face.”
But Evgeny Gontmakher, a board member at Medvedev’s think tank, the Institute of Contemporary Development, now says the game is over. “There was this idea that Medvedev could land out of thin air and introduce American notions of competition into the Russian political system. This was a silly idea,” he tells TIME. “Medvedev’s goals and plans have faced very serious limitations that were made clear to him recently.” He declines to elaborate on how exactly they had been made clear, saying only that “the limitations are linked to the fact that [Medvedev] has no political force, no party that he can rely on.”
Putin on the other hand has a sound base as chairman of the United Russia party, which dominates the bureaucracy and virtually every elected body in the country. “Whatever Putin says, United Russia will do,” says Gontmakher. “If Putin tells them to support Medvedev [in the elections], then that is what it will do. If Putin says don’t, then Medvedev will simply be ousted. That is the reality.”
In looking for his own political base, Medvedev could have turned to Fair Russia, a pro-Kremlin party which holds a sizable minority in both houses of Russia’s parliament. Last year, a few of its leading members even created an alliance of bureaucrats and politicians to cheer on Medvedev’s policies, offering themselves as a base of support. But Medvedev refused to have any ties with that group, and on Wednesday, the leader of Fair Russia, Sergei Mironov, was stripped of his seat as speaker of the upper house of parliament, robbing the party of its highest political office. Bizarrely, Medvedev endorsed the move during Wednesday’s press conference, saying it was “nothing out of the ordinary.”
“Sooner or later, every statesman’s career comes to an end, and that also includes the president,” Medvedev told the 800 journalists in attendance. It was a tone of defeatism not to be heard from Putin heading into this election cycle.