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Government Rulemaking as a Brake on Perestroika

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 December 2018

Abstract

The Soviet political system is made up of three major institutions: the Communist Party, the parliament, and the government. Whereas the first two have changed dramatically under perestroika, the government has continued to function in more traditional ways. Most worrying to reformists, the government–the Soviet Union's “executive branch”–has used its broad rulemaking authority to impede the transformation of Soviet politics and society. This essay examines the role of governmental rules in the Soviet political and legal system. It concludes, following the lead of Soviet reformists, that without a fundamental restructuring of government making authority, legal, political, and economic reform in the Soviet Union cannot be institutionalized.

Type
Symposium: Perestroika in Soviet Legal Institutions
Copyright
Copyright © American Bar Foundation, 1990 

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References

1. The Soviet government is to be distinguished from the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and the central legislative institutions. The government contains the executive agencies of state and is comparable in formal terms to its namesake in a parliamentary system such as Britain.Google Scholar

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44. Often the laws themselves will invite corrections by governmental rulemaking. “In the Civil Code all the articles on retail purchase and sale in stores contain references to other acts [otsylki], allowing the Ministry of Trade to interpret the laws of purchase and sale. The Ministry interprets them not in the interests of individuals but in its own interest.”“Pravovoe gosudarstvo: kakim emu byt'!” Pravda, 2 August 1988, at 2.Google Scholar

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55. It is not known how much influence government officials retain over the legislative drafting commissions of the Supreme Soviet, which they used to dominate before the seating of a more competitively elected legislature this summer. B. Lazarev, “Pravovoe gosudarstvo,” Pravda, 23 June 1988, at 2.Google Scholar

56. It is unclear what role, if any, joint party-government decrees will play in the Soviet legal hierarchy in the future. These decrees, which became “a part of our political-legal tradition” (S. Alekseev, Pravo i perestroika: voprosy, razdum'ia, prognozy 51 (Moscow, 1987)) cannot be reconciled with traditional conceptions of state law, a conclusion the Soviet legal community is finally able to state openly. A staple of Soviet legislation for decades, the Party-government decrees were a vital instrument of party rule in the early stages of perestroika. In an authoritative recent collection of party directives governing reform, KPSS o perestroike (Moscow, 1988), approximately half of the acts included were issued as joint Central Committee-Council of Ministers decrees. The level of Party usage of such decrees should serve as an indication of the authority that the Party is willing to invest in the newly invigorated Supreme Soviet. According to a prominent Soviet legal scholar, the party ordered a halt to the enactment of joint decrees immediately after the XIX Party Conference in June 1988. Interview with Iu. Rozenbaum.Google Scholar

57. The creation of a powerful new presidency, invested with lawmaking powers of its own, will almost certainly place additional limitations on the government's ability to use administrative rules to direct the behavior of the Soviet bureaucracy and society. At this writing, however, it is still not known to what extent presidential and legislative power will erode governmental rulemaking authority.Google Scholar

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