Alexandra Odynova
Among a motley crowd of 20,000 candidates to win seats in local
legislatures nationwide last weekend were three prominent tycoons
who had good, if varied, reasons to dabble in regional
politics.
Mikhail Slipenchuk and Alexander Lebedev won seats
in legislatures in Buryatia and Kirov, respectively, while Chelsea
football team owner Roman Abramovich was re-elected in
Chukotka.
Slipenchuk, 46, a geographer-turned-investment
banker who ran for the Yeravna district council on United Russia's
ticket, crushed his sole opponent, a Communist who works in
forestry, with 65 percent of the vote.
The businessman, whose net worth was put by Forbes
at 11.5 billion rubles ($400 million) last year, was registered as
a resident of the local Ozernoye village in 2008.
"I became one of the main tax payers in the
district," he said in e-mailed comments Tuesday. "I became
interested in where the budget money goes and how it is
spent."
He said that as a lawmaker he would pitch business
ideas to local residents, although he conceded that his political
work would largely be done long distance.
But there appears to be a practical reason behind
his bid as well, because Slipenchuk has been lobbying the
government for years to permit metals mining in
Ozernoye.
The local deposit, managed by the East Siberia
Mining Co., could produce 6 million tons of various ores, mainly
lead and zinc, by 2013, but it will take $1 billion to fully
develop it, Slipenchuk said last year.
Another potential reason to drive tycoons to remote
nooks may be new legislation, in effect since January, that says
only people who serve as local lawmakers can become senators in the
Federation Council.
Slipenchuk acknowledged that he was interested in
the opportunity.
"I didn't have such an aim originally. But if an
order comes, I will work at any other level," Slipenchuk said,
without elaborating on who might give the order.
Billionaire banker Lebedev, elected to the Sloboda district
council as an independent with a modest 39 percent of the vote,
denied that he was seeking a springboard for the Federation
Council.
His bid was more of a "charity project," Lebedev, worth $2.1
billion according to Forbes last week, wrote on his blog after the
elections. "It will be interesting to test myself at this place —
to make a pilot project and see if modernization is possible at
such a level," Lebedev wrote in a reference to President Dmitry
Medvedev's much-touted modernization program.
Abramovich, incumbent speaker of the Chukotka regional
legislature, scored the biggest victory of all, winning 92 percent
of the vote.
"Abramovich's decision to stand for re-election signals his
ongoing commitment to the region," his spokesman John Mann said by
e-mail, adding that the businessman continues to attract investment
to the region.
Abramovich's fortune is estimated at $13.4 billion, or 26 times
larger than Chukotka's budget of 14.8 billion rubles ($517.8
million) for this year.
Abramovich served as Chukotka's governor from 2000 to 2008. He
was widely believed to dislike the job, supposedly imposed on him
by the Kremlin, and spent much of his time at his home in Britain.
But the money that he shelled out for Chukotka residents from his
own pocket made him popular in the region.
Overall, the tendency to mix business and politics is not new in
Russia, giving entrepreneurs a chance to prove their political
loyalty and give their constituencies an economic boost, analyst
Alexei Minayev said.
"It's convenient for both sides," said Minayev, who works for
Rye, Man & Gor Securities. "The businessmen feel safer, while
the authorities lure big investments to their regions."