From Moscow With Liberty: Meet the Head of Russia's Libertarian Party
Andrey Shalnev just won an election, and he's sowing the seeds of freedom in an unfree nation.


While a libertarian moment blossoms in the United States, the ideas of limited government and personal freedom are catching on elsewhere in the world, too. Reason last month highlighted the victory of a Libertarian in Australia's Senate, and has this year noted campaigns in Canada, ground gained in Costa Rica, and one free market-lover (but controversial military hawk) in Israel. Now, libertarianism is getting a footing in one of the unlikeliest countries: Russia.
Writer, activist, and chairman of the Russian Libertarian Party Andrey Shalnev, 27, won a deputy council position in the Moscow region last month. He had to run as an Independent, but he is the second-ever Libertarian Party member to win office in Russia. This was no easy task. From corruption locally to President Vladimir Putin's crackdown on the nation's minorities, political opposition, and independent media, it's little wonder why Freedom House ranks the country as "not free" (and getting worse).
Shalnev is sowing the seeds of change, and discussed with Reason the personal risk he incurs for his beliefs and the difficulties of promoting liberty in a country where "capitalism" is missing from the collective vocabulary.
Reason: Libertarianism isn't a widely known political philosophy in Russia, correct? How did you come to adopt it?
Shalnev: That's right, libertarianism is hardly a buzz-word outside the narrow circle of political activists in Russia. For a broader audience, any knowledge of what libertarianism is about still lies ahead. It's hard to tell now what exactly made me accept this philosophy, but the following three influences I'm pretty certain about: My family and my upbringing; not exactly libertarian, but they still provided a correct underpinning; my secondary school; I am very lucky to have had very good humanities teachers, my history and sociology teacher was especially good in that, instead of making us rote-memorize historic dates, he coached us in debating and reasoning. And it was probably due to a lucky accident that a link to a book by Hernando de Soto called The Other Path, and an ad announcing a CATO Institute Summer School essay competition had been published on the same webpage, prompting me to participate. Thus the pieces of the puzzle fell into place by the end of 2008.
Reason: What do Russians think of "capitalism"? Can libertarians improve the way Russians think of the concept?
Shalnev: Actually, a contemporary Russian's vocabulary does not contain such a word and he or she will rather talk of "liberalism" in a derogatory context. That is why, instead of going straight for the concepts as such, our political opponents prefer to concentrate on the hodgepodge of myths connected with the word "capitalism," stemming partly from the old-time Soviet upbringing and partly from the erroneous (mis)identification with capitalism of the economic reforms driven by Egor Gaidar's cabinet of the 1990s, reforms that were at best half-hearted half-measures and never yielded the expected fruit. Most of them simply had nothing to do with capitalism.
That said, people here tend to adhere to a variety of the capitalist values in their daily lives here, minus the word itself, for example when interacting and cooperating with each other with no eye to the state. They just don't realize that that's exactly what it is, capitalism.

Reason: What aspects of libertarianism might other Russians identify with most?
Shalnev: Kakha Bendukidze was right in asserting that Russians are natural-born or grassroots libertarians in that they don't trust their government in their everyday lives. True, they may be led on by the government propaganda with respect to geopolitics and stuff, but not in matters of day-to-day existence. That is not to suggest that this alone can make one a libertarian proper.
Also, the number of those opposed to military draft is also on the rise.
Russians are beginning to show a cautious desire for a decentralized government. People want to deal with their issues on the ground rather than get involved in an uphill struggle against government agency after government agency of Putin's infamous "executive vertical," which was established precisely to make you lose your patience and make you surrender.
Reason: Last year when Reason spoke to Russia's first-elected Libertarian, Vera Kichanova, the party was not officially registered yet. Is it now?
Shalnev: Alas, we have not been able to get officially registered so far. After the initial liberalization of 2012, the authorities have made the procedure so much more complicated by piling new requirements upon new requirements. Furthermore, whatever privileges registration with the authorities might have carried initially, they have all broken down in meaninglessness due to recent amendments to the relevant legislation. In a short while we will decide whether to continue our struggle for registration or to carry on without it.
Reason: How did you become the chairman of the party?
Shalnev: It so happened that in the run-up of the first Libertarian Party convention on February 19, 2011, the question arose whether we needed a chief coordinator or manager. We decided that we did, and of all the candidates I alone was prepared at the time to fully commit my time and energy to the task. As a result, many of the skills I now possess had to be picked up as I went along, after I had been elected chairman.
Reason: Do you have a strategy for getting more people to join the party, whether it becomes official or not? Any plans to build alliances with other parties?
Shalnev: We're planning a more active work across the regions of Russia, many of them a veritable political vacuum. By the end of 2015 we will have built up a sustainable core framework of, say, the 15 most efficient regional branches carrying out uninterrupted libertarian outreach. To this end, we will be coaching our activists in all the necessary skills. We're also planning a number of regular events across those regions, probably along the lines of our Free People Forum.
We have never refrained from tactical cooperation with other political organizations where common cause was at stake. The broadest coalition we're involved in concerns gun rights. Alongside other parties, we take part in the Peace March protesting against Russia's military intervention in Ukrainian affairs. Our regional branches are involved in a number of joint projects.
Reason: What kind of difficulties did you encounter during your campaign, and how did the public respond to your campaign?
Shalnev: Russian laws forbid you to indicate your membership in a political party, unless your party is registered with the authorities. The election was a pretty tough going, and I won't hesitate to call what my team and I did a real feat. We came second, beating 17 other candidates (the Council has 5 seats in all), almost all of them pro-government, pro-ruling party, having recourse to administrative pressure, buying votes during early voting, and having access to budget money to fund their campaign. The chief trouble with my opponents was that they had to use every trick in the book, even break the law, while we were playing things straight. All our voters/constituents were friendly. But the main thing was that, although, after the 25 years of politicians lying to them people had lost faith in their ability to change the existing system, I managed to convince them that that was precisely why I was running—because other politicians will never look after our interests or campaign for genuine freedom.

Reason: What can you accomplish as the deputy councilman of the Pushkino District?
Shalnev: The bottom line is to bring this level of power closer to people at the grassroots, to empower them to participate in decision-making. Then I will be pushing for the abolishment of land tax for persons.
Reason: As an elected official that is part of the opposition, are you safe? Have you ever been arrested or detained?
Shalnev: The status of an elected official, if anything, serves to increase personal risks as Russians have almost no immunity against persecution coming at the hands of the state. Yes, I was detained once, at a rally supporting political prisoners on December 15, 2012. I was fined 20,000 rubles ($650) then.
Reason: What is the next big event or step forward for the Russian Libertarian Party?
Shalnev: We're now making preparations for the 6th Adam Smith Forum in Moscow, one of the foremost libertarian events in Russia.
Reason: How is the current political situation in general in Russia? What is good and what is bad from a libertarian's perspective?
Shalnev: Well, happy news is sadly scarce, except perhaps that, despite the tightening of the screws and a crackdown on political activism, tens of thousands of Muscovites can still without fear turn out for a protest rally.
Bad news, on the contrary, is plentiful. But the worst part of it is the Ukraine war effort. The blame falls on the Russian government and personally on Vladimir Putin who has unleashed a bloodshed that has already claimed thousands of lives and undermined many of the country's achievements, to say nothing of the fact that it has cast all Russians in the role of aggressive 21th century barbarians.
Reason: Who else besides libertarians can bring the ideas of freedom to Russia? Will it be other dissident political figures like Alexei Navalny, cultural figures like Pussy Riot, or someone else entirely?
Shalnev: Inculcating values is no easy matter. What seems more feasible is creating social institutions that would foster such processes. But this is the responsibility not of politicians but of the citizens themselves. It is they who will have to try and learn to interact directly with one another cutting out the state-middleman completely.
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Actually, a contemporary Russian's vocabulary does not contain such a word and he or she will rather talk of "liberalism" in a derogatory context.
AM radio and Fox News are in Russia too.
As is Obama's war criminalistic drone strike policy.
BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!! Knee slapper...ugh.
Fuck off, turd.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BX-7BlRc_a0
Of course, "Liberalism" in the rest of the world basically means "Libertarianism".
So more like anything BUT Fox News then..
Is this going to be another UKIP thing?
I wasn't aware that a group of like 5 people really needed a 'chairman' to coordinate their actions.
I would think that anarchist-individualism or anarchist-syndicalism or some form of libertarian anarchism would leap-frog any libertarian movement given Russia's history.
Zenon? Is that like German or something?
So they naturally don't trust the Gubment and that's why:
"President Vladimir Putin's approval ratings soared to an all-time high of 87% this week, leaving just 13% of his countrymen and women shaking their heads"???
Hard to imagine.....looks like libertarians there have the same backward/bizzarro/opposite view (of reality) that ours do here!
They already have an economic libertarian paradise.....in the sense that the corporations rule...as long as they keep the really big Corporation (Putin/Gazprom, etc.) happy.
It's like Kochsucking gone wild there!
Dumbass in mass - please stop intentionally confusing capitalism with crony corporatism.
please stop intentionally confusing capitalism with crony corporatism
It does not know how. Progs twist language and concepts until they mean nothing except whatever emotional appeal is in fashion at any given time.
Sure, the same folks who promote Koch being able to spend billions promotion crony corporatism now say "that's not what we mean".
You either believe in one person one vote or one dollar one vote. So far the Libertarians here seem to believe the later.
When you give billionaires more power than the average joe, what do you expect them to do? Fight for the average joe?
Unicorns and Utopias are much closer than that idea!
Nice false choice.
When you give the government tanks, assault rifles and drones, what do you expect them to do? The same thing your hero Chairman Mao did I'm guessing.
Thanks for the item. The Kochs have nothing to do with the formal libertarian movement, which is the main force for fair votes and democracy today.
To get acquainted with the world movement and what people are actually doing, I would suggest the Libertarian International at http://www.libertarianinternational.org
"The Kochs have nothing to do with the formal libertarian movement, which is the main force for fair votes and democracy today."
Well, you better tell that to the US "Libertarians" here who fight against voting for all, who take money from the Koch's for writing Bullshit and who quote and follow stuff from all the false institutions and think tanks that the Koch's own (Cato, etc.)....
If the American Libertarians are fascists and corporatists and love the Big Bosses and dislike the peasantry, you are going to have a harder time in the rest of the world....
Free markets, free minds and the NAP. That is libertarianism. It isn't clear whether you believe your BS or just post it in an effort to try and convince others.
Though I will partially agree with you in that I by voting you mean less productive people determine how much money the state will acquiesce out of my paycheck, then yes, I and many libertarians do oppose that.
Not sure if joking or retarded.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BX-7BlRc_a0
Die Muthafucka !! Die Muthafucka !!!
While a libertarian moment blossoms in the United States-
I stopped reading here.
Nothing will get in the way of libertarian fatalism!
Russia can't be free until it's gone. Russia has to be disintegrated in the same way the USSR was, and it will probably happen in my lifetime. A good first step would be tightening monetary policy and increasing oil/gas output to cause the price of Russia's main money-maker to plummet.
But the people don't want it to be gone. They love Putin and they love the situation as it is. The Chinese do too - both at MUCH higher percentages than, for instance, US citizens like our ways.
Maybe we are the ones going down the tubes.....
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BX-7BlRc_a0
Not a new idea. Yet Russia survived for quite some time, and I predict will continue to do so. Also, if Russia can't sell oil, they will start selling ICBMs to Iran, N Korea, Cuba, Venezuela, ISIS, and everybody else willing to pay. Then fun will really start.
What does Cathy Young say? Ha she gone the way of She Who Must Not Be Mentioned?
Good article. Russians associate capitalism with 90's reforms and botched privatization, so it has very poor image. Ukraine business united the country behind Putin (like any war), so currently any opposition will have a very tough going. However, once situation goes back to normal, and foreign policy stops dominating the news, Putin's approval ratings will drop again, as people focus on corruption and economy once more.
Russian economy is overheating due to labor shortages (high inflation, low growth), so the only way forward is to increase labor force productivity, which means market liberalization. If libertarians can sell this message, they will be in good shape.
Putin is/was popular well before Ukraine.
http://b-i.forbesimg.com/marka.....000-13.png
60% support is quite a bit lower than 87%. At 60%, opposition has a chance.
As for 'opposition dead or in jail', yawn. Western media needs to make up its mind on the story it is trying to sell. If Putin is indeed an evil dictator, then why are there anti war protests in Moscow? Russia is corrupt as hell, and heavily bureaucratic to boot - that is true. Permit and registration processes are terrible, and if you miss a dot, you get fined. No, Russia is not a paragon of democracy and free speech. But the idea that Putin just goes around and murders everybody who looks at him funny is just ridiculous.
Especially for leaders of the movement that is marginal even in the US, sadly. Libertarians have a number of good ideas that Putin would be wise to listen to.
"But the idea that Putin just goes around and murders everybody who looks at him funny is just ridiculous."
Not everybody, but he surely shutters up the free press and takes over large corporations when they dare go against his ways (or if he or his friends want them).
He's no Stalin - that's for sure. But using the word democracy or liberalism in reference to either him or the present state of Russia seems foolish.
In the USA, 60% - which is the very low Putin has ever seen, is incredibly high approval. It looks like Putin averages 70% plus, which is way above what any American POTUS does.
Also, we'd need to see a different chart - that being whether Russians are generally satisfied with the state and direction of their country. I think they are to a large degree.
Putin makes no bones about it. He does not believe in the American Way....heck, who knows, maybe he will turn out to be right?
People have been given a chance to govern themselves and it seems like they always fuck it up.
For what its worth, I have family back in Russia, they seem to be happy. Russian economy currently has lowest unemployment ever since the Soviet days, and major wage increases that are driven by it. So people aren't feeling too bad. Due to demographic mess of the 90's, severe labor shortages will persist for a decade if not longer (Russia vaccums up East Ukrainian labor force and gives them jobs immediately at triple the wages).
Best part? Low (but increasing) life expectancy. That means old people will die before they bankrupt the pension system. In the West, the talent and energy of youth will be spent changing old people's diapers. Russia will not have such problem.
"If libertarians can sell this message, they will be in good shape."
If Libertarians promote true Libertarian way, they'll likely be in jail and their leaders dead.
Thanks for the article. To get acquainted with the world movement and what people are actually doing, I would suggest the Libertarian International at http://www.libertarianinternational.org
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