Today, Explained - Martin Sheen 2020?
Episode Date: April 23, 2019Ukraine elected a new president on Sunday and his only meaningful preparation for the position was playing the president on TV. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices...
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Okay, crazy news out of Ukraine. Before we get into it, can I have you say your name and how you want us to ID you on the show?
My name is Vladislav Davidsson. I am a
Russian-American journalist and editor. I am based in Ukraine and France and between Paris and Kiev.
And I am the chief of the Odessa Review, a fine journal of culture and policy.
And I'm an expert on Ukrainian and Eastern European politics.
So we had an election here in Ukraine, which I monitor as an election monitor,
which is a historical election. Ukraine's president Petro Poroshenko was voted out of office after five years for a few different reasons.
And the Ukrainian voters, by an overwhelming majority, has put into power an amateur comedian, television actor, into the presidential chair.
By a landslide.
Yes, on Sunday night, I watched the results,
as did all the other journalists and analysts covering the elections.
It was between 72 and 74.5% projected that Volodymyr Zelensky received in the count.
I'm feeling good. Thank you. Thank you, everybody.
And who is this gentleman?
This gentleman is a 41-year-old actor, a comedian. He is a guy who plays the president on TV.
It's as if Martin Sheen, after having played President Bartlett on The West Wing, was elected to that
exact same office. I hope that by the time we're done with our four years here, we'll have seen
to it that every young person who chooses can go to college and beyond, regardless of their
economic status. But also having included subplots within the show being part of the actual campaign
with a wink and a nod to the electorate.
So for those people who haven't seen the show, what was the president he played on TV like?
He plays a history teacher from the outskirts of Kiev
who makes a kind of profane, curse-filled speech to the Ukrainian population about the elites
and the oligarchs and how bad they are.
And then he has that speech taped by one of the students who uploads it to the
internet and a crowd-sourced campaign takes place,
and he becomes a president of Ukraine without really trying,
being a very clean and pure fellow who represents the spirit of the people,
an ordinary man of the street who becomes the president by accident.
How did he become a president in real life? Did someone say,
hey, you're really good at doing that thing on TV, you want to try at IRL?
Yeah, he ran for the presidency, started his campaign on the same exact television station on which the show had aired. He was backed by a Ukrainian oligarch,
a very profane and funny fellow by the name of Mr. Kolomoisky.
Kolomoisky, a banking, energy and media tycoon with a fortune put at $1.8 billion by Forbes last
year, who owns one of the biggest television stations in Ukraine.
So Zelensky had a powerful backer and a familiar face. Was that it? Did he
think he could win? I honestly think that he never ever expected to go this far. I think that he was
what we call a technical candidate in Ukraine, a candidate that was deployed to siphon off votes
from another candidate, a more serious candidate. I think that he expected to win 10%, 12%, 14%
in the first round of a presidential campaign
and then go on into the parliamentary elections in October.
And then he'd win 25, 30 seats in the parliament
and that he would be a member of parliament
and have his own guys in the parliament.
But I don't think he ever expected the president.
He was massively successful, I think more successful than anyone ever expected.
Himself, his backers, the president, the entire population. He was never supposed to go this far.
You've actually sat down with him, right? What's he like?
I'm one of the few journalists or policy analysts or anybody really to sit down with him.
He does not really give interviews.
He is surprisingly very macho.
He's not a very big guy. He must be about 5'5".
He is very muscular, very slim.
He obviously lifts weights. He is psychologically and emotionally extraordinarily intelligent and sizes up people very, very, very quickly.
He has not really talked about what he actually intends to do for the most part with some small exceptions in terms of policy.
So he represents, I think, different things to different people.
And he hasn't really dissuaded people from the fact that he doesn't really believe what they might think he believes.
And he's Jewish. Is that significant for Ukraine?
It's amazing. I'm actually someone who works on the Jewish-Ukrainian relationship a lot.
I myself am Jewish. I'm a Russian Jewish American. And this is the second country after Israel, which has both a Jewish prime minister and a Jewish president-elect at this moment.
It's utterly remarkable in that way.
This is the cradle of Jewish civilization in many ways, of Ashkenazi Jewish civilization.
But only about a third of 1% of a population are of Jewish descent.
He is not religious. He has openly spoken about his Jewish identity in the public sphere. He would
say things like, I am of Jewish blood, Russian culture, and Ukrainian patriotism. And everyone
here knew that he was a Jew, and no one cared about it, I think, for the most part. And that is really an indicator of the fact that this country has changed in a lot of
ways and anti-Semitism is not really a big deal here.
Tell me about the campaign.
He was running against the incumbent, Petro Poroshenko.
What was it like?
He didn't really campaign at all because I don't think he really has much grasp of policy
issues.
So he basically just kept giving comedy shows.
And he challenged the president to a debate in a stadium, which was basically not unlike a boxing match.
I'm not a politician. I basically not unlike a boxing match.
I am not a politician. I am not a politician at all. I am just a human being, an ordinary human being who has come to break this system. I am the result, Petro Poroshenko, of your mistakes
and promises. Including a drug test that both sides agreed to before the match. What?
Yeah, he demanded that the sitting president take a drug test before he would debate him.
Petro Poroshenko gave his analysis on live television in front of journalists.
He also signed a document allowing for the results to be released,
but only regarding drugs and alcohol.
How did they do on their drug tests?
The presidential administration had to release a
press release saying that the sitting president of Ukraine was not taking LSD or anything related to
hallucinogenic narcotics. And then when Mr. Zelensky, now President-elect Zelensky,
took this test, it was in a drug clink that a friend of his owned, who's actually a bit actor in one of his skits.
What?
Yeah.
Yes, I donated blood.
Everything, all the blood they needed, they pumped out of me.
I have a lot of blood, thank goodness.
The blood is young.
The presidential administration spread rumors that he was a drug addict, that he was doing coke all the time, that he was a cocaine addict.
Obviously, I was never there, you know, snorting cocaine with him, but that's what the presidential administration was intimating that he was doing.
So why did people ultimately vote for him? Because he was funny? Because he was fresh? Because he was famous, all of the above. What? First of all, Ukraine is in the midst of an economic situation
where after the war was started by the Russians,
after the Russians invaded, the economy collapsed.
We have 1.1 million internally displaced people
from the war in the East and the illegal annexation of Crimea by Russia.
At the same time, it is an economic crisis as well.
It's 20%
of our economy. And people's life savings evaporated. And after that happened, the
Ukrainian population gritted their teeth and waited for a long time for things to get better.
And things are getting better. The economy is growing at 3% a year, but people aren't feeling it. So there's a lot of oligarchs also who have television stations, which kept pumping propaganda
to the population that things are really bad and the president's on the take and corrupt. And
whether that's true or not, and he is a billionaire and he is an oligarch and that's true, and he is
making money and he didn't stop making money during the course of the war.
How did it happen that Ukraine has practically the poorest government with the richest president in history?
So there's just so much pent-up rage and frustration with the presidential administration of Mr. Poroshenko that people voted against him.
So you could have put up maybe a penguin or a camel or a dog or a random person and they would
have won this election. I could have won this election. You could have won this election.
If your name was put up against the president, you would have won.
It is a total and utter and axiomatic and categoric humiliation for a sitting president.
Russia's been messing with Ukraine for years.
Up next, how Putin feels about the actor slash comedian running the country next door.
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Vladislav, we haven't talked about Russia yet. How does Russia feel about all of this?
So the Russians, obviously, it's a big deal because they really want a weak Ukraine and
they want Ukraine to, you Ukraine to return to the Russian
sphere of influence. President Poroshenko lost because he was not good on internal stuff,
but on the external relationship with the Russians in terms of Ukrainian nationalism
and the Ukrainian nation, he was very solid. So President Putin and the Kremlin really didn't like him.
And they were happy, I think, very, very happy to have anybody else come to power, including a
inexperienced young guy who's never worked in politics and has no experience of holding public
office, who will certainly, almost certainly make mistakes, and who is set to have a chaotic
and perhaps even weak presidency for at least the first year.
Has Zelensky said anything about his intentions with Russia? Does he have a firm position, a plan?
Look, he has said all the right things from the standpoint of the Ukrainian elections,
and he's been fairly belligerent in his rhetoric,
certainly not as belligerent as President Petro Poroshenko, but he has said the things
that you would expect him to say.
Why is Ukraine's relationship with Russia so important?
Well, look, Ukraine is one of the biggest countries in Europe. was part of the Soviet Union.
Happily, unhappily, that's a different question.
But it's a country that has never been independent except for three years in the last 300 years.
Does that make sense?
Yeah.
Do you think Russia will look at this inexperienced,
fun actor who had his buddy do his own drug test
that he called for and see some low-hanging fruit to go in and just walk all over this guy?
Look, these guys are really, really tough, to put it mildly,
and they will look at this guy and will say,
this guy is weak, this guy is inexperienced,
and we might use the opportunity to press our advantage.
That could mean anything from a diplomatic campaign to a full-scale invasion.
And certainly there's a huge risk to the Ukrainians
that the election of a young guy who's not had any kind of experience in this kind of thing before
might lead to more aggression in one way or another from Russia.
You know, I hate to make everything about the United States, but it just seems so comparable that people were thinking, oh, this guy, he doesn't have experience, but he can do it.
At least in the United States, people could say, oh, Donald Trump, he's got business experience,
I guess.
Sure.
Maybe he can run the country.
This guy, he's like, he's got. Sure. Maybe he can run the country. This guy, he's like, he's got acting experience.
Maybe he could run the country.
It seems even more far-fetched.
Did they look at the United States and go,
oh, that's working out well, let's try that.
Yeah, I'm not sure if they actually looked at the model
in order to say, oh, that's a great thing.
It's not quite the same as Donald Trump
because he, Volodymyr Zelensky, is not really a populist in the Western European sense
because he has not taken any right-wing or ultra-right-wing positions.
It's actually much more like Reagan than it is like President Trump.
But Reagan ran the state of California, the biggest state in the Union,
for years before he became president. Yeah, that's true. In the way that he is like Reagan, he is an actor who has
a role that he played on TV that he's actually playing in politics now. He's just a guy who
represents an opposition to the elite. And the elite here is really nasty and corrupt.
It's not the same as it is in America, where people pay their taxes. And you know, it's just
very different. It's a really extraordinarily corrupt country. And people are really angry.
So there are a lot of people who are promising an end to that. It's not only him.
But the question is, I guess, can he do it? Can this guy with literally no political experience,
who didn't think he could win, who was, you know, instituting all these stunts during the campaign,
can he fix a country with deep-rooted issues regarding corruption and influence?
And, oh, and he was backed by an oligarch, right? I mean...
Yeah, he was totally backed by an oligarch. Actually, everyone who comes to power here is
either of themselves an oligarch or backed by an oligarch. So there's really no way to come to
power if you don't have oligarchic connections, money, and television stations. That's the most
important thing. It's really a corrupt country and things are really based on, you know, 15,
20 people fighting between themselves and arguing between themselves, right? It's a really
complicated situation that way. That said, can he do it? I think it'll be extraordinarily difficult
for him because politics here is so cutthroat and so shark-like that he will be eaten alive by the
really cynical and vicious people in parliament. He'll have IMF debt to pay off. He'll have seven
or ten really vicious and very smart oligarchs positioning themselves to take stuff from him.
He'll have the Russians. He'll have an ongoing war. He'll have poverty to deal with. It's an extraordinarily difficult situation for any president to deal with, let alone a young gentleman who's never done anything in politics. So can he do it? You know, he can do little things. And if he has a very strong team of reformers, maybe he'll surprise us. But it's a really, really, really steep hill to climb. Do you think because Zelensky didn't think he had a chance to win, really wants this
job?
Do you think he might be terrified of actually doing this now that he's won the office?
I'm really wondering myself, is he terrified?
Why wouldn't he be?
How could you not be terrified in this situation?
If he fails, he will bring forth another popular revolution. And if that
happens, this country will probably see the collapse of economy and even invasion by the
regular forces of the Russian army taking large chunks of territory. How could you not be terrified
if you're a rational person in that situation? We're going to find out for the rest of europe and the and the rest of the world if voting for
a television candidate social media candidate actually gets what you want or you're always
unhappy even with that it's for me the next chapter of democracy by television.
It's something that Americans and the British people and the French for a certain point have pioneered,
but the Ukrainians are going to teach us
what the actual final frontier of this experiment is,
and in many ways the experiments in democracy and disinformation
and propaganda that have taken place here have been exported to the west and it is
an extraordinarily important story for americans and western europeans to understand.
Vladislav Davidson is a Russian-American journalist and editor.
He is based in Ukraine and France and between Paris and Kiev.
And he is the chief of the Odessa Review, a fine journal of culture and policy.
And he is an expert on Ukrainian and Eastern European politics.
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