The News (New Glasgow)

PUTIN TO EASILY WIN FOURTH TERM AS RUSSIA’S PRESIDENT

Early results show Putin far ahead in fraud-tainted Russian vote

- BY VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV AND JIM HEINTZ

Early results and an exit poll showed that Vladimir Putin handily won a fourth term as Russia’s president Sunday, adding six years in the Kremlin for the man who has led the world’s largest country for all of the 21st century.

The vote was tainted by widespread reports of ballot-box stuffing and forced voting, but the complaints will likely do little to undermine Putin. The Russian leader’s popularity remains high despite his suppressio­n of dissent and reproach from the West over Russia’s increasing­ly aggressive stance in world affairs and alleged interferen­ce in the 2016 U.S. election.

Putin’s main challenges in the vote were to obtain a huge margin of victory in order to claim an indisputab­le mandate. The Central Elections Commission said Putin had won about 72 per cent of the vote, based on a count of 22 per cent of the country’s precincts.

Russian authoritie­s had sought to ensure a large turnout to bolster the image that Putin’s so-called “managed democracy” is robust and offers Russians true choices.

He faced seven minor candidates on the ballot. Putin’s most vehement and visible foe, anticorrup­tion campaigner Alexei Navalny, was rejected as a candidate because he was convicted of fraud in a case widely regarded as politicall­y motivated. Navalny and his supporters had called for an election boycott but the extent of its success could not immediatel­y be gauged.

The election came amid escalating tensions between Russia and the West, with reports that Moscow was behind the nerve-agent poisoning of a former Russian double agent in Britain and that its internet trolls had mounted an extensive campaign to undermine the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election. Britain and Russia last week announced diplomat expulsions over the spy case and the United States issued new sanctions.

Russian officials denounced both cases as efforts to interfere in the Russian election. But the disputes likely worked in Putin’s favour, reinforcin­g the official contention that the West is infected with “Russophobi­a” and is determined to undermine Putin and Russian cultural values.

Putin has come to embody Russia’s exceptiona­lism, the sense of the state and culture as an extraordin­ary entity that is nonetheles­s under constant attack from outside.

The election took place on the fourth anniversar­y of Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea, one of the most dramatic manifestat­ions of Putin’s drive to reassert Russia’s power. Crimea and Russia’s subsequent support of separatist­s in eastern Ukraine led to an array of U.S. and European sanctions that, along with falling oil prices, damaged the Russian economy and slashed the ruble’s value by half. But Putin’s popularity remained strong, apparently buttressed by nationalis­t pride.

In his next six years in office, Putin is likely to assert Russia’s power abroad even more strongly. Just weeks before the election, he announced Russia has developed advanced nuclear weapons capable of evading missile defences. The military campaign in Syria is clearly aimed at strengthen­ing Russia’s foothold in the Middle East and Russia eagerly eyes possible reconcilia­tion on the Korean Peninsula as a lucrative economic opportunit­y.

At home, he will be faced with how to groom a successor or devise a strategy to circumvent term limits, how to drive diversific­ation in an economy still highly dependent on oil and gas and how to improve medical care and social services in regions of the sprawling country far removed from the modern glitter of Moscow.

Casting his ballot in Moscow, Putin was confident of victory, saying he would consider any percentage of votes a success.

“The program that I propose for the country is the right one,” he declared.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? People wave Russian flags as they wait for election results in Manezhnaya square in Moscow.
AP PHOTO People wave Russian flags as they wait for election results in Manezhnaya square in Moscow.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada