The Telegram (St. John's)

Putin’s popularity dips

Poll shows rising support for extending rule

- ANDREW OSBORN TOM BALMFORTH

MOSCOW — Russian President Vladimir Putin’s approval rating has slipped to its lowest level in more than two decades amid the coronaviru­s crisis, even as support for his plan to extend his rule for years ahead has risen, a poll showed on Wednesday.

The poll, by the Levadacent­er, showed Putin’s support fell to 59 per cent when Putin was a rookie prime minister with a 53 per cent approval rating.

However, support for his plan to change the constituti­on to allow him to extend his rule until 2036 rose to 47 per cent in April, up from 40 per cent in March. A nationwide vote on the proposed change, scheduled for last month but delayed because of the virus outbreak, is now expected later this year.

Putin’s approval rating is still very high by Western standards, and there is no sign that the man who has dominated Russian politics as president or prime minister for more than 20 years and survived many crises, is about to be toppled.

Economic and social fallout from the coronaviru­s crisis is causing problems for him though, as the number of cases continues to sharply rise, oil prices remain historical­ly low and a lockdown poisons the economy and people’s livelihood­s.

The number of confirmed coronaviru­s cases rose by more than 10,000 on Wednesday for a fourth consecutiv­e day and now stands at 165,929, though at 1,537 the death toll remains far lower than in many other countries.

The poll was conducted by phone because of the coronaviru­s-related lockdown, rather than face-toface, which Levada’s Deputy Director Denis Volkov said may have clipped one to two per cent off Putin’s approval rating.

Even taking that into account, Volkov said an outcome of 61 per cent would still mean Putin’s rating was on a par with 2013, a year before Russia’s annexation of Ukraine’s Crimea prompted his ratings to surge.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry

Peskov cast doubt on the poll.

“I’m not inclined to entirely trust Levada’s polls,” Peskov told reporters. “There are other polls which give a different picture.” A survey from state-run pollster VTSIOM gave Putin a trust rating of 69.8 per cent in April.

Among those who said they intended to take part in the vote on constituti­onal change, 58 per cent said they would back the changes and only 25 per cent vote against them.

“What is important is that those that are ‘for’ are very well mobilised and are ready to come (and vote),” said Volkov.

Levada said the survey was conducted on April 24-27 and that 1,608 people had been polled across Russia.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a ceremony for newly appointed foreign ambassador­s to Russia, at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, on Feb. 5.
REUTERS Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a ceremony for newly appointed foreign ambassador­s to Russia, at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, on Feb. 5.

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