Landslide
Putin scores commanding win in Russian elections
MOSCOW (Reuters) – An exit poll showed Vladimir Putin won Russia’s presidential election held on Sunday with 73.9% of the vote.
The voting projection, by state-run pollster VTsIOM, put Communist Party challenger Pavel Grudinin in second place with 11.2%.
Vladimir Zhirinovsky, head of the nationalist Liberal Democratic Party, received 6.7% and TV personality Ksenia Sobchak had 2.5%, the exit poll showed
Opinion polls before the election gave Putin, the incumbent, support of around 70%, or nearly 10 times the backing of his nearest challenger.
Another term will take him to nearly a quarter century in power – a longevity among Kremlin leaders second only to Soviet dictator Josef Stalin.
Many voters credit Putin, a 65-year-old former KGB spy, with standing up for Russia’s interests in what they view as a hostile outside world.
Russia’s annexation of Ukraine’s Crimea region, alleged Kremlin meddling in the US presidential election, and Moscow’s bombing campaign in Syria, have been condemned in the West. But for most people at home, they have only burnished Putin’s reputation as a strong leader.
A row with Britain over allegations that Kremlin used a nerve toxin to poison a Russian double agent in a sleepy English city – denied by Moscow – has not dented Putin’s standing.
“I voted for Putin,” said Lyubov Kachan, a teacher in the settlement of Ust-Djeguta in southern Russia.
“If anything is not going our way right now, that’s thanks to the world which treats us so negatively, while he is trying to stand up to that,” she said.
The biggest headache for Putin’s campaign was the possibility many voters, including Putin supporters, would not bother to come to the polls because they felt the outcome was already a foregone conclusion.
Putin’s opponents alleged that employers with close ties to the state were ordering staff to go and vote, and send back evidence.
Reuters reporters witnessed multiple people in different locations voting in groups and then taking photos of themselves in front of the ballot boxes. Some arrived at polling stations on board private-hire buses.
In polling station 1515 in Zelenodolsk, 800 km. (500 miles) east of Moscow, five people photographed themselves voting. Asked by a Reuters reporter why, one of the group, a young woman, said: “What do you mean, ‘Why?’ It’s a photographic report for our bosses.”
At polling station number 216 in Ust-Djeguta, Marina Kostina was supervising two teenage girls who were photographing voters. Asked why one woman was photographed, Kostina said: “Her work asked her to report back.”
A low turnout, it was feared, could diminish Putin’s authority within the ruling elite, which is founded in large part on his ability to mobilize the public behind him.
“There is no intrigue. I do not see any point for me in going to the election,” said Alexei Khvorostov, a resident of Krasnodar in southern Russia.
The first politician in years to challenge the Kremlin’s grip on power, Alexei Navalny, was barred from the race because of a corruption conviction he says was fabricated by the Kremlin. He called for a boycott of the election, saying it was an undemocratic farce.
Navalny’s headquarters said activists sent out to monitor the vote reported people being bussed to polling stations by their employers.
“We would call this the ‘shuttle bus election,’” Ivan Zhdanov, a Navalny aide, told a briefing.
The day of voting across Russia’s 11 time zones began Saturday on Russia’s eastern edge, in the Pacific coast city of Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky. Voting ran until polls closed at the westernmost point of Russia, the Kaliningrad region on the Baltic Sea.
The majority of voters saw no viable alternative to Putin. He has total dominance of the political scene and state-run television, where most people get their news, gives lavish coverage of Putin and little airtime to his rivals.
Many Russians believe he has restored stability after the chaos that ensued after the Soviet Union collapsed.