The Jerusalem Post

Russian parliament backs move to keep Putin in power

Putin could rule until age of 83 • 170-seat Federation Council gave its approval by 160 votes

- • By ANDREW OSBORN and POLINA IVANOVA

MOSCOW (Reuters) – Constituti­onal changes allowing Vladimir Putin to run for president again in 2024 sailed through both houses of Russia’s parliament on Wednesday, raising the prospect he could clock up over three decades in the Kremlin.

Putin, 67, who has dominated Russia’s political landscape for two decades as either president or prime minister, made a dramatic appearance in the lower chamber a day earlier to argue that term limits were less important in times of crisis.

A former KGB officer, Putin is currently required by the constituti­on to step down in 2024 when his second sequential and fourth presidenti­al term ends. But the amendment he backed would formally reset his own presidenti­al term tally to zero. Successors would face a two-term limit, however.

The 450-seat State Duma, the lower house of parliament, on Wednesday backed the term reset for Putin, along with other amendments to the constituti­on, by 383 votes, in a third and final reading. Nobody voted against; 43 lawmakers abstained.

Hours later, the 170-seat Federation Council, the upper house of parliament, gave its approval by 160 votes to one with just three abstention­s.

If, as Putin critics expect, regional parliament­s and the constituti­onal court now give their blessing and the overall changes are backed in a nationwide vote in April, Putin would have the option to run again for president in 2024.

Were he to do that, and his health and electoral fortunes allowed, he could potentiall­y stay in office for another two back-to-back six-year terms until 2036, at which point he would be 83 and have spent 36 years at the top of Russian politics.

Such a scenario would see him wield power longer than Soviet leader Josef Stalin but still leave him well short of Tsar Peter the Great, who reigned for 43 years.

Kremlin critic and opposition politician Alexei Navalny has said he believed Putin was trying to become president for life.

Putin has not spelled out his plans after 2024 but has said he does not favor the Soviet-era practice of leaders remaining in place until they die.

Opposition politician and former lawmaker Dmitry Gudkov said on Wednesday he thought the changes had dealt a mortal blow to the country’s constituti­on.

“Russia has lost its constituti­on, which didn’t work anyway,” Gudkov wrote on social media. “The fig leaf has fallen off the regime and we can see who turned out to be beneath it.”

Putin in January unveiled a major shake-up of Russian politics and a constituti­onal overhaul, which the Kremlin billed as a redistribu­tion of power from the presidency to parliament.

But Putin’s critics say the reform was merely a smoke screen to give the country’s ruling elite a way to keep Putin in power after 2024.

Opposition activists have said they plan to organize protests as early as Friday. Their plans are complicate­d however by an order from Moscow’s government which has banned public gatherings of more than 5,000 people until April 10 due to coronaviru­s-related risks.

Putin remains popular with many Russians, who see him as a welcome source of stability, even as others complain that he has been in power for too long.

Two people staged lone pickets outside the State Duma on Wednesday. One of them Gleb Tumanov, 31, said he was a member of the Yabloko Party and held a banner calling the move “an usurpation of power.”

“I’m here because of Vladimir Putin’s desire to stay for a fifth term or even maybe a sixth,” said Tumanov. “It just feels sad and reminiscen­t of the Soviet Union. I didn’t spend very much time living in the Soviet Union obviously, but neither do I have any desire to do so.”

 ?? (Evgenia Novozhenin­a/Reuters) ?? MEMBERS OF RUSSIA’S lower house of parliament, the Duma, are seen shortly after a vote that approved constituti­onal changes in a final reading yesterday in Moscow.
(Evgenia Novozhenin­a/Reuters) MEMBERS OF RUSSIA’S lower house of parliament, the Duma, are seen shortly after a vote that approved constituti­onal changes in a final reading yesterday in Moscow.

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