Cape Times

Test for Russia’s ruling party

-

RUSSIANS went to the polls yesterday in local elections being scrutinise­d for signs of discontent with the ruling United Russia party following the suspected poisoning of Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny.

Navalny, 44, had urged Russians to vote tactically against the ruling party in a bid to undermine its tight grip on power before he fell gravely ill in what Germany and his allies say was an attempt to kill him last month.

United Russia, which backs President Vladimir Putin, dominates politics across 11 time zones, but the elections come at a time of public frustratio­n over years of falling wages and the government’s handling of the pandemic.

The regional polls, which will elect 18 governors and an array of local parliament­s, city councils and municipal bodies, are seen as a dry run for next September’s parliament­ary elections.

Navalny’s team has fielded dozens of candidates at elections for the city councils of Novosibirs­k, Russia’s third-biggest city by population, and Tomsk, a student town of about halfa-million people.

“People are tired of being promised a bright future if they just vote for them. Five years go by and everything stays exactly the same,” said Fateev,

32, one of two Navalny supporters competing in Tomsk.

One voter, a student from Tomsk who identified himself only as Alexander, said he had voted for Ksenia Fadeyeva, the second Navalny candidate there.

“I think it’s the same in all the regions. I doubt it’s different anywhere. People want something new,” he said.

Navalny’s allies have pressed ahead with the Kremlin critic’s “smart voting” strategy, naming more than a thousand politician­s on the ballots they think can beat ruling party candidates and telling their supporters to vote for them.

The strategy aims to disrupt a political system that often bars the Kremlin’s staunchest foes from running, while allowing softer candidates from the parliament­ary parties to compete.

Navalny has been unable to set up his own party.

Early results coming in from Russia’s Far East where polling stations had already closed showed two Kremlin-backed regional governors winning election by a landslide in Kamchatka and the Jewish Autonomous Region.

But there have been some signs of anti-Kremlin discontent in the regions. Mass rallies in the far-eastern city of Khabarovsk show no sign of abating two months after they flared over the arrest of a popular local governor who defeated United Russia’s candidate in an election upset in 2018.

Early voting began on Friday after authoritie­s stretched out the poll over three days, a move criticised by independen­t election watchdog Golos which warned this would make it harder to catch fraud.

 ?? | ?? A MAN with a boy exit a voting booth at a polling station in Tomsk, Russia, yesterday. Reuters
| A MAN with a boy exit a voting booth at a polling station in Tomsk, Russia, yesterday. Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa