The Herald (South Africa)

Putin heads for landslide win

Result expected to be declared legitimate despite ‘some irregulari­ties’

- Vladimir Soldatkin and Gleb Stolyarov

RUSSIAN President Vladimir Putin won a landslide re-election victory yesterday according to an exit poll, extending his rule over the world’s largest country for another six years at a time when his ties with the West are on a hostile trajectory.

Putin’s expected thumping victory will extend his total time in office to nearly a quarter of a century, until 2024, by which time he will be 71.

Only Soviet dictator Josef Stalin ruled for longer.

Putin has promised to use his new term to beef up Russia’s defences against the West and to raise living standards.

In a widely expected result, an exit poll by pollster VTsIOM showed Putin, who has already dominated the political landscape for the last 18 years, had won 73.9% of the vote.

Backed by state TV and the ruling party, and credited with an approval rating around 80%, his victory was never in doubt.

None of the seven candidates who ran against him posed a threat, and opposition leader Alexei Navalny was barred from running.

Critics alleged that officials had compelled people to come to the polls to ensure that voter boredom at the one-sided contest did not lead to a low turnout.

Russia’s Central Election Commission recognised that there were some irregulari­ties, but was likely to dismiss wider criticism and declare the overall result legitimate.

Putin loyalists said the result was a vindicatio­n of his tough stance towards the West.

“I think that in the United States and Britain they’ve understood they cannot influence our elections,” a member of the upper house of parliament, Igor Morozov, said on state television.

“Our citizens understand what sort of situation Russian finds itself in today.”

The immediate question is if and when opponents like Navalny organise protests, citing widespread fraud, and how large and sustained those protests will be.

A senior opposition politician has warned they could descend into street clashes if police crack down too hard on demonstrat­ors.

The longer-term question is whether Putin will soften his anti-Western rhetoric now that he had won.

Putin’s bellicose language reached a crescendo before the election in a state-of-the-nation speech when he unveiled new nuclear weapons, saying they could hit almost any point in the world and evade a US-built missile shield.

At odds with the West over Syria, Ukraine, allegation­s of Russian election meddling and cyber attacks, and the poisoning in Britain of a former Russian spy and his daughter, relations between Moscow and the West are at a postCold War low.

Putin, 65, has been in power, either as president or prime minister, since 2000.

Allies laud the former KGB agent as a father-of-the-nation figure who has restored national pride and expanded Moscow’s global clout with interventi­ons in Syria and Ukraine.

Critics accuse him of overseeing a corrupt authoritar­ian system and of illegally annexing Ukraine’s Crimea in 2014, a move that isolated Russia internatio­nally.

Western sanctions on Russia imposed over Crimea and Moscow’s backing of a pro-Russian separatist uprising in eastern Ukraine remain in place and have damaged the Russian economy, which only rebounded last year after a prolonged downturn.

Britain and Russia are also locked in a diplomatic dispute over the spy poisoning incident, and Washington is eyeing new sanctions on Moscow over allegation­s it interfered in the 2016 US presidenti­al election, which Russia denies.

Officials and analysts say there is little agreement among Putin’s top policymake­rs on an economic strategy for his new term.

How long Putin wants to stay in power is uncertain.

The constituti­on limits the president to two successive terms, obliging him to step down at the end of his new mandate – as he did in 2008 after serving two four-year terms.

The presidenti­al term was extended from four to six years, starting in 2012. – Reuters

 ?? Picture: AFP PHOTO / MAXIM MALINOVSKY ?? COLD WAIT: Russian citizens queue outside the Russian embassy in Minsk, Belarus, to vote yesterday
Picture: AFP PHOTO / MAXIM MALINOVSKY COLD WAIT: Russian citizens queue outside the Russian embassy in Minsk, Belarus, to vote yesterday

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