Springfield News-Sun

Putin extends rule in preordaine­d election

- By Emma Burrows, Dasha Litvinova and Jim Heintz

President Vladimir Putin extended his reign over Russia in a landslide election whose outcome was never in doubt, declaring Monday his determinat­ion to advance deeper into Ukraine and dangling new threats against the West.

After the harshest crackdown on dissent since Soviet times, it was clear from the earliest returns that Putin’s nearly quarter-century rule would continue with a fifth term that grants him six more years. Still, Russians heeded a call to protest Putin’s repression and his war in Ukraine by showing up at polling stations at noon on Sunday.

With all the precincts counted Monday, election officials said Putin had secured a record number of votes, underlinin­g the Russian leader’s total control of the country’s political system. Western leaders denounced the election as a sham.

Putin has led Russia as president or prime minister since December 1999, a tenure marked by internatio­nal military aggression and an increasing intoleranc­e for dissent. At the end of his fifth term, Putin would be the longest-serving Russian leader since Catherine the Great, who ruled during the 18th century.

Emboldened by his sweeping victory, Putin said he planned to carve out a buffer zone in Ukraine to protect Russia from cross-border shelling and attacks. Asked if an open clash could erupt between Russia and NATO, Putin responded curtly by saying: “Everything is possible in today’s world,” adding:

“it’s clear to everyone that it will put us a step away from full-scale World War III.”

Russian officials said they recruited over 500,000 volunteers for the army last year, but many expect Putin to mobilize more forces to attempt to push deeper into Ukraine.

Putin hailed early results showing him with a firm lead as an indication of “trust” and “hope” in him — while critics saw them as another reflection of the preordaine­d nature of the election.

Any public criticism of Putin or his war in Ukraine has been stifled. Independen­t media have been crippled. His fiercest political foe, Alexei Navalny, died in an Arctic prison last month, and other critics are either in jail or in exile.

Voters had no real alternativ­es to Putin, and independen­t monitoring of the election was extremely limited.

Russia’s Central Election Commission said Monday that with all the precincts counted, Putin got 87% of

the vote. Central Election Commission chief Ella Pamfilova said that nearly 76 million voters cast their ballots for Putin.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy was particular­ly critical of the election and voting in regions of his country that Russia has illegally annexed, saying “everything Russia does on the occupied territory of Ukraine is a crime.”

Germany sharply criticized the vote with Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s spokeswoma­n, Christina Hoffmann, saying that “in our opinion, it was not a democratic election.”

“Russia, as the chancellor has already said, is now a dictatorsh­ip and is ruled by Vladimir Putin in an authoritar­ian manner,” she told reporters in Berlin.

Lithuanian Foreign Minister Gabrielius Landsbergi­s also derided the voting in Russia: “some might call it reappointm­ent, lacking any legitimacy.”

 ?? ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICH­ENKO / AP ?? Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks during a visit to his campaign headquarte­rs after a presidenti­al election in Moscow early Monday.
ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICH­ENKO / AP Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks during a visit to his campaign headquarte­rs after a presidenti­al election in Moscow early Monday.

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