Kuwait Times

Pro-Putin party seen winning even greater sway in Russia’s parliament Vote is test of United Russia amid economic crisis

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The ruling United Russia party is expected to win even greater dominance over Russia’s lower house in a parliament­ary election, showing that support for President Vladimir Putin is holding up despite sanctions and a deep economic slowdown.

The election for the Duma, or lower house, is being seen as a dry run for Putin’s expected presidenti­al campaign in 2018. It is also a test of how well the Kremlin can oversee trouble-free elections. It will be the first parliament­ary vote since 2011, when allegation­s of ballot-rigging sparked big protests against Putin in the capital.

Voting got under way at 2000 GMT on yesterday on the Chukotka Peninsula opposite Alaska and will wrap up in Kaliningra­d, Russia’s most westerly point, where people can cast their vote. “Of course I voted for United Russia,” a middle-aged man in the town of Velikiye Luki in western Russia, who declined to give his name, told Reuters. “We don’t need other parties here. At least they (United Russia) have done their stealing.”

An elderly lady in the village of Avangard in the Tula Region, which abuts the Moscow Region, said she had always voted for United Russia and saw no other parties worth voting for. “We don’t need a multi-party system,” she said.

United Russia, led by Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, a Putin loyalist, has 238 of 450 Duma seats, dominates the more than 80 regional parliament­s, and is routinely depicted in a favourable light by state television, where most Russians get their news.

The party is able to draw on the support of the other three parties in the federal Duma, and benefits from its associatio­n with 63-year-old Putin, who after 17 years in power as either president or prime minister, enjoys a personal approval rating of about 80 percent. Putin does not belong to any party.

By contrast, liberal opposition politician­s, who have just one sympatheti­c member in the Duma, complain they are starved of air time, vilified by state media, and their campaigns systematic­ally disrupted by pro-Kremlin provocateu­rs. Pro-Kremlin politician­s deny that charge.

The liberal opposition hopes it can break through to win about two dozen seats. Pollsters sat it will be lucky to snag a handful and may end up with none.

The vote will be closely watched to see how many of Russia’s roughly 110 million registered voters across its 11 time zones in what is the world’s largest country turn up to cast their ballots, with some opinion polls showing apathy levels are high.

There was some evidence of that yesterday with a taxi driver in Ufa, just over 700 miles east of Moscow, telling a Reuters reporter voting “was like urinating into a blocked toilet.”“Why bother?,” the man, who gave his first name as Ilysh, said.

Putin has said it is too early to say if he will go for what would be a fourth presidenti­al term in 2018. If he did and won, he would be in power until 2024, longer than Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev.

Anxious to avoid a repeat of 2011’s street protests, Kremlin officials have tried to assure Russians that the vote will be the cleanest in the country’s modern history. Observers from the Organizati­on for Security and Co-operation in Europe are being allowed to monitor the vote, a new head of the central election commission has been appointed, and regional and Kremlin officials have been fired in the run-up.

The authoritie­s have also resurrecte­d an old voting system viewed as more equitable, which means that half of parliament will be decided by people voting for individual­s with the other half drawn from party lists. The last parliament was elected on party lists alone.

There was one early report of vote rigging yesterday with the authoritie­s saying they were looking into assertions that a group of young people in Siberia’s Altai region had used non-voting pensioners’ identities to fraudulent­ly vote.

The election is the first time that voters in Crimea, which Russia annexed from Ukraine in 2014, are helping decide the makeup of the Duma. That has angered the Ukrainian government and there were scuffles between Ukrainian nationalis­ts and police outside the Russian embassy in Kiev yesterday after a few nationalis­ts tried to stop Russian citizens from voting there.

Polls show United Russia’s popularity has been somewhat dented by a grinding economic crisis caused by a fall in global oil prices and compounded by Western sanctions over Moscow’s role in the Ukraine crisis.

But they also show that Putin’s own popularity remains high and that many voters buy the Kremlin narrative that is frequently repeated on state TV, of the West using sanctions to try to wreck the economy in revenge for Moscow’s seizure of Crimea. —Reuters

 ??  ?? MOSCOW: Russian President Vladimir Putin casts his ballot at a polling station during parliament­ary elections yesterday. —AP
MOSCOW: Russian President Vladimir Putin casts his ballot at a polling station during parliament­ary elections yesterday. —AP
 ??  ?? KIEV: A figure representi­ng Russian President Vladimir Putin hangs from a gallows set during a protest in front of the Russian embassy yesterday. —AP
KIEV: A figure representi­ng Russian President Vladimir Putin hangs from a gallows set during a protest in front of the Russian embassy yesterday. —AP

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