Otago Daily Times

Ruling party loses many seats in Moscow

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MOSCOW: Russia’s ruling United Russia party, which supports President Vladimir Putin, has lost a slew of seats in the Moscow Parliament, RIA news agency said yesterday, suggesting a tactical voting strategy pushed by opponents may have worked.

Yesterday’s poll was one of the most closely watched local elections in years after the exclusion of many opposition candidates triggered the Russian capital’s biggest protests in nearly a decade.

Protests erupted in midJuly after the Central Election Commission refused to register a large number of opposition candidates, saying they had failed to collect enough signatures from genuine backers.

The excluded candidates, including allies of prominent opposition politician Alexei Navalny, denounced the action as a ruse designed to stop them winning seats.

Navalny advised his supporters to vote tactically across Russia for the candidate with the best chance of defeating United Russia.

United Russia’s Moscow candidates rebranded as independen­ts in an apparent effort to distance themselves from the party, whose popularity is at a more than decadelong low.

Nearly complete election data cited by the RIA news agency suggested United Russia had lost about a third of the seats it previously controlled.

RIA said it was on course to control 26 of the Moscow Parliament’s 45 seats, enough to retain its majority. In a 2014 election it did much better, winning 28 seats in its own name and a further 10 by independen­t candidates that it backed.

This time, the Communist Party took seats from United Russia, reportedly winning 13, up from five last time. Two other parties, the opposition Yabloko Party and the Fair Russia Party, appeared to have won three each, RIA said. — Reuters

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Waiting and seeing . . . Alexei Navalny speaks to journalist­s outside a polling station during the Moscow city Parliament election yesterday.
PHOTO: REUTERS Waiting and seeing . . . Alexei Navalny speaks to journalist­s outside a polling station during the Moscow city Parliament election yesterday.

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