The Post

Putin set for six more years at top

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RUSSIA: Vladimir Putin has announced he will run for reelection as president of Russia next March.

After months of public speculatio­n, he made the announceme­nt while speaking to workers at the 85th anniversar­y of the Gorky automobile plant (GAZ) in Nizhny Novgorod, a Soviet-era powerhouse that has been revived through orders from Western carmakers in recent years.

He is almost certain to win another six-year term. By the end of it, he will have been in power for more than 24 years, including a stint as prime minister that allowed him to skirt the limit of two consecutiv­e terms.

Earlier yesterday, a participan­t at a volunteer conference appeared to disrupt the careful stage management that has surrounded Putin’s announceme­nt by asking him in front of an audience whether he would run. The president would only reply that the ‘‘decision should be made very soon’’.

‘‘Today at the volunteer forum, you were asked whether you would put your candidacy forward, and you said you would if the people support you. All of us in this hall support you without exception,’’ a GAZ employee told Putin to the applause of his coworkers.

‘‘Vladimir Vladimirov­ich, give us a present, announce your decision. Because GAZ is for you! GAZ is for you!’’

‘‘There is probably no better place and reason for this,’’ Putin said.

‘‘Thank you for your support, I will put my candidacy forward for the presidency of the Russian Federation.’’

Amid applause and uplifting music pumped over the speakers, he praised the factory and its long history.

‘‘Thank you for your work, thank you for your relationsh­ip with your enterprise, your city and your country,’’ he said. ‘‘I’m confident that everything will work out for us.’’

State television immediatel­y began devoting its evening news programmes to the announceme­nt, which it dubbed a ‘‘historic event’’. The ruling United Russia party within minutes announced it

"Vladimir Vladimirov­ich, give us a present, announce your decision."

Putin supporter and GAZ autoworker

would back Putin.

During his appearance, the president also said Russia ‘‘won’t announce any blockade’’ of the 2018 Winter Olympics after it was banned on Wednesday over its doping programme. Russian athletes can still participat­e under a neutral flag.

Putin has long been expected to run and is almost certain to win given his approval ratings, which have remained above 80 per cent since the annexation of Crimea in 2014.

But he and the Kremlin have been cagey about when the announceme­nt would be made. At 65, Putin has already reached the Russian retirement age, and he has run the country for 18 years, surpassed only by Joseph Stalin.

He has sometimes appeared bored with domestic issues at public appearance­s, although by all accounts he remains highly involved in foreign policy.

The ageing leaders of two Kremlin-loyal parties, who avoided criticisin­g Putin during previous elections, have also announced their candidacie­s, as has Ksenia Sobchak, the controvers­ial socialite nicknamed the ‘‘Russian Paris Hilton’’.

– Telegraph Group

 ??  ?? Vladimir Putin
Vladimir Putin

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