The Pak Banker

Putin had to contrive a ‘landslide’

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Although Vladimir Putin’s landslide victory with 87 percent of the vote in the Russian election was no surprise, these elections were important both for the Kremlin and for those in opposition to Putin.

With voter turnout at 74 percent, the highest in history, anything less than a landslide victory would have suggested that those who did not vote for Putin represente­d a significan­t force in Russian politics.

This would have been particular­ly awkward in the case of young upstart Vladislav Davankov, who, with 3.79 percent of the vote, came a close third place.

Davankov has been mistakenly described as an anti-war candidate, he supports peace and negotiatio­ns, “but on Russia’s conditions and without one step backwards”, but his platform also called for “freedom of speech and opinion, instead of intoleranc­e and denunciati­ons”, and “openness and pragmatism instead of searching for new enemies”.

Several opposition figures, including the well-known blogger Maxim Katz, and barred candidate Boris Nadezhdin, publicly stated they would vote for him. According to Vote Abroad, Davankov gained the majority of votes at Russian polling stations in other countries.

With such a “subversive” candidate on the ballot sheet, nothing other than absolute victory would have allowed Putin to sleep at night. It was clear for some time that the Kremlin saw this election as a test of the regime’s legitimacy.

It is reported to have spent close to €1bn on the election campaign, with funds overwhelmi­ngly devoted to ensuring a large turnout. It was not enough for the Kremlin to win the election – it also had to demonstrat­e public engagement.

There was a push for early voting, especially in the occupied territorie­s in Ukraine, where electoral officials accompanie­d by armed men in uniform knocked on peo- ple’s doors and politely asked them if they would like to vote early.

Those who did not yet have Russian passports were allowed to use their Ukrainian IDs. In Russia there were the usual raffles, discos and canteens at polling stations to entice people out.

The elections also marked the culminatio­n of weeks of modest but consistent protest for those opposed to Putin. Alexei Navalny’s widow called for his supporters to turn up at polling stations around Russia at noon on 17 March to show their solidarity with the antiPutin movement. The turnout for these protests, both in Russia and abroad, was significan­t.

Navalny’s grave, which authoritie­s had cleared of the flowers that mourners had brought since his funeral, was covered instead with ballots voters had brought from polling stations. Other acts of rebellion marked the elections as well, which even the official press could not ignore.

State-owned news agency Tass reported arrests after a number of fires and explosions, with voters throwing molotov cocktails at polling stations, or else ballot spoilage by pouring paint, or green disinfecta­nt, known as zelyonka, into ballot boxes.

The ironic symbolism of the latter will not have been lost on voters or the regime: Navalny was seriously injured in the eye when he was doused with the green disinfecta­nt mixed with a corrosive substance in 2017.

In many ways, even though the result was known in advance, these elections have some telling lessons. We should be heartened by the acts of brave resistance, which show that Russian civil society is still alive in spite of Putin’s attempts to repress it.

However, the majority of the population still support the regime. Veteran Russia analyst Mark Galeotti suggests that without fraud, Putin would still have been easily elected with a 60 percent majority in the first round.

That Putin would obviously try to push that number upward despite widespread support shows that the Kremlin has abandoned any pretence that Russia is anything other than a one-party dictatorsh­ip. Putin also seemed emboldened by how well the election went; at his post-electoral press conference, he finally said Navalny’s name out loud.

With his power comfortabl­y cemented, he is no longer afraid of his arch-nemesis, or even his ghost. It is likely he will use the result of these Potemkin elections as a stamp of legitimacy to justify more repression, intensifie­d war and another round of mobilisati­on.

try to push that number upward despite widespread support shows that the

Kremlin has abandoned any pretence that Russia is anything other than a one-party dictatorsh­ip. "

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