The Norwalk Hour

Putin claims six-year term amid allegation­s of fraud

Vote condemned as not free or fair

- By Francesca Ebel

MOSCOW - The Kremlin on Monday brushed aside condemnati­on of the Russian presidenti­al election as neither free nor fair and rejected allegation­s of pervasive electoral fraud as the country’s Central Election Commission claimed record-high turnout and said that Vladimir Putin easily secured a new sixyear term.

With genuine opposition candidates barred from running and the Kremlin exerting tight control over the news media to Putin’s benefit, Western nations, including the United States, denounced the vote as failing to meet basic democratic standards. Many Russians protested by forming long lines at polling stations at noon Sunday.

Putin’s spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, waved off the criticism. “We do not agree with the United States’ assessment of the election,” Peskov said. “De facto the United States is involved in the war in Ukraine and is de facto at war with us. This is not an opinion worth listening to and not an opinion that will be of importance to us.”

On Monday, Russia’s Central Electoral Commission predictabl­y claimed a landslide victory for Putin. With 100% of votes counted, the commission said Putin had won 87.28% - his highest tally in any of his previous four elections. In his last campaign in 2018, the authoritie­s said he received 77.5% .

Putin, who took power upon Boris Yeltsin’s resignatio­n on Dec. 31, 1999, has defied term limits since 2008, when, after serving the maximum two full terms, he swapped jobs with Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev. Four years later, they swapped again. In 2020, Putin engineered constituti­onal amendments allowing him to rule until 2036.

The election commission also reported “record turnout” - with 87.1 million Russians, totaling 77.44% of voters - heading to the polls. Previously, the highest turnout in a Russian presidenti­al election was recorded in 1991, after the fall of the Soviet Union, when Yeltsin was elected with 74.66% of voters participat­ing.

This year’s vote, amid Russia’s continuing war against Ukraine, took place one month after the sudden death of Alexei Navalny, Putin’s most formidable political rival, in an Arctic prison colony. In areas of Ukraine occupied by Russia, electoral teams accompanie­d by soldiers forced residents to cast ballots at gunpoint.

The electoral commission claimed that in occupied areas of Ukraine’s Kherson and Zaporizhzh­ia regions, Putin won 88.12% and 92.95% of votes respective­ly. Russia controls only parts of Kherson and Zaporizhzh­ia - two of four Ukrainian regions it claims illegally to have annexed - and many residents are displaced.

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