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Russia to hold presidential elections in March 2012


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Posted

Russia to hold presidential elections in March 2012

2011-11-26 20:14:22 GMT+7 (ICT)

MOSCOW (BNO NEWS) -- The Russian government has decided that presidential elections will take place on March 4 next year, the upper house of parliament announced on Friday.

Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, who is widely expected to win the vote, will be officially nominated as presidential candidate during the United Russia party congress on Sunday. Incumbent President Dmitry Medvedev admitted in late September that he and Putin had planned this move a long time ago.

Three of the four parties in parliament have already announced their presidential candidates, but none are expected to be a real challenge for Putin. His main election rivals will be Vladimir Zhirinovsky, the leader of the right-wing LDPR party, and Communist leader Gennady Zyuganov.

The 'A Just Russia' party will decide on its participation in presidential polls at a party congress on December 10 and non-parliamentary parties such as the 'Right Cause and Yabloko' are also undecided on whether or not they will take part in the presidential race.

A parliamentary election is set for December 4 where the United Russia party is also expected to win. "I want to bring your attention to the necessity to achieve the maximum result at this vote because if we slacken away the parliament, we, like in some other countries, will not be able to make the necessary decisions in the needed time," Putin said at a meeting with party leaders on Thursday.

According to a new poll by the independent Levada Center think tank which was released on Friday, United Russia's representation in the parliament's lower chamber might drop from the current 315 seats to just 253 out of 450.

With Putin likely to win a presidential run next year, the prime minister previously proposed Medvedev to head the election list of United Russia during the legislative elections. This would make him prime minister at the end of his presidential term. "I believe that this will enhance the party's prestige and will guarantee its anticipated and honest victory," Putin said in September.

Putin first became acting president in December 1999 until he was elected for his first full term which began in May 2000. He won re-election in March 2004 and continued to serve in the country's highest office until May 2008 when term limits prevented him from running for a third consecutive presidential term.

Days before the end of Putin's second term as president, he undertook a series of controversial steps to increase the power of the prime minister. Medvedev had been widely expected to serve only one term so Putin could again become president after a short break.

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-- © BNO News All rights reserved 2011-11-26

Posted

Sounds like some sort of 'Russian Leap Frog' First Putin, then Medvedev, then Putin, .........then get ready for Medvedev again.

Posted

I was living in Moscow leading up to their first presidential elections in 1996. Those were true elections with many candidates from all over the political spectrum. They even had to do a run off because no candidate received more than 50% of the vote. Yeltsin had 35% and the commie Zyuganov had 32%. Yeltsin of course won the run-off. No chance in hell that Putin won't get well over 50%. I wonder how Russians feel about having one true election since the USSR dissolved?

Posted (edited)

It is well known Russia isn't a real democracy now. So is Thailand more of a real democracy than Russia, or vice versa? Another comparison to Russia that I read that I found interesting where the Iranian government was described as a mix of Russia and the Taliban.

Edited by Jingthing

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