Putin urges Russians to vote as general election gets under way

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Russian president Vladimir Putin urged Russians on Thursday to vote in the upcoming parliamentary elections after a lacklustre campaign season.

With early voting already under way in the petrochemical sector, nationwide polls will open for the three-day election on Friday morning.

Putin’s United Russia party is expected to comfortably hold its dominance over the State Duma, where it currently holds a two-thirds majority.

After months of official moves to shut down any significant opposition, there are official concerns that low turnout could damage the ruling party’s prestige.

In an eleventh-hour video message on Thursday, Putin appealed to voters: “The election of the new parliament is without doubt the most important event in the life of our society and our country.

“We are all equally interested in responsible, efficient and respected people being elected… I count on your responsible, well-considered, patriotic, civic position.”

The landscape of this weekend’s vote

The Kremlin wants to retain control over the new parliament as it will still be in place in 2024 when Putin’s current term expires.

The long-standing Russian premier will then have to decide on running for re-election or choosing some other strategy to stay in power.

This year 14 parties are fielding candidates for half of the 450 seats in the Russian legislature’s lower house. But the three parties – aside from United Russia – that are expected to gain the 5 per cent of support necessary to get a seat rarely challenge the Kremlin.

The other half of the seats are chosen in individual constituencies, where independent candidates or those from small parties such as the liberal Yabloko party may have stronger chances.

Polls indicate that general approval for United Russia is low. But nevertheless, the Russian independent Centre for Current Policy predicts it will score 299 to 306 seats: down from the 343 it currently holds but within the range of the 303 seats needed to change the constitution.

The Centre believes most of the seats lost by United Russia will be picked up by the Communist Party. But this party also largely conforms to the Kremlin line.

In addition to the Duma election, nine Russian regions will be choosing governors, 39 regions will be choosing legislatures and voters in 11 cities will be choosing city councils.

“There is very little intrigue in these elections… In fact, they will not leave a special trace in political history,” Andrei Kolesnikov, an analyst at the Carnegie Moscow Center, told AP.

Ethical concerns may cast a long shadow over outcome

The result could be more readily contested this year than in previous elections. The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe has said it will not be sending observers this weekend, saying Russia imposed excessive restrictions.

In August, Moscow also added independent vote-monitoring group Golos to its list of foreign agents. This does not block its work but could allow any findings it issues to be more easily dismissed by the Kremlin.

The Russian Elections Commission ordered voting expanded to three days, concluding on Sunday, to reduce crowding at the polls amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Critics have warned this could increase the risk of ballot manipulation. Commission head Ella Pamfilova rejected the claim, saying there would be “total video surveillance” of polling stations and that ballots would be in secure containers.

According to surveys by the Russian state-funded pollster VTsIOM, more than one in 10 workers say they have been given directives by their bosses on how to vote.

Ukrainian politicians also sounded the alarm on Thursday over polling stations being set up in the annexed Crimea, where Moscow has issued 600,000 passports to pro-Russian separatists ahead of the vote.

On Thursday, Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova also hit out at the European parliament on Thursday after the bloc said it was prepared to not recognise the results if it deemed them fraudulent.

“As in the past, we will defend ourselves against unacceptable interference in the national democratic process of the Russian Federation,” she said. “We strongly condemn attempts by European deputies to manipulate European public opinion.”

Eliminating the opposition

The ongoing detention of opposition leader Alexei Navalny promoted mass protests across Russia earlier this year.

Navalny’s Foundation for Fighting Corruption and network of about 40 regional offices were outlawed as extremist groups in July, with many of his core team members arrested.

Some 50 websites run by either Navalny’s team or supporters have also been pulled down by Russian authorities in recent months.

But the group’s ‘Smart Voting’ initiative could still make inroads with the Russian electorate. It advises voters on which alternative candidate is the strongest in their area and might have a chance at unseating United Russia.

In 2019, the platform boosted opposition candidates who went on to win 20 of 45 seats on Moscow city council. In last year’s regional elections, United Russia lost its majority in Novosibirsk, Tambov and Tomsk.

It’s unclear how widely the Smart Voting programme will be used this year after authorities blocked access to its website. The service remains available through apps, but Russia has threatened Apple and Google with fines if it is not removed from their online stores.

The Foreign Ministry last week summoned U.S. Ambassador John Sullivan to protest election interference by American “digital giants.”

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