Russia on Friday barred the sole liberal challenger to Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin in the March 4 presidential election in a move the opposition and Washington said undermined the polls’ legitimacy.
The Russian Central Election Commission said it could not accept about a quarter of the registration signatures gathered by Yabloko (Apple) party founder Grigory Yavlinsky because they were either photocopies of originals or fakes.
“I am sad to announce that we will not able to register Yavlinsky as a candidate,” election commission member Sergei Danilenko told a special hearing.
Russia’s presidential election rules have grown progressively stricter since 1996 and now require all independent candidates to collect 2 million signatures to win registration.
RESTRICTIONS
The restriction has been heavily criticized by the candidates as well as the growing protest movement against Putin, who will be standing for a third term as president in the polls after his four-year stint as prime minister.
The Party of People’s Freedom established by a group of former liberal Cabinet members called on Putin to delay the election because of the decision, while Yavlinsky vowed to challenge the move in court.
“We are preparing an appeal,” the 59-year-old economist told reporters. “I am certain that Putin is the person who issued the instruction” for the election authorities to act.
“Open political competition requires that electoral laws be applied fairly to all parties and candidates,” US Department of State spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said. “Russians, like Americans and people everywhere, seek free, fair, transparent elections and a genuine choice when they go to the ballot box.”
The decision could add still more momentum to a spreading opposition movement that plans to stage the third in a series of rallies in Moscow and other big cities against Putin on Feb. 4.
FAIR VOTE
Putin spokesman Dmitry Peskov moved quickly to stamp out charges from Yabloko that the decision laid waste to Kremlin claims that it supports a fair vote.
“If one of the candidates fails to collect the required number of signatures, this does not mean you can make claims about the vote’s illegitimacy,” Peskov told the RIA Novosti state news agency.
Putin doubled the number of signatures required for candidates’ registration in 2004, a year when he stepped up his campaign to centralize power by also announcing an end to direct elections for regional governors.
RULES
The presidential election rules were tightened again in 2007 when Putin was about to hand power to his hand-picked successor Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, giving candidates just a month to rally their support instead of the previous three months.
Facing Russia’s largest protests since the turbulent 1990s, Medvedev last month proposed reducing the required number of signatures — a move the opposition said came too late.
The vote is now set to feature Putin and three leaders of nominally opposition parties who all lost presidential elections before, as well as the billionaire tycoon Mikhail Prokhorov.
A precious-metals magnate who owns the New Jersey Nets basketball team in the NBA, Prokhorov also criticized officials for threatening Yavlinsky with expulsion this week, calling current election rules unfair.
Yavlinsky, who was shown winning less than 3 percent in most polls, founded Yabloko in 1993 as Russia struggled with a post-Soviet economic crisis that left many impoverished and looking for social protection.
He always promoted more -socially-oriented policies and twice ran for president, failing to break the 10 percent barrier in 1996 and 2000.
ACTIONABLE ADVICE: The majority of chatbots tested provided guidance on weapons, tactics and target selections, with Perplexity and Meta AI deemed to be the least safe From school shootings to synagogue bombings, leading artificial intelligence (AI) chatbots helped researchers plot violent attacks, according to a study published on Wednesday that highlighted the technology’s potential for real-world harm. Researchers from the nonprofit watchdog Center for Countering Digital Hate and CNN posed as 13-year-old boys in the US and Ireland to test 10 chatbots, including ChatGPT, Google Gemini, Perplexity, Deepseek and Meta AI. Eight of the chatbots assisted the make-believe attackers in more than half the responses, providing advice on “locations to target” and “weapons to use” in an attack, the study said. The chatbots had become a “powerful accelerant for
Australians were downloading virtual private networks (VPNs) in droves, while one of the world’s largest porn distributors said it was blocking users from its platforms as the country yesterday rolled out sweeping online age restriction. Australia in December became the first country to impose a nationwide ban on teenagers using social media. A separate law now requires artificial intelligence (AI)-powered chatbot services to keep certain content — including pornography, extreme violence and self-harm and eating disorder material — from minors or face fines of up to A$49.5 million (US$34.6 million). The country also joined Britain, France and dozens of US states requiring
Since the war in the Middle East began nearly two weeks ago, the telephone at Ron Hubbard’s bomb shelter company in Texas has not stopped ringing. Foreign and US clients are rushing to buy his bunkers, seeking refuge in case of air raids, nuclear fallout or apocalypse. With the US and Israel pounding Iran, and Tehran retaliating with strikes across the region, Hubbard has seen demand for his product soar, mostly from Gulf nation customers in Bahrain, Qatar, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates. “You can imagine how many people are thinking: ‘I wish I had a bomb shelter,’” Hubbard, 63, said in
STILL IN POWER: US intelligence reports showed that the Iranian regime is not in danger of collapse and retains control of the public, casting doubt on Trump’s exit Nearly every US Senate Democrat on Wednesday signed a letter sent to US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth requesting a “swift investigation” of airstrikes on a girls’ school in Iran that killed scores of children and any other potential US military actions causing civilian harm. Reuters reported on Thursday last week that US military investigators believe it is likely that US forces were responsible for the Feb. 28 strike on the school, as US and Israeli forces launched attacks on Iran. “The results of this school attack are horrific. The majority of those killed in the strikes were girls between the ages