Russia prepared yesterday to return Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin to the Kremlin for a record third term as president, facing the first swell of protests in his 12-year domination and another rise in tensions with the West.
The 59-year-old former-KGB spy’s victory in today’s presidential ballot seemed beyond doubt.
State forecasts showed him storming to a first-round victory with 60 percent of the vote and his Communist rival Gennady Zyuganov — a dour, but seasoned lawmaker who is running for the fourth time — taking second with 15 percent.
The tycoon Mikhail Prokhorov and the flamboyant — but ultimately pro-Kremlin — populist Vladimir Zhirinovsky are expected to battle for third place, while the former upper house speaker Sergei Mironov is looking to finish last.
However, the landslide victory may only mask a new era of political uncertainty that has descended on Russia and contrasts sharply with the current prime minister’s stable first two terms as president between 2000 and 2008.
The emotional street protests that erupted in response to a fraud-tainted December parliamentary ballot have since swelled into a broader opposition movement whose reliance on social media echoed the Arab Spring revolts.
The largest demonstrations have thus far been confined to Russia’s main cities and the authorities point to polls showing the anti-Putin cause backed by only a marginal fraction of the nation.
Putin himself has put a brave face on the show of public displeasure by telling Western media executives he was “very happy about this situation.”
“I think this is a very good experience for Russia,” Putin said in an interview this week. “It means that the authorities ... have to actively react to what is happening in the country.”
However, Putin has never before ruled from anything less than an impregnable position of power and few dare to predict how he might respond now.
“The system needs comprehensive political and economic reform. But [Putin] has neither the financial nor the political capital to accomplish this,” said Mark Urnov, of the Higher School of Economics in Moscow.
The London-based Chatham House policy institute called Putin’s return “the latest stage in a continuing process of deterioration, not the start of a renewal, as some in the West might hope.”
The entire campaign has been driven by an undercurrent of anti-Western rhetoric whose indignant tone now threatens to set back the “reset” in relations that US President Barack Obama tried to strike in 2009.
“The days when Russia could be lectured or preached to are over,” Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov warned this week.
The campaign also saw Putin’s almost imperial refusal to debate his opponents — a feature of past elections that aimed to paint him as a man of action who was too busy to engage in polemics with rivals.
The four rank outsiders have all admitted to only having the ambition of finishing second and possibly joining a runoff should Putin fail to pick up 50 percent of the vote.
“I really want to make it into the second round,” the metals magnate Prokhorov said before attending a Friday night campaign concert that featured a special performance by Russian pop empress Alla Pugacheva.
Putin for his part looked relaxed as he leaned back against the table and addressed the nation one last time before the vote.
The marathon election stretches over nine time zones and began with the opening of polls in the far east yesterday. It culminates with their close in the western enclave of Kaliningrad 21 hours later today.
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