Putin Agrees to Run for Russian President

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Russian strongman Vladimir Putin on Sunday agreed to be the ruling party candidate in 2012 presidential elections that he is certain to win and that will fix the country's political future.

His nomination at a glitzy congress of United Russia was a formality after President Dmitry Medvedev announced in September he would give way for Putin in the March 2012 polls and instead take the job of prime minister.

The congress comes one week ahead of parliamentary polls on December 4 which United Russia is certain to win but could, for the first time in recent years, show that the authorities' once colossal public support is on the wane.

"I am grateful to (President) Dmitry Anatolyevich Medvedev and to the United Russia congress for nominating me and asking me to run for president of the Russian Federation," Putin said.

"Of course, I gratefully accept this offer, thank you," Putin added. The chairman of United Russia, Boris Gryzlov, had earlier announced that it had agreed to put forward Putin for the presidency.

Putin has dominated Russia for over a decade since taking over from its first post-Soviet president Boris Yeltsin in 2000. In 2008 he handed over the presidency to Medvedev after serving the maximum two consecutive terms.

"There is no more successful, experienced or popular politician in Russia than Vladimir Putin," Medvedev said in a speech praising his mentor.

"We have officially determined our political future not just for the short term but for the long term," he said. "There is no deception here."

Referring to his tandem with Putin and United Russia, Medvedev said: “There is no other team than ours. There simply is not."

The nomination came at a mass congress attended by over 10,000 people at the Luzhniki sports arena, the same place where in September Medvedev announced he would be stepping aside to allow Putin to return to the Kremlin.

Medvedev and Putin made a joint entry at the election-rally style meeting to loud music and flashing lights with the delegates waving flags and chanting "Russia! Russia!".

The 59-year-old Putin's expected return could keep him in power through 2024 and turn him into Russia's longest-serving leader -- as either premier or head of state -- since the Soviet dictator Josef Stalin.

The nomination comes just one week ahead of elections to the State Duma lower house of parliament which United Russia is expected to win but with a significantly smaller majority than in the last elections on 2007.

In his speech clearly aimed at improving United Russia's election ratings, Medvedev said that Putin's decade in power had seen the creation of a new middle class in Russia and an eightfold increase in salaries.

He said that the results of the December 4 polls would have an effect on the presidential polls on March 4 and urged Russians to vote for United Russia in the legislative elections.

"I am convinced that our victory is not just advantageous but essential for the future of the country," said Medvedev.

Two polls published on the eve of the congress showed United Russia keeping its current majority but winning no more than 262 seats in the 450-member chamber.

Comments 1
Default-user-icon Who Cares (Guest) 27 November 2011, 22:33

What a surprise! We never saw it coming! How could an already shaky democracy survive the tricks of an autocrat intent on turning back the clock? Russians might as well accept the fact that they have a new tsar, albeit one that loses his crown for 8 years but gets to come back to wear it for another 8.

A true farce.