Putin wins right to extend his rule until 2036 in
landslide vote
Constitutional amendments allow Russian president to
run two more consecutive times.
By EMMA
ANDERSON AND ZOYA SHEFTALOVICH 7/1/20, 9:25 PM CET Updated 7/2/20, 3:01 AM CET
Surprise!
Putin won.
Russians
voted by a landslide to pass constitutional changes that will allow Vladimir
Putin to run for president twice more, potentially extending his rule until
2036.
According
to official preliminary results published Thursday at 2:50 a.m., around 78
percent voted yes to the amendments, versus 21 percent against. Turnout was
about 65 percent.
The
amendments will "reset" the two-term presidential limit to zero,
allowing Putin to run for another two six-year, consecutive mandates after his
current term ends in 2024. He has already led Russia for more than two decades,
as either president or prime minister.
Putin has
said he is yet to decide whether he would run again. If he does run in the next
elections, set for 2024 and 2030, he could be in charge longer than any ruler
since Peter the Great, including Joseph Stalin. By the time of the 2036
election, Putin would be 83.
The outcome
of the election was never in doubt: Copies of Russia’s new constitution went on
sale in bookstores days before the results were known.
Voting took
place amid the continuing coronavirus pandemic, with some polling stations set
up in parks and other outdoor locations. There were reports of widespread
irregularities including inconsistent tallies of results, and voters being
pressured to go to the polls to increase turnout.
Late last
month, Putin ordered a one-off payment of 10,000 roubles (€126) to be made to
those with children under 16, with the cash starting to flow into bank accounts
on polling day Wednesday. As is now customary in Russia, polling stations held
raffles and competitions with prizes, while companies were asked to boost their
employees' turnout and given the ability to check whether their workers voted,
Reuters reported.
Russia also
issued 500,000 new passports and 29,000 temporary certificates to allow more
people to vote, First Deputy Minister of Internal Affairs Alexander Gorovoy
said in a statement on Twitter.
Opposition
leader Alexei Navalny called the results "fake and an enormous lie"
and the vote "invalid, illegal," in a statement. "We will never
recognize this result," he added.
Navalny
called for his supporters to take to the streets in September, when he said the
peak of the coronavirus pandemic should have passed. “What Putin fears
most," Navalny said, "is the street," calling for "hundreds
of thousands and millions" to protest.
Russia's
Central Election Commission (CEC) said it had received 7,196 complaints from
citizens about the vote, 591 of them on election day. The CEC considered 92
percent of all the complaints, but none required consideration at a meeting of
the commission, it said.
The vote
was originally set for April but was postponed due to the pandemic. The ballot
was stretched out over seven days, culminating on Wednesday, as a preventative
measure at a time when Russia has been reporting thousands of new COVID-19
cases each day.
David M.
Herszenhorn contributed reporting.
This
article has been updated.
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