Putin more popular, says Medvedev

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has defended his decision not to seek a second term, saying that the nation likes Vladimir Putin more.

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has defended his decision not to seek a second term, saying that the nation likes Vladimir Putin more.

Mr Medvedev told Russian television stations that he and Mr Putin share the same goals, but acknowledged that Mr Putin has broader public support. “Putin undoubtedly is the most authoritative politician in our country and his ratings are higher,” he said.

Mr Medvedev and Mr Putin, who is now prime minister, announced over the weekend that they would swap places. Mr Putin stepped down in 2008 after eight years as president due to a term limit but he has continued to call the shots and is certain to win March’s presidential election.

While state-controlled national TV has given ample coverage to both leaders, Mr Putin has been far more astute in using television to cultivate his image as Russia’s most powerful person, riding a horse bare-chested through the mountains, swimming in a Siberian river and driving motorcycles.

The iPad-toting and Tweeting Mr Medvedev looks boyish compared to his steely-eyed mentor.

Last weekend, Mr Putin’s United Russia party approved his proposal that Mr Medvedev heads the party list for December’s parliamentary elections and becomes prime minister after the election.

Russia’s opposition has denounced the planned swap as a show of contempt for democracy.

Mr Putin is eligible to serve another 12 years because the presidential term will be extended from four to six years, which would make him the longest-serving leader since Soviet dictator Josef Stalin. Liberal politicians and commentators pointed at steady erosion of Russia’s post-Soviet democratic achievements under Mr Putin’s rule and warned that his return to the presidency would set the stage for further crackdowns on freedoms.

Critics described Mr Putin’s statement that he and Mr Medvedev had decided between them years ago which job they would take as evidence of their disdain for democratic procedures.

Mr Medvedev sought to counter such criticism by saying that the final choice will be made by voters.

Many Kremlin critics have said that Mr Putin has turned the elections in Russia into a farce by adopting laws that bar radical opposition from the ballot. The opposition has cited ample evidence of voting manipulations during previous elections.

“An honest and respectable vote count is impossible,” Communist Party chief Gennady Zyuganov said today.

Mr Medvedev insisted that his earlier statements that he wasn’t excluding running for a second term reflected a possibility of a shift in public sympathies and weren’t just a smokescreen.

“When I said that I didn’t exclude that, I didn’t cheat anyone,” he said. “Life could have made special, paradoxical corrections. What if electoral preferences would have changed for some reason?”

Mr Medvedev said that he and Mr Putin share “very close positions on most strategic issues, in fact on all strategic issues of the country’s development”.

“Having such positions, should we compete against one another?” he said. “Should we quarrel and swear at one another?”

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