Highlights

  • Putin set to get another 6-year term as President
  • March 15-17 contest to keep Putin in Kremlin till 2030
  • All opposition & dissent quashed, Putin sure to win

Latest news

Samsung Galaxy M17 5G Review: Best Budget Samsung Phone Under ₹15,000?

Samsung Galaxy M17 5G Review: Best Budget Samsung Phone Under ₹15,000?

OnePlus 15R first look: OnePlus changes the R-series playbook

OnePlus 15R first look: OnePlus changes the R-series playbook

India's retail inflation rises to 0.71% in November

India's retail inflation rises to 0.71% in November

Cabinet approves CoalSETU window for auction of coal to boost industrial use and export

Cabinet approves CoalSETU window for auction of coal to boost industrial use and export

Cabinet approves Minimum Support Price for Copra for 2026 season

Cabinet approves Minimum Support Price for Copra for 2026 season

Fire never left: Vinesh Phogat comes out of retirement, targets LA Olympics

Fire never left: Vinesh Phogat comes out of retirement, targets LA Olympics

Flexible office segment in India set to grow faster, over 25% annually by 2027: Report

Flexible office segment in India set to grow faster, over 25% annually by 2027: Report

Rahul Gandhi flags issue of air pollution, seeks discussion in Lok Sabha

Rahul Gandhi flags issue of air pollution, seeks discussion in Lok Sabha

Putin set for election coronation in vote with no opposition

Putin has been in power since the final day of 1999, and victory in the March 15-17 contest will allow him to stay in the Kremlin until at least 2030.

Putin set for election coronation in vote with no opposition

Vladimir Putin is set to secure another six-year term as Russian leader this weekend in a vote the Kremlin says will show society is fully behind his assault on Ukraine.

In power as president or prime minister since the final day of 1999, Putin has quashed all forms of opposition and dissent, exerting a level of domestic control that ensures the result is in no doubt.

Victory in the March 15-17 contest will allow him to stay in the Kremlin until at least 2030, longer than any Russian leader since Catherine the Great in the eighteenth century.

The poll comes at a time of high confidence for the former KGB agent.

Russia's troops in Ukraine have chalked up their first battlefield gains in months.

And Putin's most strident critic, Alexei Navalny, died in an Arctic prison colony last month.

Though Putin is blasted as a pariah in the West, the Kremlin says the vote will show that Russians at home are unified behind him and his offensive.

"He has no rivals at the moment and cannot have any," Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov said last year.

"Nobody can realistically compete with him," he said.

This year Putin will officially face three other contenders -- Kremlin-approved candidates designed to give a facade of competition.

Anti-Putin politician Boris Nadezhdin was blocked from standing after tens of thousands of Russians backed his surprise bid to run on a pro-peace message.

Despite the ceremonial undertones, the Kremlin takes the electoral process seriously.

Moscow has poured resources into a campaign designed to whip up enthusiasm for Putin.

The president has toured the country and was filmed flying in the cockpit of a supersonic nuclear bomber, burnishing his tough-guy credentials.

The Kremlin is aiming to secure a higher level of support for Putin than in his previous four election wins.

Less than a year after an aborted mutiny by mercenary boss Yevgeny Prigozhin, the Kremlin will want to show possible rivals and successors that Putin is secure on his throne.

From exile and behind bars, Russia's remaining opposition figures still hope they can spoil the procession.

They want anti-Putin Russians to form huge queues outside polling stations on the final day of voting.

Navalny's widow, Yulia Navalnaya, says the show of dissent could spook Putin.

The Kremlin appears unfazed.

"We will hold the kind of elections that our people need," Peskov said earlier this month, dismissing those who describe the vote as neither free nor fair.

"We won't tolerate any criticism of our democracy. Our democracy is the best."

Also watch: Navalny's ally assaulted with hammer in Lithuania

ADVERTISEMENT

Up Next

Putin set for election coronation in vote with no opposition

Putin set for election coronation in vote with no opposition

Japan lifts tsunami warning after magnitude 6.7 quake

Japan lifts tsunami warning after magnitude 6.7 quake

Artefacts from India among items stolen in ‘high value’ burglary at UK museum

Artefacts from India among items stolen in ‘high value’ burglary at UK museum

Pakistan warns social media platforms of possible nationwide bans

Pakistan warns social media platforms of possible nationwide bans

6.7-magnitude earthquake strikes northern Japan, triggers tsunami alert

6.7-magnitude earthquake strikes northern Japan, triggers tsunami alert

US approves sale of advanced technology, support for F-16 fighter jets to Pakistan

US approves sale of advanced technology, support for F-16 fighter jets to Pakistan

ADVERTISEMENT

editorji-whatsApp

More videos

Modi-Putin car ride highlighted as US Congresswoman criticizes Trump's India policy

Modi-Putin car ride highlighted as US Congresswoman criticizes Trump's India policy

Donald Trump launches ‘Trump Gold Card’ visa allowing top foreign graduates to stay in US

Donald Trump launches ‘Trump Gold Card’ visa allowing top foreign graduates to stay in US

Netanyahu, Modi to meet 'very soon': Israel PMO

Netanyahu, Modi to meet 'very soon': Israel PMO

Narrow escape: Plane crashes into car during emergency landing on Florida highway | Watch

Narrow escape: Plane crashes into car during emergency landing on Florida highway | Watch

How Australia is banning under-16s from social media

How Australia is banning under-16s from social media

Australia bans under-16s from social media in world-first crackdown

Australia bans under-16s from social media in world-first crackdown

Pakistan and India, they were going at it, I ended the war: Trump

Pakistan and India, they were going at it, I ended the war: Trump

US social media vetting triggers major disruptions for H-1B visa applicants in India

US social media vetting triggers major disruptions for H-1B visa applicants in India

Cambodia-Thailand clashes spread on border as toll rises

Cambodia-Thailand clashes spread on border as toll rises

Magnitude 7.5 quake hits northern Japan, injures 30 and damages roads

Magnitude 7.5 quake hits northern Japan, injures 30 and damages roads

Editorji Technologies Pvt. Ltd. © 2022 All Rights Reserved.