Russian media see election flaws
- Published
Scepticism has filled many Russian newspapers following what some media outlets consider to have been a flawed parliamentary election, with some party leaders and opposition activists also using Twitter to voice concerns over the election process.
However, several commentators have detected a change approaching in Russian politics, after the drop in support for Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's ruling United Russia party.
NEWSPAPERS
Mikhail Rostovsky in Moskovskiy Komsomolets
No 'Orange Revolution' will happen in Russia on the cusp of 2011-12. The authorities will ensure whatever result from the election they consider necessary. [However, the results] may be deemed unfair by a considerable part of the Russian population. If that happens, the keynote of the Russian political process in the near future may be a gradual erosion in the legitimacy of the authorities.
Editorial in Vedomosti
Those who tried to sterilise the election and the vote count probably unknowingly did the authorities a bad turn. They confirmed society's fears. It is highly probable that many people will refuse to recognise the results of such an "election" instead of the real people's choice, and will wish to count the votes themselves.
Kirill Rogov in Novaya Gazeta
The predictable result of the election is that the results will not be regarded as legitimate by the population. The authorities are to blame for this. Never before have we seen such shameless pressure, such brazen pressuring of undesirable candidates and observers, such nakedly lawless behaviour on the part of officials and such an evident show of political commitment from the Central Electoral Commission.
Aleksandr Rubtsov in Novaya Gazeta
Having put himself above everything and having put everything around him down, Putin has made the system fully dependent on his own charisma. Without its leader, United Russia will instantly collapse and disperse. After this election, there will be a pause... and everything will "stabilise" again, but not forever: the process has started.
Head of the Political Information Centre Alexei Mukhin in Izvestia
I hope this will show the party that it is necessary to change, but not to become a bronze monument by ignoring the electorate's signals. This loss of votes is the result of the decision made by Putin and Medvedev to "exchange their posts".
Leonid Radzikhovsky in Rossiyskaya Gazeta
Yes, the ruling authorities have won, but their moral capital is declining. And if the system is weak inside, any outside impact (such as a drop in oil prices) will be enough, and it may collapse.
Many of Russia's best-known Twitter-users have been giving their reaction to the results, with Russia's most followed tweeter, President Dmitry Medvedev, hailing United Russia's poll success.
However, several high-profile party leaders and opposition activists used their tweets to claim election fraud, including opposition activist Roman Dobrokhotov, who was detained in Moscow on election day and criticised Mr Medvedev.
President Dmitry Medvedev
Thank you for supporting United Russia!
Opposition activist Roman Dobrokhotov
Whose support? No-one's supporting you, you cardboard buffoon. Only [chairman of the Central Electoral Commission] Churov and his wondermaths.
United Russia MP Alexander Khinshtein
When people say that it's only crooks, officials and forced slaves who vote for United Russia, they're spitting in the faces of millions of people!
A Just Russia leader Sergei Mironov
What's happening in St Petersburg is completely outrageous - they're brazenly rewriting the electoral returns. Tomorrow we'll be out on the streets.
LDPR leader Vladimir Zhirinovsky
We have been recording violations in every region today.
Popular blogger and anti-corruption campaigner Alexei Navalny
The party of crooks and thieves managed to crawl above 50% after all. I'll have to review my assessments of their dishonesty.
Popular photo-blogger Ilya Varlamov
Oh! United Russia's got more than 50%. Well, that's it, now I can go to sleep, without any fear of waking up in a different country.
Popular blogger and opposition activist Oleg Kozyrev
A clear success for protest voting. United Russia has collapsed and fallen below 50%. By the presidential election, they'll have slumped to 15%, where they belong.
selects and translates news from radio, television, press, news agencies and the internet from 150 countries in more than 70 languages. It is based in Caversham, UK, and has several bureaux abroad.
- Published6 March 2012
- Published24 November 2011
- Published6 March 2012