Presidential election in Russia: Putin registered as fourth candidate

As of: January 29, 2024 1:07 p.m

It is not surprising: Kremlin leader Putin was the fourth candidate to be approved for the presidential election in March. So far, only candidates who are considered to have no chance or who even support Putin have been admitted.

Kremlin leader Vladimir Putin has officially received approval from Russia’s Central Election Commission as the fourth candidate to run in the presidential election in March. So far, only candidates who are considered to have no chance or who even support Putin have been admitted. As representatives of the parliamentary parties, they did not have to submit any signatures of support. Elections will take place in Russia from March 15th to 17th.

The remaining applicants have until January 31 to submit the necessary signatures of eligible voters and documents to register as candidates, said election director Ella Pamfilova in Moscow.

Putin’s victory is considered certain

The 71-year-old Putin, who has been in power for almost a quarter of a century, did not want to be nominated by the Kremlin party United Russia, but rather run as an individual candidate. He had the necessary supporting signatures collected, which were now found to be valid after a random check.

Russia’s media reported extensively on Putin’s admission, although there had been no doubt about it. An election victory for Putin is considered certain.

Will Kremlin critic Nadezhdin be approved?

It is questionable whether the candidate Boris Nadezhdin, who is supported by Russia’s anti-Kremlin opposition, will be allowed to vote. The 60-year-old demands that the war against Ukraine be ended. So far, Nadezhdin has collected more than 200,000 signatures from supporters, some of whom had waited in long queues – that’s about twice what is needed.

However, the electoral commission repeatedly declares many signatures invalid due to formal objections. In the sample of 60,000 signatures for Putin’s candidacy, the proportion of invalid supporter names was 0.15 percent.

There has been speculation for days about whether the liberal politician Nadezhdin will be admitted. Many observers rule this out.

Fifth term for Putin

For Putin it would be his fifth term in office, which he made possible through a constitutional change. In 2030, Putin, who has been waging war against Ukraine for almost two years, could run for election again – as president for another six years. In Russia, the Kremlin candidate has always been declared the winner of the election.

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