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Russia: Dmitry Medvedev Defends Decision Not To Run For Presidency

Russia Dmitry Medvedev Presidency

VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV   09/30/11 07:11 AM ET   AP

MOSCOW — President Dmitry Medvedev defended his decision not to seek a second term in an interview broadcast Friday, saying that the nation likes Vladimir Putin more.

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

Medvedev and Putin, who is now prime minister, announced over the weekend that they would swap places. 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 have given ample coverage to both leaders, 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 the butterfly stroke in a Siberian river and driving motorcycles. The IPad-toting and Tweeting Medvedev looks boyish compared to his steely-eyed mentor.

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

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

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 Putin's rule and warned that his return to presidency would likely set the stage for further crackdowns on freedoms.

Critics described Putin's statement that he and Medvedev had decided between them years ago which job they would take as evidence of their disdain for democratic procedures. They said it also revealed Medvedev's role as mere placeholder for his mentor.

Medvedev sought to counter such criticism by saying that the final choice will be made by voters. Many Kremlin critics have said that Putin has turned the elections in Russia into farce by adopting laws that that bar radical opposition from the ballot. The opposition has cited ample evidence of vote manipulations during the past elections.

"An honest and respectable vote count is impossible," Communist Party chief Gennady Zyuganov said Friday.

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?"

Medvedev said that he and 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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MOSCOW — President Dmitry Medvedev defended his decision not to seek a second term in an interview broadcast Friday, saying that the nation likes Vladimir Putin more. Medvedev told Russian tele...
MOSCOW — President Dmitry Medvedev defended his decision not to seek a second term in an interview broadcast Friday, saying that the nation likes Vladimir Putin more. Medvedev told Russian tele...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nappyman
Hatred is gained as much by good works as by evil
08:52 AM on 10/02/2011
Putin doesn't need to circumvent democracy. He is actually popular. In the end people will give up democracy if they believe you will improve their lives.
03:49 PM on 10/01/2011
President Dmitry Medvedev defended his decision not to seek a second term in an interview broadcast Friday, saying that the nation likes Vladimir Putin more."-----Sounds fishy and I hope Dmitry is not in danger or was COERCED or made that decision in duress. He seems like a gentleman and one who is in favor of peace. God bless and protect Dmitry forever.
01:22 PM on 10/01/2011
These good comments prove that reasonable people can disagree. However, the first issue that needs to be confronted is the failure of United Russia to allow freedom of ideas and open debate. Until these things are assured, visionaries like Prokhrov and others will never have the chance to bring real, unmanaged democracy to Russia. With open campaigning, free debate, and secure elections, the people of Russia can say who they want to lead them. Right now, it appears to me that the whole charade is being performed (badly, I might add) by Surkov, putting his own needs above those of Russia.

Putin is only more popular because the ideas of new reformers cannot be heard under Russia's managed democracy. In a real democracy, the social and economic reforms proposed by Prokhorov would be so popular with Russians, that this election might be a real contest. This fear of contest is what has guided the United Russia party's strategy over the past few weeks, but they fail to see that though open debate like this, others are watching. Not just the West, but also Russians who are growing tired of power grabs and the status quo.
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Caymus77
We the people ARE the Government
12:53 PM on 10/01/2011
Putin is a dictator pulling these strings. Medvedev get's his instructions from Putin and would be toast if he did not follow them.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
12:24 PM on 10/01/2011
One gets the sense that Dmitry Medvedev would be killed -- literally-- if he doesn't support the thug Putin
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MANOFCOMMONSENSE
The #1 Republican Team? Bush/Shady.WMD?$$
09:42 AM on 10/01/2011
Yes Putin would make a good Republican!!................................................................................................................................Mikhail Khodorkovsky to Vladimir Putin: you owe me answers ...
Mar 17, 2010 ... Mikhail Khodorkovsky, the jailed former head of Russia's biggest oil company, has thrown down the gauntlet to Vladimir Putin, the man many ... Lawyers for Mr Khodorkovsky, who has been in prison since his arrest in 2003 and ... In written answers to questions put to him by The Independent through his ...

www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/mikhail-khodorkovsky-to



Russia
Branches: Executive--president, prime minister (chairman of the government). ... Principal U.S. exports (2010)--oil/gas equipment, meat, motor vehicles and ..... Putin moved quickly to reassert Moscow's control over the regions, whose .... Russia has one of the highest prison population rates in the world, at 613 per 100000. ...

www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/3183.htm

Putin pulls plug on last critical TV channel | World news | ...
Putin pulls plug on last critical TV channel. Cash-starved Russian independent station taken off air during ad break 'for the benefit of the audience', Kremlin says ...

www.guardian.co.uk/world/2003/jun/23/media.russia
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sf1000000
Screw being nice its highly overrated
08:42 AM on 10/01/2011
Yes and in my country we call them tyrants, dictators, perhaps the name CZAR comes to mind?
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grizzly bear55
King of the forest
07:22 AM on 10/01/2011
They made a gentlemen agreement that Medvedev will only be president for one year allowing Putin to run again.

Both kept their word.

I wish politicians learn from them what respecting your word means.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FACTISFACT
A war veteran. Finally retired
03:21 AM on 10/01/2011
Yes, the Russian president is a very intelligent person who intentionally used the word to attract the world community of nations attention to the word that very soon this authoritative person will establish an authoritarian autocratic rule in Russia.

Congratulation President, and congratulation Putin for marching back to square one again without pride but with prejudice..
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wonderfullone
02:03 AM on 10/01/2011
Putin has a "Small Man complex and that makes him a very dangerous midget.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wonderfullone
02:01 AM on 10/01/2011
Well what do you expect from the EX Head of the KGB ?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Whistlejackett
Hey stop doing that
01:09 AM on 10/01/2011
KGB or CIA is all the same. They both need to perish.
12:44 AM on 10/01/2011
Putin, has never been ex-KGB. He is still KGB, something Medvedev understands. And he is not a man to be trifled with. Medvedev is stepping down because it has been dictated by law. And in Russia, Putin is law.
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12:08 AM on 10/01/2011
What else did they expect the Gopher to say? This is news??

"President Dmitry Medvedev defended his decision not to seek a second term in an interview broadcast Friday, saying that the nation likes Vladimir Putin more."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ramon Noches
Retired Air Force
11:28 PM on 09/30/2011
I imagine Putin told Medvedev not to run. Putin, an ex KBG chief is and has always been in charge. He is smart if not brilliant and is a communist from head to toe. Looking into his eyes one would not see his soul, but a cold, calculating mystery that only he knows. Could you imagine if President Obama ever said that he peered into Putin's eyes and could see his soul how Republicans would crucify him at every turn. Therein lays the difference and contrast in treating our current president with proper respect and decorum. Politicians, even Democrats, made very little of those remarks made by President Bush. President Obama's policies, decisions, or comments did not created all of the constant vitriol coming from Republicans, because all of that was well underway even before he took the oath of office.