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Monitors decry Russian vote as undemocratic

Putin dismisses criticism by European officials. His party's landslide is 'a sign of trust' from the electorate, he says.

THE WORLD

December 04, 2007|Megan K. Stack, Times Staff Writer

MOSCOW — European officials and vote monitors Monday denounced Russia's parliamentary elections as an undemocratic exercise engineered by President Vladimir V. Putin and his party.

"Neither a free, fair nor democratic election," said a German government spokesman.


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"Steered democracy," said the Swedish foreign minister.

"Not a level playing field," added the European observer mission.

With Putin's second presidential term drawing to a close and political uncertainty shadowing the country's future, Russians trooped to the polls Sunday to elect the lower house of parliament in balloting widely regarded as a plebiscite on the president's ability to run the country. After an intense and often surreal campaign that featured Putin as its star and almost sole player, voters delivered a landslide victory to his United Russia party.

Putin, a 55-year-old former KGB agent, appeared unruffled by the criticism. During his regular Monday meeting with Cabinet ministers, he called upon parliament to assemble quickly for its first session, rather than wait the usual 30 days after an election.

The victory was "a sign of trust," Putin said. "Russians will never allow the nation to take a destructive path, as happened in some other ex-Soviet nations."

With 98% of the ballots tallied, United Russia was poised to capture more than 64% of the vote. The results gave Putin's party 315 seats in the 450-seat lower house, more than the two-thirds needed to amend the constitution without the support of other parties.

Much of the criticism from the West focused not on events at the polls, but on the carnival-like campaign engineered by the Kremlin. European election monitors pointed out that Putin had personalized the parliamentary elections by putting his name at the top of the United Russia ticket, involving himself to a degree they considered inappropriate for a sitting president.

Heavily state-controlled media cheered on Putin's party, government resources were abused and opposition parties were harassed, the monitors said.

"If Russia is a managed democracy, these were managed elections," Luc van den Brande, head of the Council of Europe delegation, told reporters in Moscow. "For us, it is an unprecedented situation that a sitting president is running in an election."

Russia dismissed the complaints as unfair barbs hurled by Western foes.

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