Pro-Putin majority party sweeps 1st nationwide election day

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Pro-Putin majority party sweeps 1st nationwide election day

United Russia candidates won most of Sunday’s municipal polls, and opposition politicians had to admit there were very few voting irregularities.

Sunday’s nationwide election day was the first for Russia.  Governors were elected by a direct vote in eight regions, and two  internal republics – Dagestan and Ingushetia – held parliamentary  vote on the issue. Sixteen regions elected members of  legislatives assemblies.

Russian media fixed their attention on the mayoral poll in the  capital. The preliminary result shows incumbent acting Mayor  Sergey Sobyanin won the elections in the first round – he  received slightly over 51 percent of the votes. The runner up –   opposition blogger Aleksey Navalny refuses to recognize the results and  is calling for a recount; threatening that his supporters would  take to the streets.

Although Sobyanin ran as an independent in the mayoral poll  United Russia can still credit itself for the victory – Sobyanin  is a prominent and longtime member of the party and a close ally  of United Russia leader PM Dmitry Medvedev. Deputy head of the  party’s General Council, Sergey Zheleznyak, told reporters on  Monday that the incumbent’s victory could be explained by his  professionalism and unique experience. Zheleznyak also praised  the honesty of the poll, recalling Sobyanin’s request for United  Russia deputies to submit signatures in support of his rivals,  simply to make the procedure more competitive.

Another apparent victory of the parliamentary majority is that  the poll has been recognized as valid and fair both by officials  and public activists. The head of the Public Election Monitoring  HQ, veteran liberal journalist Aleksey Venediktov   announced that the results of manual ballot counts matched the  data of the automated ballot processing “to a single  vote”.

United Russia also secured victory in the overwhelming majority  of the other regions that held gubernatorial elections. The  second most populated of the federation districts – the Moscow  Region (the area around the Moscow that excludes the city itself  and a large sector of the prospective development area dubbed the  New Moscow) elected incumbent acting governor Andrey Vorobyov who  also is a long-time United Russia activist. 73% of voters  supported Vorobyov, with closest rivals running from the  Communists and liberal party Yabloko getting 10.6% and 5.6% of  votes respectively. Both runners-up have already recognized that  the elections were fair, despite several recorded violations,  such as a minor brawl at one of the polling stations and  publishing exit poll results on the internet before the voting  was over.

United Russia also ranked highly in other federation subjects.  The party candidates, many of whom, like Sobyanin and Vorobyov,  were incumbent acting heads of their regions won by huge margins  in Chukotka, Magadan Region, Khakassia, Vladimir Region and  others. Voters in the flood-stricken Khabarovsk Region in the Far  East also gave their support to United Russia member and  incumbent acting governor. The legislative assembly of the North  Caucasus Republic of Ingushetia voted for United Russia member  Yunus-Bek Yevkurov and Dagestan parliamentarians elected United  Russia member Ramazan Abdulatipov, though these votes were not  proper elections but demonstration of confidence in the  candidates appointed by the Federal authorities.

Only one region – the Far Eastern Trans-Baikal – voted for Fair  Russia candidate Konstantin Iliyinsky, who also was the incumbent  acting governor.

United Russia dominated at the parliamentary polls that were held  in 16 regions, followed by the Communist Party and the  nationalist populists LDPR.  The secretary of the  party’s General Council, Sergey Neverov, told reporters on Monday  that United Russia would form a parliamentary majority in all 16  legislatures adding that its candidates managed to secure 636  seats of the total of 820.

Neverov also emphasized the intense competition and exceptional  fairness of the regional parliamentary elections, saying that the  victory was because of lessons learned from previous polls where  the party’s results were more modest.

In addition, eight Russian cities held mayoral elections on  national election day (Moscow is not included as it is considered  a separate Federation subject). United Russia also ranked first  in most polls with one significant exception – early results  indicate that the Urals industrial center of Yekaterinburg  elected Yevgeniy Roizman as its new city head.

Roizman is an extremely controversial figure, most known for  creating and running a network of makeshift drug rehabs,  employees of which had been tried and convicted of kidnapping and  illegal imprisonment. The politician has also described his fight  against drug dealers in a colorful and popular blog, gaining  notoriety not only in his home city but also across the  country.  The popularity, in turn, has brought Roizman  to the attention of billionaire politician Mikhail Prokhorov   who suggested he run for mayor on the ticket of  the Civil Platform party.

On Monday the city elections commission reported that Roizman got  over 33 percent of the votes and his closest competitor – United  Russia candidate Yakov Silin got slightly under 30 percent. The  governor of the Yekaterinburg Region, United Russia member  Yevgeniy Kuivashev has already announced that he was ready to  work with any mayor as the will of the voters was the important  factor in his policies.

 

http://rt.com/politics/election-day-united-victory-608/

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