Russian President Vladimir Putin
announced Wednesday that he will officially run for office again in 2018,
debunking questions and theories surrounding his delayed official announcement.
Putin, whose approval ratings hover
around 80 percent, is expected to sail through the election in March. Should he
win again, he would become the country’s longest serving ruler since Josef
Stalin.
The announcement was made at the GAZ
automobile factory in the city, Nizhny Novgorod. The factory is a symbol of the
country’s industrial might, and Putin was greeted by an enthusiastic audience
by the blue-collar workers who make up the core of his base.
“I couldn’t find a better place and
movement,” Putin, 65, said to the crowd. “Thank you for your support. I will
run for president.”
For months, Putin fended off
questions about his plans for 2018, fueling speculation about why he would not
say if he would seek re-election. Some theorized he might step down and name a
preferred successor.
Putin is pitted against a number of
candidates, including TV host Ksenia Sobchak, the daughter of late St.
Petersburg Mayor Anatoly Sobchak, who was Putin’s boss in the 1990s.
“I don’t trust a system where Putin
makes all decisions,” Sobchak said Wednesday when she also met with voters in
Nizhny Novgorod. “Let’s believe in our ability to change the situation.”
Another contender is Alexei Navalny,
who previously intended to seek office before getting arrested in June. His
conviction, which he calls politically motivated, bars him from running.
The upper house of the Russian
parliament is expected to authorize the start of formal election campaigning
later this month.
Putin has been in power in Russia
since 2000. He served two presidential terms during 2000-2008, then shifted
into the prime minister’s seat because of term limits. As prime minister, he
still called the shots while his ally, Dmitry Medvedev, served as the
placeholder president.
Medvedev had the president’s term
extended to six years and then stepped down to let Putin reclaim the office in
2012. If Putin serves another six-year term, which would run through 2024, he
would reach the milestone of having the longest tenure since Stalin, who ruled
for nearly 30 years.
Source Fox News
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