• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Putin party set for crushing election win: poll

MOSCOW
Wed Nov 21, 2007 9:06am EST

MOSCOW (Reuters) - President Vladimir Putin's United Russia party will win an overwhelming majority in a parliamentary election on December 2 and only one other party will get enough votes to join it, according to a poll on Wednesday.

World  |  Barack Obama

Nearly two-thirds of those who plan to vote in the election for the Duma (lower house of parliament) say they will cast their ballot for United Russia, national pollsters VTsIOM said.

United Russia has seen its support increase from 57 to 63.8 percent since Putin said in early October he would lead the party's list of candidates. VTsIOM's figures suggested the party had overcome a small dip in support seen in early November.

The Communists are the only other political party headed into Sunday week's vote with a definite chance of passing the minimum 7 percent threshold for representation in parliament, VTsIOM said on its Web site (www.wciom.ru).

If these polls hold true through elections next Sunday, Russia's parliament will be shorn of any representatives from liberal parties.

VTsIOM put Communist support at 7.3 percent, down from 7.7 percent in a previous poll a week earlier and well below the 12-18 percent attributed to them by other pollsters.

Vladimir Zhirinovsky's nationalist LDPR had 5.2 percent of voters polled, down from 6.8 percent a week ago and well below the 7 percent minimum, VTsIOM said.

The second pro-Kremlin force, Fair Russia, scored 6.0 percent support, up from 4.9 percent a week earlier but still below the threshold. No other party scored more than 1.4 percent.

Some 11.6 percent could not say whom they would vote for.

The polling centre said 74 percent of Russian voters intended to participate in the election on Sunday week.

VTsIOM said its poll was conducted among 1,600 voters in 153 cities and towns across Russia on November 17-18 and had a margin of error of plus or minus 3.4 percent.

(Reporting by Chris Baldwin; Editing by Richard Balmforth)



More from Reuters

An image of U.S. President Barack Obama is seen in an exhibition at the Nobel Peace Centre in Oslo December 9, 2009. Two leading international human rights groups gave Obama mixed reviews on his human rights record on Wednesday, a day before he is slated to accept the 2009 Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo. Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International urged Obama to use his acceptance speech on Thursday to renew U.S. leadership on human rights after its position was undermined by abuses committed during the Bush administration's war on terrorism. REUTERS/Chris Helgren

Copenhagen: What of Obama?

President Barack Obama’s decision to attend the climate talks in Copenhagen is said to show the White House is serious about pursuing a deal to curb global warming. What should Obama commit to on climate change? Share your views.  Full Article | Related Story 

     Tom Metzold, Vice President of Eaton Vance Management and Senior Portfolio Manager at Eaton Vance, speaks at the Reuters Global Media Summit in New York, December 9, 2009. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

    "Everything's not hunky-dory"

    Did the worst downturn in 70 years leave a permanent scar? Top money managers like Tom Metzold examines how a "new normal" will shape things to come.  Full Article