Four liberal opposition politicians called on the crowd to help mount a challenge to Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and his United Russia party in 2011 parliamentary elections and the 2012 vote.
“We stand for free elections, for a Russia without lawlessness and corruption,” Mikhail Kasyanov, who was prime minister during Putin’s first term as president in 2000-2004, told the crowd.
Kasyanov joined prominent Putin critic Boris Nemtsov and two other liberal politicians in a bid to unite Russia’s fractured opposition as elections near. Putin has hinted he will either run for president in 2012 or support the protege he steered into the Kremlin in 2008, President Dmitry Medvedev.
“We formed the coalition to put forward a single candidate for the elections in 2012. We will stand against the party of thieves and traitors United Russia,” Nemtsov said, addressing the crowd on a square across the river from the Kremlin.
“Our aim is to throw this clique from power,” he said.
More than 100 police monitored the rally, which was held with the permission of Moscow authorities.
The size of the crowd underscored the uphill battle faced by liberal Kremlin opponents who were pushed to the margins of Russian politics during Putin’s 2000-2008 presidency.
In an opinion poll last month by the independent Levada Center, two percent of respondents said they would vote for the alliance if it were running in parliamentary elections.
That score put them behind United Russia, the Communists and the other two parties that are now represented in parliament.
Nemtsov said the alliance would aim to seek registration as a party — which is required if it is to run in parliamentary elections — in the spring.
That effort will test the mood of the Kremlin, which critics say has used technicalities and dirty tricks to kept opponents off ballots in recent years.
“In today’s circumstances, this is a step forward,” Gennady Vasin, a 49-year-old bank employee, said of the coalition’s formation. “We want Russia to be democratic and free. We want an end to corruption.”
Yuri Volnov, a 36-year-old manager at an IT company, expressed cautious optimism about the alliance’s prospects.
“We can’t be sure this will work, but we have to try something,” said Volnov, who carried his eight-month-old son.
Mayor picks
President Medvedev approved on Saturday a shortlist of four candidates to replace the sacked mayor of Moscow, including the chief of staff of Prime Minister Vladimir Putin.
Medvedev, who dismissed Yuri Luzhkov last month after the longtime mayor targeted him with rare public criticism, has 10 days to pick a new mayor for Moscow, a city of 10.5 million that accounted for about one-quarter of Russia’s economy in 2009.
The four candidates are Sergei Sobyanin, Putin’s chief of staff; Igor Levitin, Russia’s transport minister since 2004; Lyudmila Shvetsova, a first deputy Moscow mayor; and Valery Shantsev, a former Luzhkov deputy who is governor of Nizhny Novgorod province.
Sobyanin had been described by Russian media and analysts as the most likely successor to Luzhkov before Putin’s ruling United Russia party formally proposed the candidates to Medvedev at his residence outside Moscow on Saturday.
1,000 anti-Kremlin activists gather in Moscow
Publication Date:
Sun, 2010-10-10 01:18
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