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Russia 2018: Kremlin Countdown

Updated

A tip sheet on Russia's March 18 presidential election delivering RFE/RL and Current Time TV news, videos, and analysis along with links to what our Russia team is watching. Compiled by RFE/RL correspondents and editors.

Kyiv Expects Rebuke For Moscow Over Crimea Voting

Former Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk says he wants a tough reaction from the West -- the United States in particular -- to Russian voting in annexed Crimea in the Russian election.

Yatsenyuk, who became prime minister after the ouster of Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych amid mass street protests in February 2014, made the comments on February 6 in Washington, where he met with U.S. officials, including Nancy Pelosi, the Democratic leader in the House of Representatives.

Russia has been hit by U.S. and EU sanctions over its annexation of Crimea and backing of separatists in a bloody war in eastern Ukraine. In March 2014, a resolution urging the international community "not to recognize any alteration of the status" of Crimea passed by a vote of 100-11 with 58 abstentions.

This is Russia's first presidential election since then.

Yatsenyuk left the government in an April 2016 shake-up and was succeeded by current Ukrainian Prime Minister Volodymyr Hroysman.

Titov, Baburin Become Fifth And Sixth Registered Candidates

The Central Election Commission certified the candidacies today of Russian Business Ombudsman and Chairman of the Party of Growth Boris Titov, as well as Russian All-People's Union leader Sergei Baburin.

Yavlinsky Officially Becomes Fourth Registered Candidate

The Central Election Commission has announced the registration of a fourth presidential candidate: Yabloko founder and liberal economist Grigory Yavlinsky.

Yavlinsky ran in 1996, 2000, and 2012, but was barred from running in 2012 after the commission ruled too many of his public signatures were invalid.

The other three candidates so far are Putin, the LDPR's Zhirinovsky, and the Communist Party's Pavel Grudinin.

Washington Renames Street Outside Russian Embassy After Nemtsov

By RFE/RL

WASHINGTON -- The city council of Washington, D.C., has renamed the street where Russia's embassy is located to honor the memory of slain Russian opposition leader Boris Nemtsov in a move that Moscow has complained about.

Vladimir Kara-Murza Jr., the chairman of the Boris Nemtsov Foundation For Freedom, said on February 6 that an official ceremony to rename the block of Wisconsin Avenue as Boris Nemtsov Plaza is scheduled for February 27, the third anniversary of Nemtsov's assassination.

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An "exotic idea" is the way Aleksei Pushkov, a senior pro-Kremlin lawmaker in Russia, has described a vote in Ukraine's parliament to urge the international community to demand that Russia not conduct its presidential election in Crimea, occupied and annexed from Ukraine in 2014.

Pushkov tweeted that "the world community is not voting in Crimea and nothing in Crimea depends on it [the world community]."

Via Interfax:

PESKOV: PUTIN CAN VOTE IN PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION IN ANY REGION OF RUSSIA, NOT AWARE OF HIS PLANS TO DO IT IN SEVASTOPOL

Nine polling stations to open in Belarus for the Russian presidential election, says RIA Novosti.

Election Observers & 'Russia 1' vs. 'Russia 2'

Political scientist Yekaterina Shulman explains on YouTube the importance of having observers at elections and talks specifically about their importance in the context of the Russian elections.

During elections, she says, we can talk of two different Russias.

In "Russia 1," which consists of cities and central Russian regions, it is harder for authorities to pull off brazen falsifications. In "Russia 2," which includes North Caucasus regions or for instance rural Russia, falsifications are more possible. But the boundary between the two can move, and election observers can make a difference, influencing where this dividing line falls.

More Grudinin And Stalin

I'm guessing this guy's no Grudinin fan. A "Baby Stalin" meme? Follows up on Grudinin's lavish praise.

Putin may for the first time cast his vote not in Moscow but at a polling station in the Crimean city of Sevastopol, newspaper Kommersant writes on February 7.

Russia's seizure of Crimea in 2014 was met with jubilation in Russia, and the authorities appear to have shifted the date of these elections so that they fall on March 18, the fourth anniversary of the annexation.

But Putin's purported plans to cast his vote in Crimea could reflect the desire to boost turnout there and illustrate the "lack of administrative successes" in the region in 2014, the newspaper writes. In September 2016, at the first federal elections held under Russian control, turnout was just 49 percent.

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