In
a video posted on Telegram, LDPR leader Leonid Slutsky, standing
on a stage beside Bout, said: "I want to thank Viktor
Anatolievich (Bout) for the decision he has made and welcome him
into the ranks of the best political party in today's Russia."
Despite its name, the Liberal Democratic Party (LDPR) has since
its founding in 1991 espoused a hardline, ultranationalist
ideology, demanding Russia reconquer the countries of the former
Soviet Union.
Its founder and long-time leader Vladimir Zhirinovsky gained a
reputation as a political showman for his outrageous stunts and
eccentric behaviour before his death in April.
Though seen as a serious contender for power in the 1990s, the
LDPR has since assumed a subordinate role in Russia's political
system, providing token opposition to the ruling United Russia
bloc while backing the Kremlin on most issues.
It has a history of recruiting controversial personalities into
Russian politics. In 2007, Andrei Lugovoy, a former KGB agent
wanted in Britain for the murder the previous year of Russian
ex-spy Alexander Litvinenko was elected to parliament for the
LDPR.
(Reporting by Reuters; Editing by Kevin Liffey)
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