Putin's anti-war challenger faces likely exclusion from election
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[February 05, 2024]
MOSCOW (Reuters)
-Russian anti-war presidential candidate Boris Nadezhdin said on Monday
that a working group of Russia's Central Election Commission had found
15% of the supporters' signatures he submitted to back his election bid
to be invalid.
That figure, if confirmed, is three times higher than the allowable
error rate and would provide grounds for the commission to disqualify
Nadezhdin from running against President Vladimir Putin in March. |
Boris Nadezhdin, a representative of Civil Initiative political party
who plans to run for Russian president in the March 2024 election, talks
to journalists as he visits an office of the Central Election Commission
to submit documents and signatures in support of his candidacy, in
Moscow, Russia January 31, 2024. REUTERS/Shamil Zhumatov/File Photo |
The commission will make a final ruling on the matter on
Wednesday, Nadezhdin's spokesman said.
Nadezhdin said on Telegram that he would appeal to the Supreme
Court if the commission refused to register him.
Nadezhdin last week presented the electoral commission with
signatures from more than 100,000 supporters across Russia as
part of his bid to get his name on the ballot paper.
On Friday, the commission said its initial analysis of the
signatures showed some of those listed as Nadezhdin supporters
were dead people.
Nobody expects Nadezhdin, 60, to win even if he is allowed to
participate, given Putin's long dominance and control of the
state.
But his campaign has captured people's attention because of his
outright opposition to what the Kremlin calls its "special
military operation" in Ukraine. Nadezhdin says Putin made a
"fatal mistake" by launching it, and has pledged to end the
conflict via negotiation.
(Reporting by ReutersEditing by Mark Trevelyan and Gareth Jones)
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