Publication
26 Sep 2011
The December 2011 elections will be the third time that Russia’s current party of power, United Russia, has competed in a national election. United Russia has dominated elections over the past decade by ensuring cohesion among the regional elite, crafting an effective catch-all ideology, and capitalizing on Putin’s popularity. This election will be no different. The only remaining questions are 1) whether the Kremlin’s potent PR machine can revive United Russia’s popularity, which has lagged slightly over the past several months and 2) whether the inclusion of outsiders from the All-Russian People’s Front on United Russia’s party list will frustrate party loyalists enough to cause them to defect. All signs indicate that the party is prepared to manage these issues and that United Russia will win the December polls by a large margin.
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English (PDF, 23 pages, 450 KB) |
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Author | Ora John Reuter, Luke March, Vladimir Gel’man, Anton Shekhovtsov, Andreas Umland, David White |
Series | Russian Analytical Digest (RAD) |
Issue | 102 |
Publisher | German Association for East European Studies (DGO) |
Copyright | © 2011 Forschungsstelle Osteuropa, Center for Security Studies (CSS), German Association for East European Studies (DGO), Institute of History, University of Basel |