Putin promises billions in spending ahead of polls
MOSCOW: President Vladimir Putin proposed on Saturday at his United Russia party congress billions of rubles in spending ahead of September parliamentary polls that could see the deeply unpopular party struggle.
Addressing several hundred of his mostly mask-wearing and socially-distanced loyalists in a Moscow convention centre as the capital set a pandemic high for new Covid cases for the second straight day, Putin proposed deploying billions towards social support.
This included 50 billion rubles ($687 million) on public transport, 30 billion rubles for repairing roads and 20 billion rubles to clean up rivers, among other spending projects on infrastructure and healthcare.
“The program of the party of the leader has to be the program of the people,” the 68-year-old Kremlin chief said in a speech broadcast on state television.
He also said the state would be allocating payments and new forms of support for families starting next month.
“Our task is to significantly increase the prosperity of Russian families and the incomes of our citizens,” Putin said.
The gathering, which determines the ruling party’s candidates and electoral platform for September’s lower house of parliament vote, comes after the party has seen support tumble in recent years amid economic stagnation, entrenched corruption and widespread voter fatigue.
On Friday, state-run pollster VTsIOM published a survey showing that 30 percent of voters support United Russia -- a 10-point drop from the last lower house State Duma elections in 2016.
But the party, which controls a majority of the State Duma, is projecting calm.
“It is a good base of support that can be further increased during the election campaign,” party chairman and former president and prime minister Dmitry Medvedev said at the start of the month. Putin, who came to power in 2000, himself boasts much higher support than his party with an approval rating of 61.5 percent, according to VTsIOM.
The pollster also predicts that three opposition parties that are seen as doing the Kremlin’s bidding -- the nationalist LDPR, the Communists and A Just Russia -- will garner around 30 percent of the vote. Further buoying the Kremlin’s prospects in September is the recent dismantling of the movement of Russia’s main opposition politician Alexei Navalny.
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