By Dmitry Zhdannikov
MOSCOW (Reuters) - The leader of Russia's Communist Party accused
President Vladimir Putin on Saturday of piling up vast powers and said
the Kremlin's main party represented billionaires rather than ordinary
people.
"He (President Vladimir Putin) has more power today than the Pharaoh of
Egypt, the Tsar, and the Soviet Union's General Secretary combined,"
veteran Communist leader Gennady Zyuganov told a party congress on the
outskirts of Moscow.
"He has four times more power than the quite powerful president of the
United States," said Zyuganov, whose party is the country's number two
political force with 162,000 members.
Zyuganov said his party, the successor to the all-powerful Soviet
Communists, hoped to win at least a fifth of seats in elections this
December for the State Duma (lower house of parliament). It currently
has just over 10 percent of deputies.
The Duma is dominated by United Russia, a party patronised by Putin,
which enjoys a two-thirds majority.
Zyuganov said he was the only real opponent of the Kremlin and added he
was gaining new supporters as voters were getting bored with
unfulfilled promises from United Russia, which he said represented the
rich, with over 30 billionaires among its Duma members.
"They (United Russia) have billionaires. We have millions (of
supporters) behind us," he added.
The December elections will be closely watched as a dress rehearsal for
a presidential vote next March.
The most recent poll by the independent Yuri Levada Centre showed this
week that the Communists could gain 18 percent of seats in December,
while United Russia would secure 55 percent.
Another pro-Kremlin party, Fair Russia, would get seven percent and the
nationalist LDPR, which often votes with the government, would gain 11
percent.
The Communists used to dominate the Duma in the 1990s during the
turbulent years of Boris Yeltsin's presidency.
But as Russia's oil-fuelled economy booms, the Communists face a tough
political challenge to win back popularity.
The Communists have complained they are not getting a fair share of
airtime on television, which is dominated by pro-Kremlin parties.
However Putin met Zyuganov this week to discuss the elections and
Zyuganov's Saturday speech was aired live on the state television
channel Vesti-24.
Zyuganov said the mood in the Communists' camp had been lifted by wins
this year in regional elections, which he said had shown that the
dominance of United Russia can be broken.
"In (the east Siberian region of) Krasnoyarsk, where the results
usually coincide with the whole country, we had 20-22 percent. And in
some regions we had over 30 percent. Let's be guided by these
figures...," he told delegates.
He also denounced analysts' observations that his electorate was
shrinking as it was mostly composed of elderly people.
"The most educated part of our society is voting today for the
Communists. And young people are turning up every day," he said, adding
that his goal was to win the undecided votes.
On Saturday, Zyuganov again denounced what he termed a "black
propaganda" campaign to discredit himself by falsely accusing him of
excessive drinking and paying a huge bill for an adult pay TV channel
while on holiday in Ukraine.
Zyuganov did not run for president in 2004 when Putin was re-elected by
more than 70 percent of votes. The outspoken Communist did not say if
he would run for president in March 2008, when Putin must step down
after two consecutive terms.
Putin, who has huge influence over voters because of his very high poll
ratings, has yet to say whom he will back.
Original
Source
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Russian communists say Putin more powerful than Tsar
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