The Russians validated at 74.1% by referendum, Wednesday, July 1, a block of amendments which, in addition to the question of the mandates of the president in office, also introduce its conservative principles in the Constitution, according to results relating to nearly 30 % of the polling stations distributed over the vast Russian territory and distributed by the Central Election Commission.

The participation was around 65%.

There was never any doubt about the outcome of the election: the reform was approved by the legislator at the start of the year and the new text of the Constitution is already on sale in bookstores.

Vladimir Putin, for his part, asked the Russians on Tuesday to guarantee "stability, security and prosperity" for Russia, which he prides himself on having escaped from post-Soviet chaos.

The ballot, originally scheduled for April, was postponed due to the Covid-19 pandemic. To avoid excessive crowds at polling stations, it took place over a week and voters had to wear protective masks and gloves.

>> See our Focus: Vote on constitutional reform in Russia: the opposition fears fraud and irregularities

Most controversial amendment: that granting Vladimir Putin the option of two additional terms after the current one in 2024. A necessity, according to him, because the political class must not get lost in "a quest for potential successors ".

Guarantee "a presidency for life"?

This change would allow him to stay in the Kremlin until 2036, the year of his 84th birthday. Other amendments strengthen certain presidential prerogatives.

The revision also introduced into the Constitution conservative principles dear to the president - faith in God, marriage reserved for heterosexuals, patriotic education - as well as social guarantees, such as indexation of pensions.

Yulia Zabolotova, an 83-year-old retiree, was enthusiastic in a Moscow polling station on Wednesday: "You have to support Putin, I never lived as well as with him. He lifted the country from chaos!".

Vladimir Putin's detractors, notably the opponent Alexei Navalny, say that the referendum has no other purpose than to guarantee him "a presidency for life" and that the other measures aimed at making the Russians go to the ballot boxes.

>> To see; Constitutional reform in Russia: "Vladimir Putin is making his country an autocratic regime"

Sergei Lepnukhov, a 47-year-old Moscow lawyer, did not take off. "We must not touch the Constitution, it must be inalienable (...) but (Putin) wants to seize power, so he found a back door. It is shameful and unhappy".

A small group of Muscovites expressed their dissatisfaction in Pushkin Square, in the center of Moscow, and in the early evening Wednesday, without being dispersed by the police present in numbers and despite the ban on rallies imposed because of the new coronavirus.

Tailor-made success

The vote came against the backdrop of declining popularity of Vladimir Putin due to a decried pension reform and the Covid-19 crisis. From May 2018 to June 2020, the approval rate for its policy measured by the independent Levada institute dropped from 79% to 60%.

According to critics of the Kremlin, the authorities have multiplied the tricks to ensure resounding success and a strong electoral participation in the ballot.

The most unusual aspect will have been the installation of makeshift voting places outside, in the courts or on playgrounds, without much respect for the secrecy of the vote or adequate surveillance of the ballot boxes. The aim of the maneuver, according to the opposition, was not to protect the electorate from the new coronavirus but to produce a tailor-made result.

The NGO Golos, which specializes in election observation and is disdained by the authorities, has also denounced hierarchical pressure on officials and employees to go and vote.

The Russian electoral commission, for its part, found "no serious offense" during the poll.

With AFP

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