Thank you for the new thread.
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=574&ncid=721&e=1&u=/nm/20040224/wl_nm/russia_government_dc Putin Replaces Government Ahead of Own Re-Election
MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russian President Vladimir Putin (news - web sites) dismissed Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov's government on Tuesday, saying he would appoint a fresh team that would form a new policy after next month's presidential election.
Reuters Photo
Putin, in what looked like a tacit acknowledgment that he is virtually certain of a second term after the March 14 poll, immediately signed a decree naming Deputy Prime Minister Viktor Khristenko as acting prime minister, a Kremlin spokeswoman said.
One Russian political analyst said Kasyanov's dismissal had been widely expected and that firing the entire government was a technical condition for that -- however, he expected little overall change on the assumption that Putin will be re-elected.
"In accordance with article 117 of the Russian Constitution, I have decided today that the government is to resign," Putin said in a live television broadcast.
"This decision is not linked to any assessment of the activity of the former government, which I believe on the whole to be satisfactory," he said.
"It is dictated by a wish once again to set down a position on how policy will develop in the country after March 14, 2004."
Putin has long expressed impatience with Kasyanov, who is associated with the former administration of Boris Yeltsin, for not proceeding quickly enough with reform and not producing strong enough economic growth.
Sergei Markov, an analyst at Moscow's Institute of Political Studies said: "It is not the firing of the government. It's the firing of Mikhail Kasyanov. According to the constitution, Putin can't do it without firing the whole cabinet.
"I think that the team of reformers headed by (Economy Minister) German Gref will keep their positions...I don't expect any big change.