Posted on 03/17/2018 5:17:22 PM PDT by goldstategop
Russian Politics & Diplomacy World Business & Economy Military & Defense Science & Space Society & Culture Sport Press Review Presidential election kicks off in Russia Russian Politics & Diplomacy March 17, 23:34 UTC+3 Residents of the countrys easternmost regions - Kamchatka and Chukotka - are the first to cast their votes Share
© Sergey Malgavko/TASS MOSCOW, March 17. /TASS/. Russias presidential election has begun in the Far East. Residents of the countrys easternmost regions - Kamchatka and Chukotka - are the first to cast their votes.
Eighty-five Russian regions cover eleven time zones. While it is still Saturday night in most Russian regions, it is 08.00 a.m. Sunday in Kamchatka and Chukotka, when polling stations open the doors for voters.
How Russia votes At midnight Moscow time, the Sakhalin and Magadan Regions will begin voting. At 01.00 Moscow time, the Primorsky and Khabarovsk Regions, eastern Yakutia will start casting their ballots. An hour later, the bulk of Yakutia will follow suit.
At 03.00 Moscow time, the presidential election will kick off in the Trans-Baikal and Irkutsk Regions, and an hour later, in the Krasnoyarsk, Kemerovo and Tuva Regions.
The regions of Altai, Omsk, Tomsk and Novosibirsk will open polling stations at 05.00 a.m. Moscow time to be followed by the Urals regions an hour later, at 06.00 Moscow time and by the Volga regions two hours later, at 07.00.
Polling stations will open at 08.00 a.m. in central and northwestern Russia and the North Caucasus. Residents of the westernmost Kaliningrad region will be the last to go to the polls, which will open at 09.00 there and close at 21.00 Moscow time.
Therefore, the first results will be made public across the country only later on.
Russias presidential election Russia will hold its presidential election on Sunday, March 18. Eight candidates are running for the highest office in the Russian Federation.
Among them are: incumbent President Vladimir Putin; Pavel Grudinin, director of the Lenin State Farm (nominated by the Communist Party of Russia); TV personality and socialite Ksenia Sobchak (nominated by Civil Initiative); Sergey Baburin, head of the Russian Peoples Union party; Maxim Suraikin, chairman of the Central Committee of the Communists of Russia party; Boris Titov, chairman of the Party of Growth and Russian Presidential Envoy for Entrepreneurs Rights; Grigory Yavlinsky, head of the Yabloko Partys federal political committee; Vladimir Zhirinovsky, leader of the Liberal-Democratic Party of Russia (LDPR).
The candidate to occupy the nations highest post - the Russian presidency - is elected according to direct suffrage, which was introduced based on the results of a referendum on March 17, 1991. Any citizen not younger than 35, and who has been permanently residing in Russia for at least 10 years, is eligible to run for office of President of Russia.
On Sunday, March 18, 2018, a total of 96,000 polling stations will begin to open nationwide at 08:00 local time. The voting will last until 20:00 local time.
According to Ella Pamfilova, the head of the Central Election Commission (CEC), some 1,500 foreign observers from 109 countries will be monitoring the presidential elections.
Some 13,000 journalists representing more than 2,400 Russian media outlets will be covering the elections. In addition, over 1,400 journalists, including 400 foreign reporters, will work at the CEC media center.
Once the voting ends, the district election commissions will open the ballot boxes with the observers watching the process, and count the votes. The returns will then be written down in the district commissions statements of votes (SOV). The 2018 election will see the introduction of a new QR-code technology. Each SOV will bear a unique QR-code to be identified by a special scanner. This will help avoid mistakes in feeding data into the national automated vote-counting system - GAS Vybory.
The chief of each district election commission will take the SOV to the regional election commission, where the data will be uploaded into the GAS Vybory vote-counting system.
The Central Election Commission shall approve of the election returns within 10 days.
In order to clinch a victory in the first round, a candidate has to receive more than half of the votes cast. Should none of the candidates collect enough votes, a runoff election would be called within three weeks time for the frontrunner and the runner-up. A simple majority will determine the winner in that case.
Sure kept American trolls out of the loop.
They’re using paper ballots in Russia.
No voting machines to hack.
I expect there to be vote fraud but with Putin’s overwhelming margin, it wouldn’t affect the overall result.
The winner should be projected the moment all the nationwide polls have closed.
Nothing stops Chicagoan's from stuffing ballot boxes and rigging elections.......
Just ask old man Daley who rigged the Illinois election from a corner bar on Archer Avenue in the Bridgeport Neighborhood when his union buddies stole more than 50 ballot boxes, re-directed them, emptied them and stuffed them with ballots for JFK in 1960.
We know how to fix elections, dammit!!
Why? Don't you want to get rid of Hilliary out of our country?
Please don’t get it twisted. I am a Christian and I want nothing to do with *godless* Putin hijacking a beautiful culture and wrapping his agenda in counterfeit Christianity.
He and his ex KGB plus oligarchs cronies have hijaked Russian Orthodoxy too.
Please don’t apply the same “conservative” and “liberal” labels to this issue. Goes much deeper than that.
I hope we’re at least meddling some
Anyone notice how the media weren’t even going to touch the Russian campaign.
It goes to the split between those who see Russia as different, the Third Rome, the mother of Orthodox and Slavic culture and those who want Russia be more Western and European in outlook.
That’s a debate far from settled and while the collapse of Communism restored Russian statehood, the ultimate question of Russia’s direction remains open.
Yes I definitely want to export HilLIARy. But to Guantanamo not to Russia. On s fond rhought, theyd just toss her into a Siberian gulag. So yes, we could send her to Russia !!
The conflict right now is between modernized *Stalinism* vs. Judeo-Christian democratic society.
And there is no place for Bolshevik Stalinism in a truly Christian civilization.
Vegas odds:
Vladimir Putin (0/1)
Vladimir Zhirinovsky (55/1)
And yes the Soviet Union had “elections” too.
The Communists get between 10-15% of the vote.
Russians know who they are from experience and left-wing ideology has limited appeal in Russia.
While Americans talk about we need to try socialism.
Whatever one thinks of Putin’s Russia, there is no mood to return to the Soviet days.
I said STALINISM not Marxism-Leninism. PUTIN is a neo-STALINIST even if not commmunist.
Which were sham elections until the first free elections were held in 1989 and multiparty elections were legalized somewhat later.
Totalitarianism is gone but competitive democracy is still very much a long term work in progress. After all, its been like a generation since the Soviet Union disappeared.
Will Trump interfere in their election???? :-) Maybe he will try to help the Greens Party defeat the Reds Party!!
Soviet nostalgia is huge in Russia even amidst the glittery externals. It doesn’t require living there to figure that out. Just a few conversations.
You live there long enough. You realize the core of the system never truly died and in terms of the State there was never any real break after 1991.
And for those born after 1991: they are taught to derive their sense of statehood and pride from Stalin’s victory over Hitler in WWII and are “Stalinized” in other ways. But that is the starting point.
Stalin was an absolute tyrant and mass murderer. Putin is a benevolent autocrat and under him there’s no mass terror or purges.
Stalin decimated the Soviet elite. Under Putin, the Russian elite is secure.
To compare the two rulers is misleading, though they ran/run highly personalist regimes.
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