VLADIMIR PUTIN
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VLADIMIR PUTIN

Media Review

24 november 2008
Press Russian International

Russian Newsweek: “Everyone’s Prime Minister”

The delegates to the congress were guessing who would be the next President. Mr Putin, said deputy Iosif Kobzon. "I have to think. I can't answer off the top of my head. There is still a lot of time ahead," answered gymnast Alina Kabayeva. She has not yet decided whether she prefers Mr Putin or current President Dmitry Medvedev, but she is in favour of a longer presidential term. "Six years is just right. You see, it takes nine hours just to fly to Vladivostok."


24 november 2008

Kommersant-Vlast: “I think Russia will get over the disease of imperialism”

In November 2003, portraits of Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin were burned in Moldova. Five years later, the Moldovan authorities invited him to Chisinau. YURI ROSHKA, the Vice Speaker of the Moldovan Parliament and one-time leader of the Moldovan opposition, commented on both events to our correspondent, VLADIMIR SOLOVYOV.

24 november 2008

Vedomosti: “Medvedev in Search of Himself”

Dmitry Medvedev's speech at the Council on Foreign Relations in Washington came as a surprise for the US establishment. The audience witnessed a different Medvedev. This was not the statesman who had given a speech the day after the US presidential elections that included statements on Russia's foreign policy and that were taken by many as anti-American both in Russia and outside the country. In Washington, Medvedev made a candidly pro-US speech. Many of his statements drew back major points made by then-President Vladimir Putin in Munich. Medvedev actually sounded opposed to Putin, disappointing those who support a confrontation between Russia and the US. So what are the reasons for this change?

24 november 2008

Rossiiskaya Gazeta: “Thinking High”

The Government does not pay much attention to high technology. This is a luxury at the moment. Nevertheless, it was pondering ways to support the IT sector and the media industry.

24 november 2008

Novaya Gazeta: "Do not wait for bonus wait for crisis"

The region will deal with the financial crisis at the expense of public sector employees in rural areas. Deputies of the regional legislature adopted a 2009 budget that, for the first time, does not include tax breaks for health and cultural sector workers. They paid housing and communal bills at half the rate. As Andrei Alyokhin, Omsk Communist leader, told Novaya Gazeta, United Russia deputies, who hold 38 out of the 44 seats, "would have gladly voted for taking benefits away from teachers, too, but these are protected by a federal law".

24 november 2008

Novaya Gazeta: “Power with Presenter Yevgeny Kiselev”

What's the point of increasing the presidential term? The most widespread opinion is as follows: the economic crisis makes the Government everybody's scapegoat. Inflation, unemployment and poverty are sending the popularity rating of Vladimir Putin's Cabinet down. In the past eight years the Russian political system has had only one flimsy support: Mr Putin's personal popularity. To keep afloat, the establishment should save face at all cost. This is what Russia's near future might be: first come constitutional amendments, followed by early election, in which the electorate would exercise its right to vote for a new president and State Duma in compliance with the updated constitution. So Putin will return to presidency or become the Speaker of Parliament, where United Russia has an absolute majority.

24 november 2008

Novaya Gazeta: “A Congress of Zeros”

As former Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin once sadly remarked, any political party set up in the new Russia ends up as another version of the Communist Party. He was famous for his succinct pronouncements. His edict would be just as appropriate for the 10th congress of United Russia, which elected a milkmaid to the party General Council-not because she was a Russian counterpart of Lech Walesa to start from a low social status for a dazzling political career. No, she was elected just because she was a milkmaid. It went without saying that the vote was unanimous just as on all the other congress decisions. United Russia has no room for debates as the Soviet Communist Party had none in its time.

24 november 2008

Moskovsky Komsomolets: Putin's Day for businessmen

At a congress of the United Russia party, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin put forth his ideas for ways of surmounting the crisis for the nation's small businesses. "We must join efforts to create the most comfortable environment for entrepreneurs, to help those people who want to open their own business, but are still hesitant and doubtful, to make a positive decision. The federal measures will be much more effective if they are supported and developed in the regions. We must invite small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) to implement state and municipal orders, help them to get premises and connection to public utility networks, and also remove administrative barriers to business, including limited access to local markets," Mr Putin said. Judging by all signs, this is only the beginning.

24 november 2008

Vedomosti: “Vladimir Putin: person of the week”

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin seems to be trying his hardest not to overshadow his superior, President Dmitry Medvedev. Putin chose the United Russia party congress - obviously, out of delicacy - to deliver his almost revolutionary announcement about tax reforms and state aid for the country's real economy, including profit tax cuts.

24 november 2008

Itogi: “The Economy Must Be Sound”

"Parties are created not to satisfy the ambitions of their leaders, but to develop the state and help people in their daily life." This is certainly true of the party that gathered at Gostiny Dvor for its regular congress on November 20. The words were spoken by Dmitry Medvedev, an honoured guest at the 10th Congress of United Russia. First, the ambitions of the UR's leader, Mr Putin, had been met long before he became the head of the party. Second, the governing party today is indeed more in touch with the "daily life" of the voters than ever before.

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