Vladimir Putin celebrates his fake election win
He claims he secured 87% of the vote
Vladimir Putin looked smirkingly triumphant as he strode onto a Red Square that had been filled with thousands of flag-waving extras, herded in to demonstrate unity and support. This spectacle, on March 18th, a day after the election that gave him yet another presidential term, was designed to give legitimacy to a dictator whose power rests on violence, lies and corruption; and it cleverly doubled up with the celebration of the annexation of Crimea exactly ten years earlier. “Glory to Russia,” he shouted, clutching a microphone and cueing up the Stalin-era Soviet national anthem, which he brought back to Russia in 2000 after he first became the country’s president.
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This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “After the show”
Europe March 23rd 2024
- Drug decriminalisation in Europe may be slowing down
- Vladimir Putin celebrates his fake election win
- Earthquake fears loom large in Istanbul’s mayoral race
- Europe is giving more parental leave to its workers
- The cyberwar in Ukraine is as crucial as the battle in the trenches
- Ukraine’s European allies are either broke, small or irresolute
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