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Putin, Medvedev to reveal 2012 plans in December

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and President Dmitry Medvedev will probably wait until December to reveal which of them will run for president in 2012, according to two people familiar with the matter.

The announcement may come in early December, shortly before the date of the March vote is officially set, said one person. 
Vladimir Putin (right) shakes hands with Dmitry Medvedev during their meeting in presidential residence Bocharov Ruchei outside Sochi on Aug. 5. (AFP-Yonhap News)
Vladimir Putin (right) shakes hands with Dmitry Medvedev during their meeting in presidential residence Bocharov Ruchei outside Sochi on Aug. 5. (AFP-Yonhap News)

There’s no need for Putin to declare his intentions before the end of the year, said another person informed about the matter. Both people declined to be identified because the information isn’t public.

Medvedev was handpicked by Putin as a successor four years ago because a constitutional ban on more than two consecutive terms forced him to leave the presidency.

The president’s chances of re-election will dwindle if he doesn’t announce he’s running for another term soon, Igor Yurgens, a Medvedev adviser, said in an Aug. 16 interview.

Putin formed a coalition, the All-Russia People’s Front, in May to rally support for his ruling United Russia party.

“I believe Dmitry Medvedev should say in September that I am going for re-election, full stop, that’s it,” Yurgens, who heads a research institute set up by the president, said in a telephone interview from Moscow.

“Delaying it until December would be in the interests of the People’s Front, the other side, but not the president’s side.”

Putin’s spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, declined to comment, as did the Kremlin press service. The premier, who has remained at the center of power since relinquishing the presidency, leads Medvedev in opinion polls.

He could serve as president until 2024 under new six-year terms, giving him a quarter of a century in power.

Putin’s return to the presidency is the outcome priced into Russia’s equity market, Julian Rimmer, a trader of Russian shares at CF Global Trading in London, said by email on Aug. 18.

Stocks would surge 10 percent if Medvedev, who’s trying to combat Russia’s reputation as the world’s most corrupt major economy and attract foreign investment, continues as president, Rimmer said.

The 30-stock Micex Index is down 15 percent this year, in line with the MSCI Emerging Markets Index.

Micex has lost 16 percent in the past month, compared to an 11 percent-decline for Brazil’s Bovespa Index. Russia’s dollar-denominated RTS index is the fifth worst-performing in the world this month out of 92 indexes surveyed by Bloomberg.

Neither Medvedev nor Putin has ruled out running for president next March. Medvedev, a 45-year-old former corporate lawyer from Putin’s hometown of St. Petersburg, has pledged to loosen political controls if he wins a second term.

Medvedev has made fighting graft, improving the rule of law and cutting the state’s role in the economy cornerstones of his presidency. The two men have clashed over foreign policy this year, and Medvedev supporters are urging him to run regardless of Putin’s wishes. 

(Bloomberg)
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