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NEWS AND VIEWS THAT IMPACT LIMITED CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT

"There is danger from all men. The only maxim of a free government ought to be to trust no man living with
power to endanger the public liberty." - - - - John Adams

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Communists oppose Russia's Putin


Around 8,000 Stalinist Communists protest in Moscow and Saint Petersburg against what they say were rigged parliamentary polls handing victory to Putin’s ruling party.


Suddenly Vladimir Putin is looking better.


The Communist Party came in second in the recent Russian elections with 20% of the vote.  Now you have thousands of hard-core Stalinists Communists holding demonstrations attacking Putin.

Free elections are a must in any nation, but the threat of Communist dictatorship is still lurking in Russia and other countries.  The insane far left will never go away.

President Dmitry Medvedev has called for an overhaul of Russia’s “exhausted” political system in a sign that street protests and dissatisfaction with Vladimir Putin’s 12-year rule are starting to have some impact as thousands protested in Moscow and Saint Petersburg against what they say were rigged parliamentary polls.

“We are facing a new stage in the development of the political system and we can’t close our eyes to it. It has already begun,” Medvedev said in a transcript released by the Kremlin and published on the presidency website. “It didn’t begin as a result of some rallies, these are just on the surface, foam if you like. It’s a sign of human dissatisfaction,” he said. “It started because the old model which has served our state faithfully, truly and well in the last few years, and we all defended it, has largely been exhausted.”

The boot-licking Communist worshipers of the mass murderer Stalin are still active in Russia.

Medvedev did not give any details of how United Russia and the political system, largely built around Putin, should change. But evoking the chaos that followed the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution made clear the risks of ignoring the mood of the people could be far-reaching. “The street, this is the mood of our people and the authorities must say responsibly and directly that this is their mood ... The mood of the people must be respected,” he said.

Thousands took to the streets of Moscow and St. Petersburg yesterday to protest over Russia’s fraud-tainted parliamentary vote. About 4,000 supporters of the Communist Party rallied just outside the walls of the Kremlin on a snowy afternoon, demanding a re-count and the government’s resignation. In St. Petersburg, a rally in a central square drew about 3,000 people from various political parties. Yesterday’s demonstrations were small compared to nationwide rallies held in at least 60 Russian cities last weekend, including an unprecedented gathering of tens of thousands in Moscow.

(Hurriyet News)

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