Issue Watch
Track global public opinion on current issues.
- 2008: Race for the White House
- 2008: The U.S. Electoral College
- Abortion
- Africa
- Angela Merkel
- Death Penalty
- Economy and Globalization
- Environment
- European Union
- George W. Bush
- Global Warming
- Gordon Brown
- Hamas
- Immigration
- Iran
- Iraq War
- Kevin Rudd
- Latin America
- New Zealand Election 2008
- Nicolas Sarkozy
- North Korea
- Oil and Gas
- Same-Sex Marriage
- Silvio Berlusconi
- Stem Cell Research
- Stephen Harper
- Terrorism
- U.S. Election 2008 - The Democrats
- U.S. Election 2008 - The Republicans
- U.S. Election 2008: The Primaries
- Vladimir Putin
- Yasuo Fukuda
Angus Reid Global Monitor : Polls & Research
No Change, Medvedev Would Win in Russia
(Angus Reid Global Monitor) - Dmitry Medvedev continues to dominate his rivals in the Russian Federation’s presidential campaign, according to a poll by the All-Russian Public Opinion Research Center. 61 per cent of respondents would vote for Medvedev in next month’s election.
Communist Party (KPRF) leader Gennady Zyuganov is a distant second with nine per cent, followed by Liberal Democratic Party (LDPR) leader Vladimir Zhirinovsky with seven per cent, and independent candidate Andrei Bogdanov with one per cent.
Vladimir Putin was elected to a second term as president in March 2004 with 71.31 per cent of all cast ballots. In April 2005, Putin ruled out seeking a new mandate, saying, "I will not change the constitution and in line with the constitution, you cannot run for president three times in a row."
Russian voters renewed the State Duma in December 2007. United Russia (YR)—whose candidate list was headed by Putin—secured 64.1 per cent of the vote and 315 of the legislature’s 450 seats. Under the country’s recently implemented proportional representation system, only three other political organizations—the KPRF, the LDPR and A Just Russia—elected lawmakers to the lower house.
In December 2007, Putin endorsed Medvedev as a presidential candidate, and Medvedev said it would be of the "utmost importance" to have Putin as prime minister.
On Feb. 19, Zyuganov discussed the announced retirement of Cuban president Fidel Castro, saying, "It’s a brave decision and in taking it I’m sure Fidel Castro was guided by the interests of his country and his people."
Polling Data
If the presidential election were conducted this Sunday, which of these candidates would you vote for?
|
|
Feb. 17 |
Feb. 10 |
Feb. 3 |
|
Dmitry Medvedev |
61% |
62% |
63% |
|
Gennady Zyuganov |
9% |
8% |
7% |
|
Vladimir Zhirinovsky |
7% |
7% |
7% |
|
Andrei Bogdanov |
1% |
1% |
1% |
|
Other / Would not vote |
22% |
22% |
22% |
Source: All-Russian Public Opinion Research Center
Methodology: Interviews with 1,600 Russian adults, conducted on Feb. 16 and Feb. 17, 2008. Margin of error is 3.4 per cent.