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Reading: Russian election officials found ‘errors’ in Putin challenger’s bid by Anti-war candidate Boris Nadezhdin
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Distinct Post > World > Europe > Russian election officials found ‘errors’ in Putin challenger’s bid by Anti-war candidate Boris Nadezhdin
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Europe

Russian election officials found ‘errors’ in Putin challenger’s bid by Anti-war candidate Boris Nadezhdin

Claire Martin Published February 3, 2024
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Russian officials said on Friday they found “errors” in a bid by presidential hopeful Boris Nadezhdin to register to challenge Vladimir Putin, paving the way to bar him from the March vote.

Nadezhdin has spent weeks criticizing long-term President Putin and the Kremlin’s military offensive in Ukraine, which is nearly into its third year.

Nadezhdin, 60, sparked queues all over Russia in January when supporters submitted signatures so he could be registered as an official candidate in the presidential election.

On Wednesday, he handed in more than the 100,000 required signatures to the Central Election Commission, which is expected to rule next week on whether he will be allowed to stand.

“When we see dozens of people who are no longer on this Earth and they add a signature, that poses a question about the ethical standards being used… including by the person collecting them,” the commission’s deputy chairman Nikolay Bulayev said, about Nadezhdin.

The verification of signatures of Boris Nadezhdin and Sergei Malinkovich is in full swing. The CEC invites Nadezhdin and Malinkovich on Monday, February 5, at 10 AM to notify them of any flaws in their signatures," – 🇷🇺 CEC deputy chair Nikolai Bulayev.https://t.co/qGqIb68ZY7 https://t.co/e4E1A3FNtU

— Russian Election Monitor (@russian_monitor) February 2, 2024

He summoned Nadezhdin and another candidate — Communist Sergei Malinkovich — to appear on Monday before the commission, where officials would show them the “results of the checking procedure”.

Nadezhdin — who has spent weeks criticizing President Putin and the almost two-year Ukraine offensive — dismissed the commission’s accusations.

Boris Nadezhdin (C), Russian presidential candidate from the Civil Initiative party and deputy of the Council of Deputies of the Dolgoprudny urban district of the Moscow Region, carries a box with documents as he arrives for a procedure to submit citizens’ signatures for his nomination as presidential candidate to the Central Election Commission in Moscow, Russia, 31 January 2024. [EPA-EFE/MAXIM SHIPENKOV]

“We are all more alive than the living,” he said, posting photographs on Telegram of people queueing to submit signatures.

He alluded to the Russian literature classic “Dead Souls” to mock election officials.

“If someone sees dead souls in my signature lists, well, friends, these questions should not be addressed to me. It’s more for the church or exorcists,” he said.

In a post earlier on Friday, Nadezhdin repeated that he would take the election commission to court if it barred him from running.

Russian anti-war presidential candidate Boris Nadezhdin delivered 105,000 signatures in his support to the Central Election Commission, technically enough to challenge incumbent Vladimir Putin in a March election even though nobody expects him to win https://t.co/qCqQeUJO5r pic.twitter.com/YEM1emk2xp

— Reuters (@Reuters) January 31, 2024

In an interview with AFP last month, he said Putin’s decision to launch the Ukraine offensive in 2022 had been “catastrophic”.

Many have been surprised that he has been allowed to progress this far in the voting process.

Political analyst Tatiana Stanovaya said the election commission’s comments were a sign that Nadezhdin would not be allowed to stand.

“The Kremlin has started to prepare the public for the decision of barring Nadezhdin,” she said on Telegram.

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