Russian President Vladimir Putin told an audience of ardent supporters
Wednesday that the main challenge faced by the nation going into the
December 2 parliamentary elections was "to ensure the continuity" of
the current policy course.
"We should do everything possible to resolve this problem ... that
it is necessary to ensure the continuity of our policy towards the
country's sustainable development," Putin was quoted as saying by news
agency Interfax.
Putin addressed some 5,000 supporters who gathered in Moscow's
Luzhniki stadium to rally in the name of "Putin for a third term."
The event organizers claim their "For Putin" movement was born out
a wave of spontaneous grass-roots rallies across the Russian regions
since late October, culminating in Wednesday's demonstration.
But media reports suggest that the movement, formally named the
All-Russian Council of Initiative Groups to Support Putin, is funded by
United Russia, whose election list is headed by the president.
The group's co-chairman Pavel Astakhov, a prominent lawyer and
television personality, said it was natural that Wednesday's forum be
held jointly with United Russia, "which shares our views and purposes.
Russian television showed Putin speaking from a fifty-metre-long
platform extending into crowds of youths decked in baseball caps, T-
shirts and flags that read "Putin's Victory is Russia's Victory!"
"The significance of the elections to the State Duma for the future
of the country is that they will be held just a few months before the
election of a new head of state," news agency Itar-tass quoted Putin as
saying.
"If victory is achieved in the December, so will it be achieved in the presidential poll," the Kremlin leader added.
With just four months before the March presidential vote, Russian
analysts see no obvious favourites among the possible successors and
observers expect a surprise. It remains unclear what position Putin,
who is constitutionally barred from a third consecutive term, might
take when he leaves office in 2008.
The popularity of Putin - not only his policies - has given form to
the idea that he should stay on as the de facto "national leader," an
amorphous position from which he could maintain authority without
holding political office.
Astakhov said 30 million signatures had already been gathered in a
petition campaign calling for the president to officially declare
himself as the country's "national leader."