Moscow, 16 May: Yabloko party leader Grigory
Yavlinsky expressed his view that Russian President Vladimir
Putin implied in his address to the Federal Assembly plans to replace
the current government.
Putin announced the principle of forming the government in keeping
with parliamentary election results, Yavlinsky recalled. This
is a key provision of the address, he said.
Although "the underlying principles for implementing this
provision remain unclear, the announcement of such a provision
is key", he said. "The current government will fail
to carry out (the goals set in the message) in 10 or even 20 years,"
he said.
Fatherland-All Russia faction leader Vyacheslav Volodin backed
the new principle of forming the government. "In the long
run, it will make Russia a strong state, which is what the president
has called for," Volodin pointed out.
Communist Party leader Gennadi Zyuganov noted that "the
president's first message sounded like a state address, the second
one was mediocre and the third one was a pure liberal mix. Today,
an attempt was made to return the topic of state patriotism."
Reality differs sharply from the President's address in a negative
way, Zyuganov added.
Putin "did not mention his approach to a government that
is clearly failing to cope with its objectives. There is no reliable
system of governance. Although judicial reform has been praised,
the entire judicial system is corrupt to the utmost," he
said.
"The weakest point of the address is the absence of remarks
on eradicating corruption and banditry, which have choked"
Russia, he said.
"Either a presidential republic must be set up, where the
president heads the government and is responsible for everything,
or a government from the State Duma majority must be established
which, together with the State Duma, would be accountable for
developments in the country," he added.
|