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Reuters

Putin's St Petersburg rival gains from election

December 9, 2002

ST PETERSBURG, Russia, Dec 9 (Reuters) - An old adversary of Russian President Vladimir Putin appeared to have a good chance of gaining a third term as St Petersburg's governor after elections for a city assembly, his opponents conceded on Monday.

Preliminary results of balloting to decide a new 50-seat legislature for Russia's second city indicated a rough parity between supporters and opponents of Governor Vladimir Yakovlev.

Yakovlev's name was not on the ballots, but the run-up to Sunday's election was dominated by a furious debate over whether the new assembly should allow him to run again.

He can secure a third term if the new city assembly votes by a simple majority to change city rules that now limit governors to two terms in office.

A spokeswoman for a main anti-Yakovlev party conceded the results suggested it would be impossible to stop the governor gaining enough support for a third term, starting in 2004.

"We fear that now we cannot block a decision for a third term by the governor," said Yekaterina Shuvalova, press secretary of the regional branch of Yabloko party.

"According to our calculations, right-wing (anti-Yakovlev) forces will have only 17 votes in the new Legislative Assembly," she said. "Our mood in general is somewhat pessimistic."

Accusations of dirty tricks marked the campaign, threatening to tarnish the image of the Tsarist-era capital, which is undergoing a face-lift approaching next year's major international summit crowning the 300th anniversary of its founding.

With daytime temperatures more than 10 degrees Celsius below freezing (18 Fahrenheit), only about 26 percent of voters cast ballots, according to preliminary results -- just enough to make the vote valid.

Since Yakovlev took charge in 1996, the birthplace of the 1917 Bolshevik revolution -- loved for the grandeur of its many palaces -- has gained a reputation as Russia's crime capital because of high-profile assassinations and gangland murders.

The rivalry between Putin and Yakovlev dates back to the period when both were deputies of city Governor Anatoly Sobchak, an important reform advocate at the end of Soviet rule.

Yakovlev staged a political revolt in 1996 and ousted Sobchak. When Sobchak died of a heart attack four years later, Putin, then acting president, said his mentor had been "killed."

Yakovlev easily won re-election in 2000, when Putin's attempt to get a pro-Kremlin candidate elected failed.

See also:
Elections to St.Petersburg Legislative Assembly, 2004
Gubernatorial elections in St.Petersburg, 2002

Reuters, December 9, 2002

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