Russia's muscular pro-Kremlin party struck back Tuesday
at the enfeebled
opposition's bid to annul last year's parliamentary election results,
saying the move could only land it in more trouble.
"They are trying to rock the boat ... instead of working on the
consolidation of power and mobilizing citizens so that we can resolve
real
problems," said parliament speaker Boris Gryzlov, of the pro-Kremlin
United
Russia party.
"I view this sort of behavior in categorically negative terms.
It will lead
to nothing good -- this is simply a waste of time for the opposition."
United Russia won a two-thirds majority in December parliamentary elections
on the single platform of unbound loyalty to President Vladimir Putin
--
whose approval ratings at the time stood at around 80 percent.
The liberals received almost no coverage in the state-controlled media
that
now dominates Russia and won only a few seats in the chamber as a result.
Most bills are passed without debate and the opposition often does not
bother to show up at the chamber.
They have since filed a series of losing appeals with the central election
commission over how the election was staged.
Moscow received a stern warning over the fate of democratic freedoms
during
a visit by US Secretary of State Colin Powell.
In a dramatic gesture that the opposition itself admitted was a futile
exercise, a small group of rebel former and current legislators hauled
14
boxes of documents into the Supreme Court on Monday to prove the election
was not fairly staged.
The complaint was filed by the liberal Yabloko party -- ousted from
the
lower house during December's vote for the first time in post-Soviet
history -- the Communist Party, which once dominated the chamber and today
controls barely 11 percent of its votes, and several members of the "2008:
Free Elections" group.
Irina Khakamada, one of Russia's most well-recognized liberals, said
the
action was staged primarily to show that the opposition was not giving
up
under Putin's dominant regime.
See also:
State Duma elections
2003
|