Mr Nadezhdin has been relatively critical of Vladimir Putin’s full-scale war in Ukraine when few dissenting voices have been tolerated in Russia.

Election authorities claimed more than 15% of the signatures he submitted with his candidate application were flawed.

He had tried to challenge this, but the commission rejected his bid.

Refusing to give up, Mr Nadezhdin, 60, said on social media that he would challenge the decision in Russia’s Supreme Court.

The Central Election Commission said that of the 105,000 signatures submitted by Mr Nadezhdin, more than 9,000 were invalid. They cited a variety of violations.

That left 95,587 names, meaning he was just short of the 100,000 required signatures to register as a candidate, commission member Andrei Shutov said.

Russia’s presidential election is due to take place from 15-17 March, although the result is not in doubt as only candidates viewed as acceptable to the Kremlin are running.

A final decision on who can take part will come on Saturday, but the election commission chairwoman said it was already clear there would be four candidates on the ballot.

Other than Vladimir Putin, they include nationalist leader Leonid Slutsky, parliament deputy speaker Vladislav Davankov and Communist Nikolai Kharitonov. All their parties have broadly backed Kremlin policies and none of the trio is seen as a genuine challenger.

  • Chainweasel
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    239 months ago

    I can’t want for the Republicans to tell us why this was a genius level decision by Papa Putin yet barring Trump from the ballot is unacceptable.

  • @[email protected]
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    9 months ago

    I bet Tucker - intrepid, unbiased and fearless journalist that he is - asked Putin about this, right?

    … Right?

    • Jay
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      109 months ago

      I’m sure he would have if he came up from under the table for air long enough.

  • @Viking_Hippie
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    199 months ago

    Leonid Slutsky

    Trotsky’s promiscuous grandson?

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    59 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Mr Nadezhdin told the BBC that some decisions in Russian politics were unfortunately “not due to the law”, but said he had already attracted the support of “dozens of millions of people who do not want Russia to be in this track of authoritarianism and militarism”.

    Russia’s presidential election is due to take place from 15-17 March, although the result is not in doubt as only candidates viewed as acceptable to the Kremlin are running.

    Other than Vladimir Putin, they include nationalist leader Leonid Slutsky, parliament deputy speaker Vladislav Davankov and Communist Nikolai Kharitonov.

    Exiled political scientist Yekaterina Shulman, in common with other commentators, said initially he had been ignored as uncharismatic and therefore harmless, until Russians began lining up to register their support for his candidacy.

    Mr Nadezhdin appeared on the BBC last month promising to end the war in Ukraine on his first day as president, although he was realistic about his chances of success.

    In December, former TV journalist and independent politician Yekaterina Duntsova was barred from running because the election commission said there were mistakes on her application form.


    The original article contains 815 words, the summary contains 183 words. Saved 78%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!