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Putin more powerful than Tsar, says leader of Russia's Communist Party

By Dmitry Zhdannikov
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Posted 23 September 2007 @ 01:54 am GMT

The leader of Russia's Communist Party accused President Vladimir Putin on Saturday of piling up vast powers and said the Kremlin's main party represented billionaires rather than ordinary people.

Russian President Vladimir Putin (R) speaks with the president of the southern Russian region of Ingushetia, Marat Zyazikov, at an investment forum in Russia's southern city of Sochi September 21, 2007. The leader of nation's Communist Party accused Presi
Russian President Vladimir Putin (R) speaks with the president of the southern Russian region of Ingushetia, Marat Zyazikov, at an investment forum in Russia's southern city of Sochi September 21, 2007. The leader of nation's Communist Party accused ...

"He (President Vladimir Putin) has more power today than the Pharaoh of Egypt, the Tsar, and the Soviet Union's General Secretary combined," veteran Communist leader Gennady Zyuganov told a party congress on the outskirts of Moscow.

"He has four times more power than the quite powerful president of the United States," said Zyuganov, whose party is the country's number two political force with 162,000 members.

Zyuganov said his party, the successor to the all-powerful Soviet Communists, hoped to win at least a fifth of seats in elections this December for the State Duma (lower house of parliament). It currently has just over 10 percent of deputies.

The Duma is dominated by United Russia, a party patronized by Putin, which enjoys a two-thirds majority.

Zyuganov said he was the only real opponent of the Kremlin and added he was gaining new supporters as voters were getting bored with unfulfilled promises from United Russia, which he said represented the rich, with over 30 billionaires among its Duma members.

"They (United Russia) have billionaires. We have millions (of supporters) behind us," he added.

The December elections will be closely watched as a dress rehearsal for a presidential vote next March.

The most recent poll by the independent Yuri Levada Centre showed this week that the Communists could gain 18 percent of seats in December, while United Russia would secure 55 percent.

Another pro-Kremlin party, Fair Russia, would get seven percent and the nationalist LDPR, which often votes with the government, would gain 11 percent.

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