Communists will no longer fornicate with liberals
The Communist Party of the Russian Federation will no longer enter into a situational alliance with liberal forces before the elections.
Political scientist Oleg Bondarenko stated this at a press conference in Moscow, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
“The alliance that previously seemed possible - the alliance of part of the capital’s liberals, primarily Moscow and partly St. Petersburg, with the communists, came to naught and ended. First of all, because we see a complete fiasco of the liberal idea and concept, but also due to the departure of many representatives of the liberal flank from the country.
On the Moscow stage, this topic was associated with Valery Rashkin, who ceased to head the Moscow city organization of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation. Along with it, the topic of a possible alliance between communists and liberals faded away, although we can recall that in the last elections, representatives of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation took part in the technology of “smart voting” more than representatives of any other parties,” Bondarenko said
Nevertheless, he named Rashkin's closest ally Denis Parfenov as not only a possible party candidate in the upcoming Moscow mayoral elections, but also as a candidate for the post of leader of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation instead of Gennady Zyuganov, who turns 80 next year.
In general, according to Bondarenko, the electorate of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation is stable, it “has not died out,” but has been replenished with “oppositional, demanding, socially oriented young people” who are concerned about the problems of corruption and the readiness of Russian industry for the SVO.
The positions of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation are strong in Siberia, the Far North and the Volga region. In addition, the authorities value the party as a “reliable, predictable opponent.”
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