Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
May 7, 2017
Keep in mind that the ruble is at half the value it was in 2013 because Putin refused to bow to the Western Jews.
The Russian economy has suffered massively because of Putin’s actions – it just so happens they were just actions, against the encroaching Jew evil.
This is not a government poll. It was done by an independent body.
RT:
About half of the respondents who said they would vote in a presidential election if it took place next weekend said they would vote for current Russian President Vladimir Putin, with all competitors falling below the 3.5% margin of error.
According to the Levada independent public opinion research center, if a presidential election took place in Russia next Sunday, and if Vladimir Putin were one of the candidates, 48 percent would vote for him. The leading opposition candidates – Communist leader Gennadiy Zyuganov and head of the Liberal Democratic Party Vladimir Zhirinovsky – each received only three percent, with a margin of error of 3.5 percent. Defense Minister Sergey Shoigu and anti-corruption activist Aleksey Navalny came in even lower, with one percent.
All of those people other than the criminal Navalny – a presumed homosexual backed by Jews Khodorkovsky and Soros – support the Putin government and are just running to see what happens.
Zhirinovsky is more hardcore than Putin by a lot, though still supports him. He is anti-Semitic, and views Putin as not hard enough on the Jews. Interesting note: it was revealed that he is part Jewish on his father’s side, I think a quarter – he had tried to cover it up and some Jew journalists revealed it. He has called for the physical removal of Jews from Russia and America. Russians think he is goofy, and Russians will probably be in the comments section of this article saying that.
Vladimir Zhirinovsky
The communist party supports Putin, despite his economic liberalism, because of his conservative social agenda. Note: Modern Russian communism is Stalinism, which, unlike Jewish communism, is extremely socially conservative; the Russian communist party introduced the “controversial” (it isn’t controversial in Russia) anti-homo legislation and is still pushing for further restriction on homos, including making it a crime for them to hold hands in public.
The level of uncertainty among Russian voters, however, is very high: 19 percent said that they did not have any fixed preferences, while 10 percent said that they had not decided whether or not to vote yet, and 13 percent said that they did not plan to vote. The head of the Levada Center, Lev Gudkov, told Kommersant daily that this is not an unusual situation, and that the general public usually makes these decisions about two weeks before elections.
The Levada researchers said that one year ago the amount of people who said they would not take part in the next presidential election was 25 percent, and the amount of Putin’s supporters among those who planned on voting was 62 percent.
In the same poll, Levada found that 64 percent of Russians want Putin to remain president for another term, and 22 percent want him to be replaced.
Despite the fact that we hear non-stop about how Russia is “non-democratic,” they have the same (I believe stupid) system of universal suffrage that the West has.
But let us remember Uncle Ezra when we try to decode the claim that Russia is “not democratic.”