Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has submitted to the parliament amendments
to a law, which will extend the presidential term and the lawmakers' mandate,
the Kremlin said yesterday.
Medvedev proposed the term of president be extended from four years to six
years and that of parliament to five years during his first state-of-the-nation
address to the parliament last Wednesday.
Speaking to an audience of about 1,000 lawmakers and government officials,
Medvedev said the extension was necessary to enable the government to implement
reforms more effectively.
The Russian head of state took office in May following a landslide victory in
the March election thanks to support from his popular predecessor, Vladimir
Putin, now the country's prime minister.
Some analysts say the extension of the presidency and the strengthening of
the role of the parliament, where the ruling United Russia party took two thirds
of the seats, will pave the way for Putin's return to the Kremlin.
"It is possible that if a plan for holding early elections and returning
Putin to the presidency is in the works, it will be carried out not through the
Kremlin, but through the United Russia, which Putin heads," Nikolai Petrov of
the Carnegie Moscow Center said in an article in the daily Moscow Times.
Putin has urged the United Russia to support Medvedev's proposals, which also
include measures to cope with the global financial crisis and other political
means to improve democracy.
A new poll indicates 80 percent of Russian's citizens put Putin, who served
two terms as president since 2000, among the top leaders who they believe have
led the country in the right direction during the past 100 years, according to
the All Russian Center for Public Opinion Studies.