Putin Leading in Russian Presidential Election With 71.97 Percent of Votes - Election Commission
Exit polls show Vladimir Putin is leading in the presidential election with 71.9% after 21.3% of votes counted.
Communist Party candidate Pavel Grudinin is running in the second place at the moment with 15.90%, head of the Liberal Democratic Party of Russia Vladimir Zhirinovsky is in the third with 6.96%, while Civil Initiative party candidate Ksenia Sobchak is in the fourth place with 1.39% of votes.
One of the candidates, co-founder of the Yabloko party Grigory Yavlinsky, received 0.77% of votes.
Vladimir Putin decisively re-elected as Russian president – preliminary results
Incumbent Russian leader Vladimir Putin is set to secure a resounding victory in the Russian presidential election, according to partial results made public by the electoral commission.
With 22 percent of the votes counted, mostly in eastern part of the country, Vladimir Putin leads with 72 percent of the vote, well ahead of the simple majority needed to avoid a run-off.
First-time Communist Party candidate Pavel Grudinin is running second with 15 percent, while veteran nationalist politician Vladimir Zhirinovsky, who first ran against Boris Yeltsin in 1991, rounds out the top three with about 7 percent.
None of the other five candidates is on track to receive more than 2 percent of the vote.
The early results are in line with exit-polls conducted by Russian polling agencies FOM, which predicted Putin would take 77 percent of the vote, and VCIOM, which predicted a final share of 73.9 percent for the current president.
Vladimir Putin was first elected to the Kremlin in 2000, and again four years later. Constitutionally barred from serving more than two consecutive terms, he did not run in 2008, the same year presidential terms were extended from four years to six years. Putin won 63.6 percent of the vote in 2012, and, if the early results are confirmed, he will now stay in his post until 2024, the year he turns 72.