Putin
becomes PM in leadership 'tandem'
MOSCOW
Petroleumworld.com, May 9, 2008
Vladimir Putin will retain a "key role" in
Russia for years as prime minister, new President Dmitry Medvedev said Thursday,
as the two men opened an unprecedented era of dual rule.
Putin was confirmed as prime minister by 392 of the 448 deputies at an extraordinary
session of the lower house of parliament, the State Duma, one day after Medvedev
was inaugurated at a lavish Kremlin ceremony.
"I think no one has any doubt that our tandem, our cooperation, will only
continue to strengthen," Medvedev said ahead of the vote.
Putin "as head of government will play a key role in implementing" the
country's strategy for development to 2020, he said.
Medvedev listened as Putin, 55, made his pitch to the assembled deputies, outlining
plans to make Russia an economic and financial powerhouse, while improving social
conditions.
Shortly after Medvedev signed a decree to make the appointment official, a Kremlin
spokesman said.
Putin's move to the premiership after eight years as president completed a carefully
choreographed transition in which his trusted 42-year-old protege became president,
while Putin moved into government.
The dual leadership is unprecedented in Russia, where overwhelming authority
has traditionally rested with the Kremlin.
Following a grandiose inauguration ceremony in the Kremlin's golden Andreyevsky
Hall on Wednesday, Medvedev's first act as president was to nominate his former
boss for the prime minister's post.
There was no indication of who will serve in his first government.
Putin remains popular among Russians who credit him with the country's economic
revival on the back of massive energy exports and a newly assertive role on the
world stage.
But while he vows to cooperate closely with Medvedev, both leaders have claimed
major power for their respective new offices, leading some analysts to predict
a potentially unstable partnership.
Many observers see the most likely outcome as a broad continuation of Putin's
policies, but some believe Medvedev, a former corporate lawyer, could soften
Putin's more hardline positions.
In his speech, Putin focused on domestic policy, the traditional sphere of the
prime minister, calling for lower taxes on oil companies, a battle against inflation
and a boost to spending on healthcare and education.
" For us the vitally important task is to significantly increase the effectiveness
and the stability of the national economy," he said, calling for improvements
in productivity, infrastructure and the investment climate.
Putin said Russia had turned into "a different country" since he
was last prime minister for a few months in 1999, shortly before being elected
president
for two terms.
Russia is now the seventh largest economy in the world and will overtake Britain
to become the sixth largest by the end of the year, he said.
Medvedev is the youngest Kremlin leader for more than a century and, unlike Putin
or most other members of Russia's ruling elite, he has no known past in the KGB
or other security services.
Medvedev soon got his first taste of his vast new powers when a military officer
presented him Wednesday with a briefcase that controls Russia's nuclear arsenal.
That power will be on display on Friday when Russia's Topol-M intercontinental
ballistic missiles will be rolled through Red Square in a Victory Day parade
that will feature heavy weaponry for the first time since the Soviet era.
Medvedev and Putin were to review the parade, which is being seen as much as
an assertion of Russia's new military might as a commemoration of the end of
the World War II.
Under the constitution, Medvedev has the right to fire his prime minister and
dismiss the government at any time. Following reforms by Putin, parliament has
been hugely weakened and provides little oversight.
However, now that Putin is starting a new career as prime minister and leader
of the ruling United Russia party, that may change.
With two thirds of votes in the legislature, United Russia can in theory change
the constitution.
Story
by Conor Humphries from AFP
AFP 08 1137 GMT 05 08
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