http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/communists-give-support-to-medvedev/391211.html

Communists Give Support to Medvedev 
10 December 2009
By Alexander Bratersky
President Dmitry Medvedev found an unlikely ally Wednesday in Communist leader 
Gennady Zyuganov, who praised the president and criticized Prime Minister 
Vladimir Putin at a presentation of his own plan to modernize Russia.

Even the title of Zyuganov's program, "Go Russia, Toward Socialism!" mirrored 
Medvedev's "Go Russia!" article, which was released in September and served as 
the backbone for the president's recent state-of-the-nation address calling for 
Russia to modernize.

"President Medvedev speaks about modernization, while Prime Minister Putin 
endorses conservatism," Zyuganov told reporters as he sought to highlight 
political differences between the two leaders who say they run the country in 
tandem.

Zyuganov noted that Putin's Cabinet and United Russia, chaired by Putin, had 
yet to draft a modernization program providing substance to Medvedev's broad 
initiative. "The program of innovations offered by the president in the 
state-of-the-nation address has not been supported by the United Russia party 
and government," he said.

The substance offered by the Communists' modernization program includes 
abolishing the flat 13 percent income tax, boosting state support for 
agriculture, nationalizing raw material industries and giving tax holidays to 
medium-sized businesses.

Zyuganov said he agreed with Medvedev's call to disband state corporations, 
which were created during Putin's presidency and do not have to follow the same 
rules as other companies.

"President Medvedev said state corporations work ineffectively, but the prime 
minister provides cover for this ineffectiveness," Zyuganov said.

He urged the State Council, a policymaking group comprised of federal 
government officials, governors and lawmakers and chaired by Medvedev, to 
review the Communists' program at its next session in January.

Zyuganov used a book of comic strips to present the program during a news 
conference at the offices of Interfax.

While Zyuganov has grown increasingly critical of Putin during the economic 
crisis, he has taken a softer stance toward Medvedev in what analysts said 
could be a sign that the Communists prefer Medvedev in the ruling tandem. "I am 
not saying the Communists will make Medvedev their leader, but they will take 
each other's interests into account" in the next State Duma elections, said 
Alexei Mukhin, an analyst with the Center for Political Information.

Mukhin said the Communist Party was the only major political group left for 
Medvedev because the others were controlled by Putin and his retinue.

Zyuganov denied on Wednesday that his party would merge with A Just Russia, an 
idea proposed by A Just Russia leader and Federation Council Speaker Sergei 
Mironov earlier this week.




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