ASSESSMENTS
Do United Russia's Election Defeats Portend a Political Shift?
Oct 15, 2018 | 09:00 GMT

With Russian President Vladimir Putin seated on the dais behind him, Dmitri Medvedev addresses the State Duma in Moscow on May 8, 2018, as Russia's lower house of parliament prepares to confirm him as prime minister.
(YURI KADOBNOV/AFP/Getty Images)
Highlights
- Recent regional elections in Russia, which led to several defeats for the ruling United Russia party, indicate that growing economic pressure and unpopular pension reforms are increasingly undermining United Russia's standing.
- The elections could mark the beginning of a gradual decline of the party's dominance at the regional level, as pro-Kremlin opposition parties such as the Communists and the Liberal Democrats appear to be on the rise.
- The elections could also have implications at the national level, as an alliance between pro-Kremlin opposition parties could mark a shift in Russia's political structures.
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