On Tuesday, the ultranationalist Liberal Democratic Party of Russia (LDPR) nominated its populist leader Leonid Slutsky as their candidate for president.
The LDPR was the first of Russia’s so-called system parties — the toothless and unthreatening groupings the Kremlin permits to field candidates and even to win occasional seats in Russian elections to maintain the illusion of democracy — to officially announce a candidate.
A longtime member of the State Duma who was at the centre of the chamber’s first sexual harassment scandal in 2018, Slutsky succeeded the LDPR’s founder and veteran leader Vladimir Zhirinovsky upon his death last year.
With Slutsky’s candidacy now certain, the stage for March’s presidential election is beginning to be set. Who might each of Russia’s other main political parties select as their presidential candidate, and why are some veteran politicians apparently reluctant to join the country’s version of an electoral process this time around?