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Putin Stand-In Faces Zhirinovsky Fire

Putin?€™s proxy Natalia Narochnitskaya glaring Tuesday at opponent Vladimir Zhirinovsky during a lively debate. Ivan Sekretarev

In Tuesday's second presidential debate of the campaign season, firebrand Vladimir Zhirinovsky harangued Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's levelheaded proxy over her patron's refusal to debate and alleged desire to rule for life.

Political scientist Natalia Narochnitskaya, one of Putin's 499 designated campaign representatives, said Putin was not afraid.

"He's a master debater and is fully informed," she said.

A Putin spokesperson has said the prime minister is too busy to participate in debates in the run-up to the March 4 contest, which Putin is expected to win by a wide margin.

Narochnitskaya did not wither under Zhirinovsky's characteristic onslaught of colorful epithets and theatrical finger-pointing.

When he accused Putin of seeking a de facto life term, she replied that Putin would step down if Zhirinovsky won.

Meanwhile, in a separate event, Putin told supporters that the government will consider bringing back daylight-saving time, the abolition of which was one of outgoing President Dmitry Medvedev's most widely felt and discussed reforms.

"If the majority thinks that it was better before, we might return [to the old time regime]," Putin said Tuesday, Interfax reported. Putin said Medvedev was open to the idea of returning to the pre-2011 regime, under which clocks were adjusted by one hour twice a year.

The reform caused headaches because many computerized systems failed to account for the change, and Russians have complained about waking up in the dark in winter.

At the time of the reform, Medvedev said the one-hour adjustment, which is observed in most of Western Europe and North America, is harmful to humans and livestock.

The announcement is the latest sign of how far Medvedev's political star has fallen since the Sept. 24 announcement that he and Putin were planning to switch places, with Putin running for president and promising to appoint Medvedev prime minister.

Last month, Putin dealt a blow to Medvedev's plan to reinstate elections of regional governors, by suggesting that the Kremlin should have a say over who can stand in a popular vote. The elections were abolished by then-President Putin in the name of stability in 2004.

The proposal was widely seen as a concession to opposition-minded voters, tens of thousands of whom have taken to the streets since Dec. 4 Duma elections to demand liberal political reforms.

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