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Yavlinsky Says Yabloko Is in the Right

Yavlinsky says the elections commission was far too harsh when it barred signatures that had been scanned in. Sergei Karpukhin

Yabloko leader Grigory Yavlinsky is accusing the Central Elections Commission of being overly harsh in its interpretation of the law when it removed him from the presidential race for having collected too many invalid signatures.

Yavlinsky admitted in a blog post late Sunday that more than 137,000 of the signatures presented on his behalf were scanned copies of actual signatures, but insisted that this was legal.

"There is no ban in the law, neither direct nor indirect, on presenting copied signatures," he said. He stressed that all copied signatures were based on real ones and that campaign staff resorted to e-mailing scans only when it was impossible to get originals to Moscow in time.

The Central Elections Commission officially ended Yavlinsky's bid last Friday, when it declared that 153,938 of 600,000 signatures it had inspected — or 25.66 percent — were invalid.

But Yavlinsky said that if you subtract the photocopied signatures, just 16,446 signatures — or 2.74 percent of those reviewed — were truly invalid.

Commission secretary Nikolai Konkin said in televised comments over the weekend that a candidate had never before presented photocopied signatures. Commission chairman Vladimir Churov said the number of red-flagged signatures surprised him.

But Yavlinsky said the outcome was a foregone conclusion because it was ordered from above: "The [Kremlin] forbade to register me … so that there won't be an alternative [candidate]. The Central Elections Commission fulfilled its order," he wrote.

The dispute highlights the difficulties presented by the rule that candidates without a parliamentary party must present signatures from 2 million supporters.

Adding to the challenge is the requirement that voters can only sign the lists in the region they are registered in and the fact that the signatures had to be collected over a relatively short time period, including the 10-day New Year's holiday.

Those requirements regularly trigger accusations of selective enforcement under Kremlin orders.

In the 2008 presidential race, Andrei Bogdanov, leader of the obscure Democratic Party, had his 2 million signatures approved, but garnered less than half that in the actual election with 968,344 votes.

In the present campaign, the Central Elections Commission has only accepted the signatures for Mikhail Prokhorov as valid — prompting fresh allegations that the billionaire has made a deal with the Kremlin, a charge he has denied.

Yabloko activists said Monday that they doubt the quality of Prokhorov's signatures was better than Yavlinsky's.

"I have seen his people collect signatures at airports and train stations all on one list — while people must have been from different regions," said Galina Mikhailyova, first deputy chairwoman of the party's Moscow branch.

Her suspicion was echoed by Masha Lipman, an analyst with the Carnegie Moscow Center, who argued that Prokhorov lacked Yabloko's organizational resources.

"Yavlinsky has trusted people in many regions, Prokhorov has nothing like that," she said by telephone.

However, others said the billionaire could easily compensate for this with cash.

"Prokhorov just has vast financial resources," said Leonid Gozman, a co-founder of Right Cause who left the party when Prokhorov was ousted in a coup he blamed on conservative forces in the Kremlin.

Attempts to reach Prokhorov's spokespeople for comment were unsuccessful Monday. The billionaire has said in the past that Yavlinsky's removal would be a blow to the election's legitimacy.

President Dmitry Medvedev promised in his presidential address last December to slash the number of required signatures to 300,000 for independents and 100,000 for candidates from parties not represented in parliament.

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