VERSIONS: روسيا اليوم NOTICIAS FREEVIDEO ИНОТВ RTД FIND US ON: YouTube Twitter
breakingnews
Go to main page   Politics   Mr Smiley votes in Russia's poll  

Mr Smiley votes in Russia's poll

Published: 25 November, 2007, 05:07

Young voters urged to use smileys

(4.6Mb) embed video

A popular internet movement is calling on young people to abandon the traditional tick or cross when voting in next Sunday's Duma election. It says smileys are a better option.

Mikhail Zaikov is the leader of an online drive to persuade people to draw smileys on the ballot sheets instead of ticks or crosses. The idea, which has been spread via mailing lists, has more than 160,000 supporters.

“Young people are not so keen on taking part in the election. I was thinking of something to inspire them. That's when a smiley came to my mind,” Zaikov said.

Under Russian law, a voter can draw any symbol in the bulletin as long as it fits the square but Igor Borisov from the Central Election Commission doesn’t exactly support the idea.

“There is a chance that ballot papers with such faces could be found invalid. If someone, for example, decides to draw a frowning face across a party’s label, how should we interpret it, as a show of support or of disapproval? So we are against this form of voting,” Borisov stated.

Meanwhile, the idea continues drawing supporters on the net. With the election scheduled for December 2, the voters still have a bit of time left to make their choice.

+1 (1 votes)
 
Back to top
next MORE NEWS
Opposition rally in Moscow 24.11.2007, 20:36

Pro and anti government rallies held in Moscow

A series of pro and anti government rallies have been held in the Russian capital on the last weekend before parliamentary elections. Security was tight as thousands of people descended on the city on Saturday. Authorities have given the green light for 2

25.11.2007, 12:33

Interview with Evgeny Kozhokin

Mikhail Saakashvili may consider force in dealing with the breakaway regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia if he gets re-elected in the first round, says Evgeny Kozhokin, director of Russia's Institute for Strategic Studies.