Putin rushes through new law that will make him a senator for life after presidency

Is Putin planning to QUIT the Kremlin? Russian leader is rushing through new law that will make him a senator for life after leaving top job and give him permanent legal immunity

  • Vladimir Putin is drafting a new law that would make him a senator for life
  • It would also guarantee him legal immunity and state perks until his death
  • The law allows presidents to become members of the Federation Council  

Vladimir Putin has given a rare signal that he is looking to quit the Kremlin rather than rule as president until he dies.

An unexpected new law is being rushed through the Russian parliament which would make the strongman a senator for life if and when he leaves the country’s highest office.

The new draft legislation was introduced by Putin himself, and would guarantee him legal immunity and state perks until he dies.

Vladimir Putin is drafting a new law which would make the strongman a senator for life if and when he leaves the country’s highest office

State-run RT media forecast the move will be seen ‘as a sign that the groundwork is being laid for an eventual transition of power in Russia’.

Putin, 68, and any subsequent ex-president will be permitted within three months of leaving the presidency to become a member of the Federation Council, the country’s upper house or senate, for life.

‘This is Russia copying the outdated British system of life peers in the House of Lords,’ said one Moscow source.

The law comes just four months after Putin changed the constitution to permit him a tsar-like hold on power by seeking a new six year term in 2024, and again in 2030.

This change, following a nationwide vote seen in the West as rigged, was widely interpreted as Putin actively seeking to remain in power until he is aged 83.

This triggered memes showing how the famously macho leader might look if he remains at the Kremlin helm for so long.

Putin, 68, and any subsequent ex-president will be permitted within three months of leaving the presidency to become a member of the Federation Council

Putin, 68, and any subsequent ex-president will be permitted within three months of leaving the presidency to become a member of the Federation Council

Yet most Russian officials are forced to quit by the age of 70, and the surprise move perhaps indicates he intends to nominate a chosen successor sooner rather than later.

Or it could be an insurance policy in case he is forced out by ill health.

Putin would still be a decade younger than a newly inaugurated 78-year-old Joe Biden if the Democrat wins the White House in tomorrow’s US election.

Under the new rules, Putin would be able to become a senator for life within three months of leaving the presidency either early or at the end of his term.

The scheme will also permit seven other senators for life, people who have given ‘outstanding service to the country’, a move perhaps enabling rewards to his closest cronies.

Putin is already the longest-serving Kremlin leader since Stalin.

He took over the Russian presidency from Boris Yeltsin on the last day of 1999 – and has been head of state ever since apart from four years as prime minister between 2008-12 when ally Dmitry Medvedev took the top office.

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