in Russia. oh yes the irony! Russia has a presidential election in 2024 too! what a coincidence!  
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2024_R...ntial_election
2020 constitutional reform
Main article: 
2020 amendments to the Constitution of Russia
 According to clause 3 of article 81 of the 
Constitution of Russia, the same person cannot hold the position of 
President of the Russian Federation for more than two terms.
[16]  The constitutional reform confirmed this provision, and even removed  the words "in a row", because there was actually no limit on the maximum  number of terms and thanks to which Vladimir Putin again became  President in 2012. However, at the same time, the number of terms  previously held by the incumbent and former presidents has ceased to be  taken into account,
 which is why Vladimir Putin can be elected again for  two new terms. 
As of March 2023, Putin has not announced his intention to run for re-election.
after rigging the russkie constitution does anyone think he's not running?
 
what was the point if not to run again? twice. 
 
guess who's gonna be a power player? 
 
note the source  
The New Voice of Ukraine
yeah they want Vlad out but will Xi care? not if he thinks he can benefit from Putin winning again. 
China Makes Casting Call for Putin's Successor
https://www.yahoo.com/news/china-mak...131300884.html
Much has been said and written about the Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s visit to Moscow. The main focus has been on three topics:
1)  The possibility of a military alliance between China and Russia, and  the supply of Chinese weapons for the war against Ukraine;
2) China’s possible influence on mediating a peace settlement between Russia and Ukraine.
3) Russia's growing economic dependence on China.
No clear movements have taken place on the first two points while the meeting focused a great deal on the third.
Xi Jinping publicly gave his blessing to Putin's reelection as President of Russia.
However,  another topic emerged during Xi Jinping’s visit that, in my opinion, is  not given enough attention: China's influence on further changes in  Russian internal politics.
First, Xi Jinping publicly gave his  blessing to Putin's reelection as President of Russia. There is still a  year before the presidential elections there, and it is not customary in  diplomatic practice for the leader of one country to express their  preferences regarding elections in another. But the Chinese leader  ignored these diplomatic taboos, and his support for Putin's re-election  is seen as an official political stance. From the perspective of Xi’s  worldview and political interests, this makes complete sense. The  Chinese Premier himself was recently re-elected for a third term as the  leader of both China’s Communist Party and the state itself. Putin suits  Xi perfectly, especially in the Russian president’s current weakened  state. But, that is just for now. China always plays the long game.
Read also:  Putin went all in. What does this mean for Ukraine and what to expect from China 
This  brings us to the main issue: Xi Jingping's special attention to Russian  Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin aroused considerable interest both in  Russia and beyond. The head of the Russian government in the Duma even  received a personal invitation from the Chinese leader to pay an  official visit to Beijing. In Russia, where the so-called “transfer” (in  other words, the topic of the transfer of power) and potential  candidates for Putin’s successors have been under discussion for several  years, this episode was immediately perceived almost as Xi Jinping’s  choice of a protege to be the future leader of Russia. Let us not rush  to conclusions, we should pay attention – at the end of last year, there  were also visits to Beijing by Secretary of the Security Council of the  Russian Federation Nikolai Patrushev (whose son, Dmitry, the Russian  Agricultural Minister, is also bandied about as a potential successor to  Putin) and Dmitry Medvedev (the former Russian President who was once  named Putin’s successor in 2008, and dreams of returning to this role  again). All this looks like the beginning of the casting for the role of  the future leader of Russia. And this casting is being conducted not by  Putin, but by the Chinese leader.
We do not know how and when  this casting process will end, or whether Beijing will be able to push  its choice into the role of the new Russian leader. But the fact itself  is important - China has begun to influence Russia’s internal political  processes, and this is further evidence of Russia's growing dependence  on China.
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 The New Voice of Ukraine