MOSCOW, March 18. /TASS/. More than a third of Russians (39%), who voted in the presidential election cited a sense of civic duty as the main reason they came to the polls, a survey conducted by the Russian Public Opinion Research Center (VCIOM).
"On March 15-17, the presidential election was held in Russia. According to the results of the latest pre-election poll by VCIOM, Russians named a total eight reasons for participating in the country’s main political event. The main driver was fulfilling their civic duty (39% of the number of voters)," the statement says.
According to the poll, 20% of respondents said they voted to support their candidate or party, while 11% cited a desire to be heard. Also, 9% of respondents said that they cast their ballot with the goal of making the country better, solving problems in their region, with another 8% saying they participated in the election out of pure habit.
According to VCIOM, citizens who voted for Vladimir Putin had a number of arguments for their choice, including: "I trust him /I don’t trust others" - 16%, "Who else to vote for?/No one else can handle it" - 16%, "happy with Putin/the best president/copes with responsibilities" - 12%, "improved the country/Russia has become a great country" - 10%, "during the special military operation you cannot change the ruler" - 8%.
The all-Russian telephone survey VCIOM-Sputnik was conducted on March 14, 2024, commissioned by the Expert Institute for Social Research. More than 1,600 Russians over the age of 18 took part in it. The maximum margin of error, with a probability of 95%, doesn’t exceed 2.5%.