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Medvedev says Russia has “no great expectations” from US elections because “they will not change anything”

Former Russian President and current Deputy Chairman of the State Security Council, Dimitri Medvedev, has stated this Sunday that Russia has no expectations from the US elections on November 5, claiming that they will not mean any change for the country, while insisting on the need to continue the offensive on Ukraine.

“We have no reason to have great expectations. For Russia, the elections will not change anything, since the positions of the candidates fully reflect the bipartisan consensus on the need for our country to be defeated,” the former president said in a communication shared through his official Telegram channel.

In this context, Medvedev has questioned the suitability of the two candidates for the White House, the Democrat Kamala Harris and the Republican Donald Trump, ironically referring to the only question “that matters” in these elections: “How much money will the new POTUS (the acronym in English for designating the president of the United States) earn for someone else’s distant war.”

He has said of Harris that “she is stupid, inexperienced and controlled” and has predicted that “she will be afraid of everyone around her,” so — if she is elected president — “the most important ministers and advisors would govern, as well as indirectly the Obama family.”

Regarding Trump, he has criticized his “tiredness” and his clichés, stating that “he cannot stop the war in one day, three days or three months.” “If he really tries, he could become the new JFK,” he added.

“Therefore, the best way to make November 5th a pleasant one for the candidates for the highest American office is to continue to crush the Nazi regime in kyiv!” the former president concluded.

Americans are called to elect on November 5 who will occupy the Presidency for the next four years, in an event in which they will have to choose whether they want the tycoon Donald Trump to return to the White House four years later or prefer instead that the current vice president continue the legacy left by Joe Biden, forced to give up his candidacy in the middle of the campaign.

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