The Russian
political party system has gone through four periodic changes, developing from a disorderly and chaotic process
of development to an orderly and stable one. But compared with the traditional party politics in Western countries, it has conspicuous deficiencies: Firstly, the insufficient nurturing of
political parties, lacking a big party with broad mass support; Secondly, the limitation of party status and roles; thirdly, the dislocations of political parties and political regime. Since Putin took power, “Russia's Party Of Power” debuted in the Russian Parliament to play the leading role. In order to further consolidate the status of “Russia's Party Of Power” and achieve its genuine combination with political regime, integrating “Russia's Party Of Power” interests with those of political regime, Putin outlined a string of
measures to reform the Russian political party system, the core of which was to use administrative measures to supervise political parties that threatened the stability of political regime, and establish a multi-party form of government comprising several large parties, and under the role of political regime force, to prompt the “Russia's Party Of Power” eventually into the ruling party in the real sense.