Opposition to Vladimir Putin in Russia
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Opposition to the government of President Vladimir Putin in Russia, commonly referred to as the Russian opposition, can be divided between the parliamentary opposition parties in the State Duma and the various non-systemic opposition organizations. While the former are largely viewed as being more or less loyal to the government and Putin,[1][2] the latter oppose the government and are mostly unrepresented in government bodies. According to Russian NGO Levada Center, about 15% of the Russian population disapproved of Putin in the beginning of 2023.[3][4]
The "systemic opposition" is mainly composed of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation (KPRF), the Liberal Democratic Party of Russia (LDPR), A Just Russia – For Truth (SRZP), New People and other minor parties; these political groups, while claiming to be in opposition, generally support the government's policies.[5][6]
Major political parties considered to be part of the non-systemic opposition include Yabloko and the People's Freedom Party (PARNAS), along with the unregistered party Russia of the Future and Libertarian Party of Russia (LPR). Other notable opposition groups included the Russian Opposition Coordination Council (KSO) (2012–2013) and The Other Russia (2006–2011), as well as various non-governmental organizations (NGOs).[5]
Their supporters vary in political ideology, ranging from liberals, socialists, and anarchists, to Russian nationalists. They are mainly unified by their opposition to Putin and government corruption. However, a lack of unity within the opposition has also hindered its standing.[7][8][9] Opposition figures claim that a number of laws have been passed and other measures taken by Putin's government to prevent them from having any electoral success.
Background and composition[edit]
The Guardian's report from Luke Harding noted that during the 2000s Neo-Nazis, Russian nationalists, and ultranationalist groups were the most significant opposition to Putin's government.[10]
Some observers noted what they described as a "generational struggle" among Russians over perception of Putin's rule, with younger Russians more likely to be against Putin and his policies and older Russians more likely to accept the narrative presented by state-controlled media in Russia. Putin's approval rating among young Russians was 32% in January 2019, according to the Levada Center.[11] Another poll from the organization placed Putin's support among Russians aged 18–24 at 20% in December 2020.[12]
Actions and campaigns[edit]
Current campaigns of the opposition include the dissemination of anti-Putin reports such as Putin. Results. 10 years (2010), Putin. Corruption (2011) and Life of a Slave on Galleys (2012). Video versions of these reports, entitled Lies of Putin's regime,[13] have been viewed by about 10 million times on the Internet.[14]
In addition, smaller-scale series of actions are conducted. For example, in Moscow in the spring of 2012 saw a series of flash mobs "White Square", when protesters walked through the Red Square with white ribbons,[15] in the late spring and summer, they organized the protest camp "Occupy Abay" and autumn they held weekly "Liberty walks" with the chains symbolizing solidarity with political prisoners.[16]
A monstration is a parody demonstration where participants gently poke fun at Kremlin policies.[17]
Participation in elections[edit]
Some opposition figures, for example, chess grandmaster Garry Kasparov, said there are no elections in Putin's Russia,[18][19] and that participation in a procedure called elections only legitimizes the regime.[citation needed]
On the other hand, a small part of liberals (the party of "Democratic Choice") consider elections as the main tool to achieve their political goals.[20]
History[edit]
2006–2008 Dissenters' March[edit]
The Dissenters' March was a series of Russian opposition protests started in 2006. It was preceded by opposition rallies in Russian cities in December 2005 which involved fewer people. Most of the Dissenters' March protests were unsanctioned by authorities. The Dissenters' March rally was organized by The Other Russia, a broad umbrella group that includes opposition leaders, including National Bolshevik Party with its leader Eduard Limonov, far-left Vanguard of Red Youth as well as liberals such as former world chess champion and United Civil Front leader Garry Kasparov.
2009–2011 Strategy-31[edit]
Strategy-31 was a series of civic protests in support of the right to peaceful assembly in Russia guaranteed by Article 31 of the Russian Constitution. Since 31 July 2009, the protests were held in Moscow on Triumfalnaya Square on the 31st of every month with 31 days.[21] Strategy-31 was led by writer Eduard Limonov and human rights activist Lyudmila Alexeyeva.
2011–2013 Russian protests[edit]
Starting from 5 December 2011, the day after the elections to the State Duma, there have been repeated massive political actions of Russian citizens who disagree with the outcome of these "elections". The current surge of mass opposition rallies has been called in some publications "a snow revolution".[22][23][24][25] These rallies continued during the campaign for the election of the President of Russia and after 4 March 2012, presidential election, in which Putin officially won the first round. The protesters claimed that the elections were accompanied by violations of the election legislation and widespread fraud. One of the main slogans of the majority of actions was "For Fair Elections!" and a white ribbon has been chosen as symbol of protests. Beginning from spring 2012 the actions were called marches of millions and took the form of a march followed by a rally. The speeches of participants were anti-Putin and anti-government.
The "March of Millions" on 6 May 2012 at the approach to Bolotnaya Square was dispersed by the police. In the Bolotnaya Square case 17 people are accused of committing violence against police (12 of them are in jail). A large number of human rights defenders and community leaders have declared the detainees innocent and the police responsible for the clashes.[26][27]
For the rally on 15 December 2012, the anniversary of the mass protests against rigged elections, the organizers failed to agree with the authorities, and participation was low. Several thousand people gathered without placards on Lubyanka Square and laid flowers at the Solovetsky Stone.[28]
2014 anti-war protests[edit]
In 2014, members of the Russian opposition have held anti-war protests in opposition to the Russian military intervention in Ukraine in the aftermath of the 2014 Ukrainian revolution and Crimean crisis. The March of Peace protests took place in Moscow on 15 March, a day before the Crimean status referendum. The protests have been the largest in Russia since the 2011 protests. Reuters reported that 30,000 people participated in 15 March anti-war rally.[29]
2017–2018 Russian protests[edit]
On 26 March 2017, protests against alleged corruption in the Russian government took place simultaneously in many cities across the country. The protests began after the release of the film He Is Not Dimon to You by Alexei Navalny's Anti-Corruption Foundation. An April 2017 Levada poll found that 45% of surveyed Russians supported the resignation of Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev,[30] against it 33% of respondents. Newsweek reported that "An opinion poll by the Moscow-based Levada Center indicated that 38 percent of Russians supported the rallies and that 67 percent held Putin personally responsible for high-level corruption."[31]
A May 2017 Levada poll found that 58% of surveyed Russians supported the protests, while 23% said they disapprove.[32]
2018 Russian pension protests[edit]
From July 2018, almost every weekend, protest rallies and demonstrations were organized against the planned retirement age hike. Such events occurred in nearly all major cities countrywide including Novosibirsk, St.-Petersburg and Moscow. These events were coordinated by all opposition parties with the leading role of the communists. Also trade unions and some individual politicians (among whom Navalny) functioned as organizers of the public actions.[33]
An intention to hike the retirement age has drastically downed the rating of the President Vladimir Putin and Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev in Russia. So in July 2018, just 49% would vote for Putin if the presidential elections were held in that moment (while during the elections in March 2018, he got 76.7%).[34][35]
2019 Russian protests[edit]
In the first half of 2019 there were approximately 863 protests across the country.[36]
From July 2019, protest rallies for an access to 2019 Moscow City Duma election of independent candidates started in Moscow. The 20 July rally was the largest since 2012. The 27 July rally set a record in number of detainees and police violence.[37][38] The 10 August rally outnumbered the 27 July rally, oppositional sources report 50–60 thousand participants.[39]
2020–21 Khabarovsk Krai protests[edit]
On 9 July 2020, the popular governor of the Khabarovsk Krai, Sergei Furgal, who defeated the candidate of Putin's United Russia party in elections two years ago, was arrested and flown to Moscow. Furgal was arrested 15 years after the alleged crimes he is accused of. Every day since 11 June, mass protests have been held in the Khabarovsk Krai in support of Furgal.[40] On 25 July, tens of thousands of people were estimated to have taken part in the third major rally in Khabarovsk.[41] The protests included chants of "Away with Putin!", "This is our region", "Furgal was our choice" or "shame on LDPR" and "Shame on the Kremlin!"[41][42][43]
In a Levada Center poll carried out from 24 to 25 July 2020, 45% of surveyed Russians viewed the protests positively, 26% neutrally and 17% negatively.[44]
2021 Russian protests[edit]
On 23 January 2021, protests across Russia were held in support of the Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, who was detained and then jailed after returning to Russia on 17 January following his poisoning. A few days before the protests, an investigation by Navalny and his Anti-Corruption Foundation was published, accusing Putin of corruption. The video garnered 70 million views in a few days.[45]
Since jailing of Navalny a "hardening of the course" was observed from the government side, with a choice of "go West or East" being offered to prominent opposition figures, meaning a non-negotiable alternative of either going on emigration ("West") or to prison colonies ("East"). Among those who left Russia are politicians Lyubov Sobol, Dmitry Gudkov, Ivan Zhdanov (whose father had been however arrested in Russia as a hostage), Kira Yarmysh, journalists Andrei Soldatov, Irina Borogan, Roman Badanin. The wave of repressions has been also linked with the September 2021 Duma elections.[46][47]
2021 Russian election protests[edit]
Protests against alleged large-scale fraud in favour of the ruling party were held.[48]
2022 anti-war protests[edit]
Following the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, protesters have used the white-blue-white flag as a symbol of opposition though not all used the flag. Several opposition activists (such as Maria Motuznaya) had criticized the justification by AssezJeune (one of the creators of the flag) to remove the red stripe.[49]
On the afternoon of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the Investigative Committee of Russia issued a warning to Russians that they would face legal repercussions for joining unsanctioned protests related to "the tense foreign political situation".[50] The protests have been met with widespread repression by the Russian authorities. According to OVD-Info, at least 14,906 people were detained from 24 February to 13 March,[51][52] including the largest single-day mass arrests in post-Soviet Russian history on 6 March.[53]
In February 2022, more than 30,000 technology workers,[54] 6,000 medical workers, 3,400 architects,[55] more than 4,300 teachers,[56] more than 17,000 artists,[57] 5,000 scientists,[58] and 2,000 actors, directors, and other creative figures signed open letters calling for Putin's government to stop the war.[59][60] Some Russians who signed petitions against Russia's war in Ukraine lost their jobs.[61]
On 17 March, Putin gave a speech in which he called opponents of the war "scum and traitors," saying that a "natural and necessary self-cleansing of society will only strengthen our country."[62][63] Russian authorities were encouraging Russians to report their friends, colleagues and family members to the police for expressing opposition to the war in Ukraine.[64]
More than 2,000 people were detained or fined by May 2022 under the laws prohibiting "fake" information about the military.[65] In July 2022, Alexei Gorinov, a member of the Krasnoselsky district council in Moscow, was sentenced to seven years in prison after making anti-war comments at a council meeting in March.[66] Lawyer Pavel Chikov said that this was the first jail term under the new Russian 2022 war censorship laws.[67] According to Amnesty International, as of June 2023, up to 20,000 Russian citizens had been subject to heavy reprisals for opposing the war in Ukraine.[68]
In October 2023, Putin's close associate Vyacheslav Volodin, Speaker of the State Duma, said that Russians who "desire the victory of the murderous Nazi Kyiv regime" should be sent to the far-eastern region of Magadan, known for its Stalin-era Gulag camps, and forced to work in the mines.[69] In November 2023, Volodin wrote on his Telegram channel that Russians who left the country after the Russian invasion of Ukraine and are now returning "should understand that no one here is waiting for them with open arms" because they "committed treason against Russia".[70]
2022–2023 Russian partisan movement[edit]
In response to the invasion of Ukraine, numerous armed pro-democratic, and anti-authoritarian partisan and insurgent groups have sprung up within Russia in open rebellion with the aim of sabotaging the war effort and overthrowing Putin and his regime.[71] These groups primarily engage in guerrilla warfare against the state and utilize the destruction of infrastructure such as railways, military recruitment centers, and radio towers, as well as other means to harm the state such as conducting assassinations. Some of the most notable groups involved in the conflict include the Combat Organization of Anarcho-Communists (BOAK) regarded by The Insider as "The most active 'subversive' force" within Russia since the war began,[9] the National Republican Army,[72] the Freedom of Russia Legion,[73] and the far-right Russian Volunteer Corps.[74]
2023 Wagner rebellion[edit]
On June 23, 2023, forces loyal to Yevgeny Prigozhin's Wagner Group began a mutiny against the Russian government. Citing the Russian Ministry of Defence's, and namely the Russian Minister of Defense, Sergei Shoigu's mishandling of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, as well as claiming the Russian army shelled one of the Wagner group's barracks, resulting in casualties. Wagner occupied the city of Rostov-on-Don, surrounding and then seizing the headquarters of the Southern Military District. Prigozhin vowed to march on Moscow and arrest Shoigu, and other Russian generals, and put them on trial for murder of Wagner personnel.[75][needs update]
There were no sizeable spontaneous displays of public support for the Putin government during the rebellion.[76] The Russian population displayed a predominantly "silent" and apathetic reaction.[77][78] Russia analyst Anna Matveeva contrasted the Russian public's response to that of the Turkish public during the 2016 Turkish coup d'état attempt, where numerous Turkish citizens actively participated in anti-coup demonstrations.[79]
2024 Russian presidential election[edit]
On 6 November 2023, journalist Yekaterina Duntsova announced her intention to run for the presidency in the 2024 election; she said she would run as an independent candidate on an anti-war platform.[80] The next month, her nomination documents were rejected by the Central Election Commission.[81]
In late January 2024, a source in the Putin administration told the Latvia-based news outlet Meduza: "There’s a portion of the electorate that wants the war to end. If [Putin’s opponent in the elections] decides to cater to this demand, they may get a decent percentage. And [the Putin administration] doesn’t need that."[82] On 8 February 2024, the only remaining anti-war candidate Boris Nadezhdin was barred from running against Putin in the election during the CEC's session due to alleged irregularities in the signatures of voters supporting his candidacy.[83]
On 1 February 2024, jailed Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny and his allies called on supporters to protest Putin and the invasion of Ukraine during the third day of the presidential election by all going to vote against Putin at the same time.[84] After the death of Alexei Navalny on 16 February 2024, Russians began bringing flowers to monuments to victims of political repression in cities across the country.[85] People laid flowers at Moscow’s Solovetsky Stone and the Wall of Grief.[86] The Moscow Prosecutor’s Office warned Russians against mass protests.[87]
Opposition figures[edit]
- Zhanna Agalakova[88][89]
- Liya Akhedzhakova[90][91]
- Malik Akhmedilov[92]* †
- Georgy Alburov[93]
- Lyudmila Alexeyeva[94]*[a]
- Maria Alyokhina[95]
- Maximilian Andronikov, a.k.a. "Caesar"[96]*[b]
- Vladimir Ashurkov[97]
- Ilya Azar[98]
- Farid Babayev[99]*†
- Anastasia Baburova[100]* †
- Mikhail Beketov[101]* †
- Nikita Belykh[102]*[c]
- Boris Berezovsky[103]* †[d]
- Darya Besedina[104]
- Nikolai Bondarenko[105]
- Dmitry Bykov[106]*[e]
- Yuriy Chervochkin[107]* †
- Alexei Devotchenko[108]* †
- Roman Dobrokhotov[109]*[f]
- Yury Dud[110]*[g]
- Yekaterina Duntsova[111]
- Natalya Estemirova[100]* †
- Sergei Furgal[105]*[h]
- Maria Gaidar[112]*[i]
- Yegor Gaidar[113]*[j] †
- Maxim Galkin[114]*[k]
- Igor Girkin[115][116]*[l]
- Nikolai Glushkov[118]* †
- Alexei Gorinov[119]*[m]
- Dmitry Gudkov[98]*[n]
- Gennady Gudkov[120]*[n]
- Andrey Illarionov[121]*[n]
- Vladimir Kara-Murza[122]*[o]
- Nadezhda Karpova[123]*[p]
- Garry Kasparov[124]*[n]
- Mikhail Kasyanov[125]*[q]
- Maxim Katz[126]
- Irina Khakamada[127]
- Mikhail Khodorkovsky[122]*[n]
- Pavel Khodorkovsky[128]*[n]
- Andrei Kozyrev[129]*[n]
- Nina L. Khrushcheva[130]*[n]
- Timur Kuashev[131]* †
- Alexander Litvinenko[100]* †
- Marina Litvinenko[132]
- Mikhail Lobanov[133]
- Ravil Maganov[134]* †
- Sergei Magnitsky[100]* †
- Mikhail Matveyev[135][136][137][138]
- Stanislav Markelov[100]* †
- Boris Mints[139]*[r]
- Sergey Mitrokhin[140]
- Sergey Mokhnatkin[141]* †
- Dmitry Muratov[142]
- Boris Nadezhdin[143]
- Yulia Navalnaya[144]
- Alexei Navalny[145]* †
- Boris Nemtsov[146]* †
- Zhanna Nemtsova[147]*[s]
- Marina Ovsyannikova[148]*[t]
- Oxxxymiron[150][151][152]*[u]
- Leonid Parfyonov[153]
- Dmitry Petrov[154]* †
- Nikolay Platoshkin[155]*[v]
- Anna Politkovskaya[113]* †
- Ilya Ponomarev[156]*[n]
- Lev Ponomaryov[157]
- Yevgeny Prigozhin[158]* †
- Mikhail Prokhorov[159][160]*[w]
- Valery Rashkin[161][162]
- Yevgeny Roizman[122]*[x]
- Ivan Rybkin[163]*[y]
- Vladimir Ryzhkov[164][165]
- Yekaterina Samutsevich
- Ekaterina Schulmann[166]*[z]
- Viktor Shenderovich[167]*[aa]
- Yuri Shevchuk[168]
- Lev Shlosberg[169]
- Ruslan Shaveddinov[93]*[ab]
- Yuri Shchekochikhin[100]* †
- Yury Shutov[170]* †
- Natalya Sindeyeva[171]
- Aleksandra Skochilenko[172]*[ac]
- Emilia Slabunova[173]
- Irina Slavina*[174] †
- Olga Smirnova[175]*[ad]
- Fyodor Smolov[176]
- Ksenia Sobchak[177][178]
- Lyubov Sobol[93]*[ae]
- Vladimir Sviridov[179]* †
- Nadya Tolokonnikova
- Sergei Tretyakov[180]* †
- Anastasia Udaltsova[181]
- Sergei Udaltsov[181]
- Yevgeny Urlashov[182]*[af]
- Denis Voronenkov[100]* †
- Pyotr Verzilov[183]*[ag]
- Kira Yarmysh[93]*[n]
- Ilya Yashin[98]*[ah]
- Grigory Yavlinsky[184]
- Magomed Yevloyev[185]* †
- Sergei Yushenkov[100]* †
- Akhmed Zakayev[186]*[n]
- Ivan Zhdanov[93]*[n]
Symbols[edit]
In 2012, the term white ribbon opposition was applied to the protesters for fair elections as they wore white ribbons as their symbol.[15]
The white-blue-white flag is a symbol of opposition to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine that has been used by Russian anti-war protesters. It has also been used as a symbol of opposition to the current government of Russia.
During the Wagner Group mutiny, forces loyal to the Wagner group painted a red Z on the side of their vehicles, in reference to the white Z used by Russian forces during the invasion of Ukraine.[187]
In culture[edit]
Books[edit]
- 12 Who Don't Agree (2009), non-fiction book by Valery Panyushkin
- Winter is Coming (2015), non-fiction book by former Russian chess grandmaster Garry Kasparov
Films[edit]
- Les Enfants terribles de Vladimir Vladimirovitch Poutine (2006)
- This is Our City (2007), by Alexander Shcherbanosov
- The Revolution That Wasn't (2008), by Alyona Polunina
- Term (2018), by Alexander Rastorguyev
- Putin's Palace: History of the World's Largest Bribe (2021), by Alexei Navalny
- Navalny (2022), by Daniel Roher
See also[edit]
- 2022–2023 Belarusian and Russian partisan movement
- Assassination of Boris Nemtsov
- Belarusian opposition
- Democracy movements of China
- Dissenters' March
- Kazakh opposition
- Kirill Serebrennikov
- National Endowment for Democracy
- Non-system opposition
- Political groups under Vladimir Putin's presidency
- Reaction of Russian intelligentsia to the 2014 annexation of Crimea
- Russia under Vladimir Putin
- "Russia will be free"
Notes[edit]
- ^ Died in 2018
- ^ Currently fighting in Ukraine
- ^ Since 2018 has been imprisoned
- ^ In exile since 2000, subject to an Interpol Red Notice by the Russian government, found dead in mysterious circumstances in 2013
- ^ Survived a suspected poisoning in 2019
- ^ In exile since 2021, warrant for his arrest issued by Russian government
- ^ In exile since 2022, designated a "foreign agent" by the Russian government
- ^ Since 2020 has been imprisoned
- ^ Currently lives abroad
- ^ Survived a poisoning in 2006, died unexpectedly at 53 in 2009
- ^ In exile since 2022, designated a "foreign agent" by the Russian government
- ^ Sentenced to four years imprisonment in a penal colony in 2024 for insulting Putin[117]
- ^ Sentenced to seven years' imprisonment in 2022 for objecting to the Russian Invasion of Ukraine[119]
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Currently in exile
- ^ Survived poisoning by FSB agents in 2015 and 2017, imprisoned since 2022
- ^ Currently lives abroad
- ^ In exile since 2022
- ^ Currently in exile, arrest warrant issued by the Russian government
- ^ Currently in exile
- ^ In exile since 2023, sentenced to 8.5 years imprisonment in absentia for "spreading knowingly false information"[149]
- ^ Designated a "foreign agent" by the Russian government
- ^ Issued a five-year suspended prison sentence in 2021
- ^ Currently lives abroad
- ^ Since 2022 has been imprisoned
- ^ Survived a kidnapping in 2004
- ^ Currently in exile, designated a "foreign agent" by the Russian government
- ^ In exile since 2022
- ^ Designated a "foreign agent" by the Russian government, warrant for his arrest also issued
- ^ Sentenced to seven years imprisonment in 2023 for replacing five price tags in a local supermarket with notes criticising the Russian invasion of Ukraine
- ^ In exile since 2022
- ^ Currently in exile, warrant for her arrest issued by Russian government
- ^ Imprisoned since 2017
- ^ Survived a poisoning in 2017
- ^ Since 2022 has been imprisoned
References[edit]
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External links[edit]
- Media related to Demonstrations and protests in Russia at Wikimedia Commons
- List of political prisoners in Russia (Russian) in 2015, compiled by "New Chronicle of Current Events".