Movement aiming to remove Vladimir Putin from his offices
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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]
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.
Prominent Russian liberal opposition figure
Alexei Navalny said before
his 2020 poisoning that the Kremlin was "far more afraid of ultra-nationalists than they were of him", noting that "[the ultranationalists] use the same
imperial rhetoric as Putin does, but they can do it much better than him".[11]
In 2022 and 2023 Political experts in Russia and in the United States have described the
far-right ultranationalist opposition to Putin as possibly "the most serious challenge" to the Russian regime.[12][13][11]
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.[14] Another poll from the organization placed Putin's support among Russians aged 18–24 at 20% in December 2020.[15]
Actions and campaigns
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,[16] have been viewed by about 10 million times on the Internet.[17]
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,[18] 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.[19]
Some opposition figures, for example, chess grandmaster
Garry Kasparov, said there are no elections in Putin's Russia,[21][22] 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.[23]
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.
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.[24] Strategy-31 was led by writer
Eduard Limonov and human rights activist
Lyudmila Alexeyeva.
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".[25][26][27][28] 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.[29][30]
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.[31]
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,[33] 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."[34]
A May 2017 Levada poll found that 58% of surveyed Russians supported the protests, while 23% said they disapprove.[35]
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.[36]
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%).[37][38]
In the first half of 2019 there were approximately 863 protests across the country.[39]
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.[40][41] The 10 August rally outnumbered the 27 July rally, oppositional sources report 50–60 thousand participants.[42]
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.[43] On 25 July, tens of thousands of people were estimated to have taken part in the third major rally in Khabarovsk.[44] 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!"[44][45][46]
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.[47]
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.[48]
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.[49][50]
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.[52]
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".[53] 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,[54][55] including the largest single-day mass arrests in post-Soviet Russian history on 6 March.[56]
In February 2022, more than 30,000 technology workers,[57] 6,000 medical workers, 3,400 architects,[58] more than 4,300 teachers,[59] more than 17,000 artists,[60] 5,000 scientists,[61] and 2,000 actors, directors, and other creative figures signed open letters calling for Putin's government to stop the war.[62][63] Some Russians who signed petitions against Russia's war in Ukraine lost their jobs.[64]
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."[65][66] Russian authorities were encouraging Russians to report their friends, colleagues and family members to the police for expressing opposition to the war in Ukraine.[67]
More than 2,000 people were detained or fined by May 2022 under the laws prohibiting "fake" information about the military.[68] 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.[69] Lawyer
Pavel Chikov said that this was the first jail term under the new
Russian 2022 war censorship laws.[70] 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.[71]
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.[72] 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".[73]
There were no sizeable spontaneous displays of public support for the Putin government during the rebellion.[79] The Russian population displayed a predominantly "silent" and apathetic reaction.[80][81] 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.[82]
Putin was due to have to stand down as president in 2024 due to term limits in
Russia's constitution,[83][84] but it was widely expected that he would attempt to stay in power through certain means such as changing the constitution, even though Putin claimed otherwise in 2018.[85][86][83] As predicted, Putin announced that constitutional changes would be proposed allowing him to stay in power until 2036 by "resetting" his terms, widely criticised by opponents, and these changes were then 'approved' in
a disputed referendum in which independent election monitors received hundreds of reports of violations and state employees were deliberately prompted to vote in favour.[87][83][84] Leader of the opposition
Alexei Navalny dismissed the legitimacy of the poll and denounced the changes, saying that they would make Putin "president for life".[87]
Journalist
Yekaterina Duntsova tried to run in the 2024 election on a platform
opposing the war in Ukraine, commenting: "Any sane person taking this step would be afraid - but fear must not win".[95][96] However, she was quickly barred from running by the
Central Election Commission, which claimed that she had made '100 mistakes' such as spelling errors on her forms and so should be denied registration.[95][97][98][99] The
BBC reported on Dunstova's rejection that: "the immediate slap-down of a Putin critic will be seen as evidence by some that no dissent will be tolerated in the campaign".[95] The nationalist and previously pro-Putin
Igor Girkin, who also attempted to become a candidate, openly declared that the election was a "sham", stating that "the only winner is known in advance" and "I understand perfectly well that in the current situation in Russia, participating in the presidential campaign is like sitting down at a table to play with card sharps".[95][100] Girkin, a former
FSB agent, was later sentenced to four years imprisonment.[101]
Boris Nadezhdin declared his intention to run on a platform of opposing Putin and the Ukraine war.[102][103] He quickly gained support, and queues formed in towns and villages across Russia and outside Boris Nadezhdin’s headquarters in Moscow to sign their name in support of his bid for presidency.[104][105][103] Footage showed how many thousands had queued even in the snow to sign their names, and he garnered "surprise levels of support", especially from younger urban Russians.[103][106][107][108] The number of Russians who had turned up to sign their names was so unexpectedly high that extra sign-up centres had to be added in Moscow.[107] In what was described as something "seemingly unachievable in Russian politics",[108] Nadezhdin managed to unify many prominent
opposition politicians and public figures behind his campaign and gained their endorsements:
Yekaterina Duntsova (who had previously been barred[109][110]),
Mikhail Khodorkovsky,
Ekaterina Schulmann,
Yulia Navalnaya (wife of
Alexei Navalny),
Ilya Varlamov,
Lyubov Sobol and many others.[111][112][113][114] Russia's main opposition leader Navalny also passed a message from his imprisonment giving his backing to Nadezhdin's campaign.[103] Navalny had himself been barred from the
previous Russian presidential election in 2018 on what is widely seen as political grounds.[103]
Multiple sources, including from inside the Kremlin, stated that the Kremlin would likely seek to deny Nadezhdin a place on the ballot.[118][119][120] The CEC regularly uses the process of having to collect signatures to refuse to register would-be opposition candidates, acting as a form of filter to stop unwanted developments for the Kremlin.[121] On 30 January 2024, Kremlin propagandist and television presenter
Vladimir Solovyov warned Nadezhdin: "I feel bad for Boris. The fool didn’t realize that he’s not being set up to run for president but for a criminal case on charges of betraying the Motherland."[118]
As predicted, on 8 February 2024 Nadezhdin was barred from running due to alleged "irregularities" in the signatures of voters supporting his candidacy.[122] The election commission claimed that only 95,587 of his signatures in support of his candidacy were valid, just short of the 100,000 needed to run.[103] His team said that some of the "errors" the election commission had claimed existed were merely minor typos that happened when handwritten names were put into its computers.[123] Nadezhdin published evidence of this, showing Mayakovsky Street typed up as 'Myakovsky Street', the city of
Salekhard misspelled as 'Salikhard', and one address in
Rostov-on-Don typed up as 'Rostov-on-Dom'.[124] Nadezhdin explained that the commission then used this to reject these signatures on the grounds that the address of these people "did not match".[124] The commission also dubiously claimed that there were eleven dead people on Nadezhdin's list of signatures and that this disqualified his entire list of 105,000 signatures – which was in fact more than the 100,000 required to run.[125] The press contacted the man who's address had been incorrectly entered as 'Rostov-on-Dom', and he confirmed he had indeed added his signature in support of Nadezhdin's candidacy, saying "this constitutes election obstruction".[124]
Suspicious death of Navalny
As well as endorsing Nadezhdin,
Alexei Navalny and his allies had called on supporters to protest Putin during the third day of the presidential election by all going to vote against him at the same time.[126] Navalny
then died in suspicious circumstances in his harsh imprisonment at a prison colony in the Arctic Circle, aged only 47, on 16 February 2024.[127][128] After his death, Russians began bringing flowers to monuments to victims of
political repression in cities across the country.[129] People laid flowers at Moscow’s
Solovetsky Stone and the
Wall of Grief.[130] The Moscow Prosecutor’s Office warned Russians against mass protests.[131] Hundreds of people across more than 30 Russian cities were detained by police merely for attending makeshift memorials to Navalny.[132]
The authorities further aroused suspicion by refusing to release Navalny's body to his family for over a week after his death, with his wife stating that his body was being kept until traces of intentional poisoning by
Novichok had disappeared.[133][134][135] He had previously been poisoned with Novichok by the Russian secret services
in 2020, which had only been discovered at the time as an emergency evacuation had been arranged to the specialist
Charité hospital in
Berlin, which then carried out the tests which identified the poison.[134][136] Navalny's mother attempted to go to the prison colony he died in to collect Navalny's body, but was repeatedly obstructed from doing so and instead sent to a morgue where his body had never been taken, and not told where his body was.[133] She was then reportedly threatened to agree to a 'secret' burial of Navalny, or else he would be buried at the prison, being given only three hours to agree to the ultimatum.[137][135] She refused to negotiate and demanded authorities complied with the law obliging investigators to hand over the body within two days of determining the causes of death.[137] Navalny's wife was then forced to sign a death certificate claiming he had died of natural causes, with authorities claiming he had collapsed and died of "sudden death syndrome".[137][135][138] Such a scenario is deemed to be suspicious due to multiple other 'sudden deaths' of those who have criticised Putin, such as
Ravil Maganov and
Yevgeny Prigozhin.[138] Independent analysts also reject the authorities' medical explanations for his death.[128] More than 50,000 Russians sent requests to the Russian government demanding that they return his body to his family.[139]
The authorities belatedly returned Navalny's body eight days after his death,[135] and upon his burial on
Moscow thousands defied likely repression to appear in the streets to chant his name and their opposition to Putin.[140] 250,000 people also watched a livestream of his funeral provided by his team, despite apparent attempts by the authorities to interrupt internet coverage.[141] The crowds who attended chanted "no to war", "Russia without Putin" and "Russia will be free", even though there was a noticeable police presence.[140] The funeral ceremony was also attended by
Boris Nadezhdin and
Yekaterina Duntsova, the two opposition candidates who had been barred from running against Putin in the presidential election, with Nadezhdin stating: "We have come to say goodbye to a person who was a symbol of an era. There is still hope that everything will be all right and Russia will be free and peaceful as Alexei had dreamed".[141]
There was widespread international condemnation of Russian authorities for Navalny's death.[139] US
President Biden commented "there is no doubt that the death of Mr Navalny was a consequence of something Putin and his thugs did", whilst French president
Emmanuel Macron remarked on his "anger and indignation", adding: "in today's Russia, free spirits are put in the gulag and sentenced to death".[139] Germany's government called for the release of political prisoners in Russia, with a spokesman commenting: "It is shocking that people are being arrested in Russia for laying flowers in honour of Alexei Navalny's death".[139]
After Navalny's death his wife
Yulia Navalnaya said that she would continue his work, asking Russians to "stand beside me" and "share the fury and hate for those who dared to kill our future".[142][143][132] She appeared before the
European Parliament on 28 February 2024 and was given a standing ovation for her emotional speech, in which she stated that defeating Putin requires innovation instead of only applying sanctions and resolutions against his regime.[144] In March, she reiterated Navalny's request for Russians to protest at the presidential election by all turning up and forming long queues at polling stations at midday on 17 March, since it was a protest action that could show the strength of anti-Putin feeling without the authorities being able to prevent it or arrest people for it.[145]
During the
Wagner Group rebellion, 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.[262]
^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
^Thomas F Remington, Presidential Decrees in Russia: A Comparative Perspective (Cambridge University Press, 2014), p. 44: "The 'within-system' opposition parties, such as
the communists and
A Just Russia, must be willing to play their prescribed role as tame, domesticated versions of a real opposition."
^The Russian Awakening(PDF). Washington DC: Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. 2012. p. 16.
Archived(PDF) from the original on 27 November 2022. Retrieved 28 November 2022.
^Freedom House (2014). Freedom in the World 2014: The Annual Survey of Political Rights and Civil Liberties. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 573.
ISBN9781442247079.