In Russia, anti-war candidate tries to harness protest vote against
Putin
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[January 24, 2024]
MOSCOW (Reuters) - Boris Nadezhdin, a 60-year-old former
opposition lawmaker, is running a long-shot campaign to challenge
Vladimir Putin for the Russian presidency and says his call to end
Russia's war in Ukraine has put rocket boosters under his bid.
Nadezhdin, who sometimes appears on state TV where he criticises the
authorities before being swiftly drowned out by TV anchors, must collect
100,000 signatures across Russia by the end of January to be registered
as a candidate.
His supporters say he has already passed the 100,000 mark, garnering
considerable support in Moscow and St Petersburg, but still needs more
from other parts of Russia as the signatures need to be spread across at
least 40 regions of the world's largest country.
Nadezhdin said he was confident of being registered and had been
surprised by how his call to end Russia's war in Ukraine had prompted
people to queue up in the depths of the Russian winter and abroad to
give their signature in his support.
"It (opposition to the war) is huge. People are tired of all this. They
want to live a normal life in a normal country, they don't want what is
happening," he told Reuters in an interview.
"People are putting their signature not because they really like me but
simply because it's a chance to do something for peace, for this whole
story to end, and for people to stop dying," said Nadezhdin, who seemed
remarkably relaxed for a man challenging the Kremlin's formidable
political machine.
A small sample of voters interviewed by Reuters appeared to confirm he
was attracting a generic anti-war vote.
"I came here to express my anti-war position. I believe this is the only
way to declare your position, we don't have any other yet," said
42-year-old Moscow resident Sergei Yasinsky.
TIGHT CONTROL
In Russia's tightly controlled political system, people have run against
Putin in the past and portrayed themselves as genuine opponents, only to
disclose years later that they were doing so as part of an agreement
with the authorities to make up the numbers.
The Kremlin says the March 15-17 election is a bona fide political
contest and that Putin, who enjoys an approval rating of around 80%, is
genuinely popular.
Putin, who has chosen to run as an independent rather than as the
candidate of the ruling United Russia party, has already collected over
three million signatures, more than 10 times the 300,000 he needs, say
his supporters.
The Kremlin also says that most Russians support what it calls Moscow's
"special military operation" in Ukraine.
State TV has worked around the clock for nearly two years telling voters
that the conflict is an existential struggle with the West for a new
world order.
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Boris Nadezhdin, a representative of Civil Initiative political
party who plans to run for Russian president in the March 2024
election, attends an interview with Reuters in Moscow, Russia
January 23, 2024. REUTERS/Evgenia Novozhenina
The outcome of the election is not in doubt. Putin, in power as
either president or prime minister for more than two decades and in
control of all the state's levers, is set to win another six-year
term in a contest critics say is a crude imitation of democracy.
There are currently 11 presidential candidates. Critics say the
Kremlin needs people like Nadezhdin to provide a semblance of
competition even if the outcome is a foregone conclusion.
Asked on Wednesday if Nadezhdin posed a political threat to Putin,
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said: "Not at all, we don't see him
as a rival. Any citizen has the right to run for president if they
meet a number of conditions."
If Nadezhdin is allowed to run and garners a small percentage of the
vote, the Kremlin will be able to point to how weak opposition to
the Ukraine war is. He is also a useful focal point to allow war
critics - including some of the wives of mobilised soldiers - to let
off steam, those same critics say.
Many opponents of the war have fled Russia or have been fined or
imprisoned under tough laws which mandate long jail terms for anyone
convicted of spreading "fake news" about the Russian army.
Nadezhdin said he was careful.
"I'm not trying to break the law or calling for unrest. I'm acting
in accordance with the law. I can't see how they can't register me,"
he said.
"I want to change the country. I want Russia to be a peaceful, free
country."
He said his only funding came from grassroots supporters and joked
about how he'd taken some modest measures to safeguard his personal
security. But he also spoke about his electoral chances in a way
that few in modern Russia would dare.
"Did you see queues outside the Putin HQ, did you see crowds
standing in the frost saying they wanted to give their signature for
Putin? It didn't happen," he said.
"It seems to me, after we got this campaign going, that Putin
himself isn't very sure about that (victory)."
(Reporting by Reuters; Writing by Andrew Osborn; Editing by Gareth
Jones)
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