Page 10 - bne IntelliNews Country Report: Russia Dec17
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these   elections   but   the   next   ones   in   2024.   There   is   a   great   deal   of   uncertainty about   what   will   happen   then.   Putin   will   be   required   by   the   constitution   to   step down,   though   it   is   unclear   whether   the   contest   to   succeed   him   will   be   any   less compromised   than   the   one   in   March.   Navalny   will   hope   that   he   will   at   least   be permitted   to   run.   His   immediate   concern   is   that   a   confident,   assertive   Sobchak could   further   marginalise   him   in   the   interim.
Endless   protest
Navalny   has   long   been   a   thorn   in   Putin’s   side.   He   has   dismissed   the   ruling elite   as   “crooks   and   scoundrels”   to   the   delight   of   his   youthful   supporters,   who believe   their   future   is   being   undermined   by   a   corrupt   leadership   determined   to thwart   political   and   economic   reform.   Putin   has   employed   bureaucratic   and judicial   ruses   to   break   Navalny,   but   Russia’s   very   own   ‘angry   young   man’   has remained   a   political   player   by   circumventing   the   Kremlin’s   monopoly   on information.
Though   banned   from   –   and   ridiculed   by   –   Putin-controlled   state   television,   the main   source   of   information   for   the   majority   of   Russians,   Navalny   has   been   able to   address   his   followers   through   a   Youtube   channel   watched   by   millions.   The platform   has   helped   him   to   build   up   a   nationwide   network   of   regional headquarters   and   tens   of   thousands   of   volunteers.      His   anti-Putin   rallies,   many unsanctioned,   continue   to   attract   supporters   despite   heavy-handed   police tactics.   But   recently   the   number   attending   the   demonstrations   has   declined.
There   are   growing   concerns   amongst   Navalny   supporters   over   the   direction and   ultimate   goal   of   his   campaigning.   Barred   from   elections   and   embroiled   in   a seemingly   perpetual   conflict   with   the   state,   some   are   beginning   to   wonder whether   he   has   a   strategy   beyond   endless   protest.   He   struck   a   chord   with millions   of   young   Russians   when   he   first   emerged,   yet   the   vast   majority   of voters   still   know   little   about   him   or,   under   the   influence   of   state   propaganda, view   him   as   a   Western   agent   intent   on   destabilising   the   country.
Now   some   followers   are   raising   questions   about   the   value   of   the   continuous cycle   of   protests   and   arrests.   The   novelty   of   it   all,   it   seems,   is   beginning   to   lose its   appeal.   Navalny   loyalists   have   displayed   great   courage   in   turning   up   for unsanctioned   rallies   in   the   knowledge   that   they   risk   being   bundled   into   police squad   cars.   However,   they   need   to   see   that   there   is   a   purpose   behind   such sacrifices.   At   the   moment,   there   does   not   appear   to   be   one.
In   advance   of   the   presidential   elections,   Sobchak   is   unlikely   to   criticise   Navalny or   exploit   regime   slurs,   as   they   have   long   been   friends   and   allies.   She   has   in the   past   shared   platforms   with   him   and   campaigned   for   his   release   from   jail. Sobchak   insists   that   she   only   decided   to   become   a   candidate   because Navalny   is   not   allowed   to   take   part,   having   earlier   suggested   that   his   wife, Yulia   Navalnaya,   could   run   instead   of   him.
Yet,   conveniently   for   the   Kremlin,   there   is   a   strong   possibility   that   Sobchak   will draw   away   at   least   some   of   Navalny’s   supporters:   those   losing   faith   in   him   and others   preferring   a   less   confrontational   approach   towards   the   authorities.   It   will help   Sobchak   that   she   has   much   higher   name   recognition   than   Navalny,   and her   candidacy   has   already   been   the   subject   of   discussion   on   popular   late   night TV   talk   shows.
10       RUSSIA  Country  Report   December    2017                                                                                                                                                                                www.intellinews.com


































































































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