As Aleksei Navalny traveled across Russia in an extraordinary campaign despite a looming ban on his candidacy, photographer Evgeny Feldman was alongside through attacks, arrests, and impromptu street speeches.
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Navalny reading during a flight to Yekaterinburg as his wife, Yulia, dozes. A few weeks before this February 24 picture was taken, after a conviction that he calls politically motivated, the anti-corruption campaigner had announced his intention to run for president.
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Following the announcement, Navalny set off on a series of outdoor speeches in town centers across Russia.
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Navalny addressing a crowd in Yekaterinburg, east of the Urals, in September. Unable to gain access to Russia’s state-run TV networks, Navalny attempted to take his anti-corruption and “democratic nationalism” message directly to people across Russia.
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Navalny’s team paid photojournalist Evgeny Feldman's travel expenses in return for photographing the campaign. These photos are a result of that collaboration.
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Feldman described the arrangement as an opportunity to photograph "an extremely interesting person at the most crucial moment of his career."
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Navalny (center) and campaign staff head to McDonald's for dinner.
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A Cossack bawling insults in Rostov-on-Don in April. Feldman told RFE/RL that hostility to Navalny's team reached such a pitch in the early days of the presidential campaign that "for two months...every trip the campaign made across Russia, we had some attacks."
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A man fleeing after hurling eggs at Navalny in Nizhny Novgorod. Human Rights Watch said Navalny campaign supporters were being "systematically" harassed and attacked.
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A man planting a sign that reads "American agent" next to Navalny's departing taxi in Ufa on March 4. Moments earlier, Navalny and his supporters had been attacked with eggs.
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Navalny after being sprayed in the face with green antiseptic known as "zelyonka" in Barnaul on March 20. Feldman says Navalny was "angry at first, then switched to a 'f*** you, I’m still smiling' mode to show such attacks were pointless. But the liquid was burning his eye, so he was actually quite scared."
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Locals listening to a Navalny speech in Yekaterinburg.
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Navalny greeting a supporter at the Yekaterinburg rally in September.
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Young protesters shouting anti-corruption slogans during protests on March 26. The Moscow protests followed a video released by Navalny that alleged massive corruption by Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev.
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Navalny handcuffed to a policeman after being arrested at one of the March 26 protests.
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Navalny splashing his face with the autumn waters of Lake Baikal before a rally in Irkutsk.
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Navalny and a local campaign supporter picking through a meal of fine-boned fish next to Lake Baikal.
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Navalny catching the attention of some military cadets on his way to a viewpoint over Saratov in December.
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In Saratov, Navalny's team was told a war veterans' event was taking place at the same time as Navalny's planned rally. Navalny then clambered onto nearby playground equipment and addressed supporters through a bullhorn.
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On December 3, Navalny’s team arrived in Samara only to be told a bellydancing contest inside the municipal building would preclude any rallies outside. Police then cordoned off the area.
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At a rally in Novosibirsk, Navalny debating a man who had been heckling him from the crowd.
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Navalny in a rundown district of Arkhangelsk.
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The Crabhouse Café during Navalny's visit to Vladivostok, in Russia's Far East.
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Navalny being led onstage by his wife in Moscow.
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Navalny's children waiting backstage at a meeting of supporters in Moscow. Navalny's daughter is reading George Orwell's 1984.
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Navalny and his team taking the Moscow Metro on December 25 to hear whether his attempt to register as a presidential candidate was successful.
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The team on the way to the Central Election Commission after emerging from the Metro. The commission told Navalny he was ineligible to run for president due to a suspended sentence for embezzlement, a charge Navalny calls politically motivated. Navalny then called on his supporters to boycott the March 2018 election.
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On December 31, Navalny giving a New Year's address that makes no mention of giving up. Feldman told RFE/RL he thinks Navalny’s campaign will try to "systemize their power, to force the government to recognize their party, to hold on to at least some of the infrastructure [the campaign has] built."