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Russia 2018: Kremlin Countdown

Updated

A tip sheet on Russia's March 18 presidential election delivering RFE/RL and Current Time TV news, videos, and analysis along with links to what our Russia team is watching. Compiled by RFE/RL correspondents and editors.

Mining For Votes

Workers at the Chelyabinsk branch of the mining conglomerate Mechel (owned by billionaire Igor Zyuzin) have reportedly been given flyers with step-by-step instructions about what to do on election day.

(1) Get dressed and take your passport.

(2) Arrive at your polling station by 12:00 and take your ballot.

(3) Make your choice and vote.

(4) Call [here the name and phone number of a company representative is provided] and report that you have voted.

(5) Celebrate.

Apparently the initiative is part of a broad, national effort to boost turnout for the March 18 presidential election and to counter opposition leader Aleksei Navalny's call for a boycott. Analysts say the Kremlin fears a low turnout will undermine the legitimacy of the heavily managed election, in which incumbent President Vladimir Putin is sure to be granted a fourth term.

Kadyrov Calls Putin A 'Superhero' Who Should Rule Russia For Life

By RFE/RL

The Kremlin-backed head of Russia's Chechnya region, Ramzan Kadyrov, says he hopes President Vladimir Putin will remain in power for life.

The remark, not unusual for a regional leader who has frequently praised the president and called himself Putin's "foot soldier," comes weeks ahead of a March 18 presidential election that seems certain to hand Putin a new six-year term.

"I wish our president and supreme commander in chief a long life and hope that he will run our country for life," Kadyrov said in a post on Telegram on February 15.

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Current Time TV hears from would-be voters (in Russian):

We previously noted this story from Daghestan, but here's more on the pro-Putin classroom campaigning in some Russian schools.

'Thank You, Putin, For Everything': Russian Kids Plump For President

Election Video Attacked As Homophobic

The Moscow Times reports on an election video that's being attacked as homophobic.

It's someone's idea of postelection hell, although we don't know whose since Moscow's Metro newspaper alerted MT to the video but didn't bother to find out who paid for it (and reportedly exaggerrated greatly its viewership number).

From MT:

The three-minute video paints a dystopian future facing those who fail to show up at the polls on March 18, with a slew of comically absurd laws. A 52-year-old man dreams that he is drafted into a multi-ethnic army, harassed by a communist son for donations and forced to limit his daily number of bathroom visits.

Our Current Time TV colleagues invited Radio Ekho Moskvy editor in chief Aleksei Venediktov and journalist Vladimir Posner to talk about the foreign policy positions of the respective candidates. (In Russian)

CIS Observers On The Case

TASS quotes mission head and former Belarusian deputy speaker of parliament Viktar Huminski as saying CIS long-term election observers have started their work in Russia.

Moscow played the leading role in launching CIS election monitoring in 2003 against a backdrop of Russian condemnation of OSCE's frequently critical reports on Russian and other FSU votes.

Critics say the CIS has a pretty questionable record when it comes to election monitoring, including nods to deeply flawed votes like the Kyrygz election that sparked the so-called Tulip Revolution in 2005. Among other things, doubts about the CIS election-monitoring missions have arisen over the nationality of its observers -- since international monitors ideally aren't citizens of the state whose election they're observing -- but the TASS report didn't include details of the nationalities of the members of this Russia mission.

The OSCE's election monitors, for instance, after boycotting the 2008 Russian presidential election over "severe restrictions," described Putin's 2012 reelection as "clearly skewed" in his favor. And PACE warned of "serious concerns" later the same year in its summation of seven years of Russian political development.

The CIS observers, on the other hand, concluded that Russia's 2012 presidential vote was "free, open, and transparent."

A Month Of Good News

Russian state television and other Kremlin-friendly media have been given strict orders to present audiences with a steady diet of good-news stories in the run-up to the March 18 presidential election, The Insider reported on February 16.

Not one state outlet appears to have reported on a January 19 incident in which a schoolchild in Buryatia attacked teachers and students with an ax and a Molotov cocktail, just as none had mentioned a few days earlier when students had a bloody knife fight in Perm.

"It all began around New Year's," one state-television journalist was quoted as saying, "the first order was not to broadcast any negative information. This was explained by saying they didn't want people to worry, that they should keep celebrating and be happy."

But later the order was said to have been extended throughout the election period.

"We were told that our audience was only interested in three things," the source said, adding:

Putin, prices, and the weather. Nothing else on the whole territory of Russia interests people. So we put together newscasts where the lead story is the unexpected snowfall in Moscow, the second piece is about how cold it is in Kazakhstan, the third is about some disaster in South America, and the last piece is about a folk festival in some Russian village. That is evening prime time.

This long report in Russian is worth reading.

Putin Poster In Kurgan Defaced

Reports continue coming in of attacks against campaign billboards promoting President Putin. Earlier we reported how police in several cities have set up round-the-clock security for Putin's ads, but there are still new incidents.

In Kurgan, activists attacked two Putin billboards with green paint and posted photographs of their handiwork on social media.

The green paint was clearly a reminder of a spate of attacks last year against Russian opposition figures using zelyonka, a harsh antiseptic that stains the skin green.

In the most serious of the attacks, opposition leader and barred would-be candidate Aleksei Navalny suffered a serious eye injury when he was splattered with zelyonka on April 27, 2017. In May he traveled to Spain for surgery on the affected eye, but his vision reportedly remains impaired.

The Case Of The Magical Governor

Although President Putin has been reported in poor health recently (his spokesman said he has a cold) and has canceled a number of trips and events, the Kremlin insists that he continues working. On February 19, for instance, the Kremlin posted that Putin met in his residence near Moscow with Irkutsk Oblast Governor Sergei Levchenko.

However, locals in Irkutsk thought this was strange because earlier in the day, Levchenko participated in a ribbon-cutting at a new hospital in Irkutsk. That event, naturally, was well-covered by local media.

Because Irkutsk is 4,000 kilometers to the east, it is five hours ahead of Moscow time. Technically, blogger Irek Murtazin concedes, Levchenko could have made it to Moscow in time to speak with Putin; but it would have been quite a logistical feat.

According to the Kremlin transcript of the meeting, Putin's first question was, "What results have you achieved [in your region]?" Levchenko answered vaguely about a growth in industrial production and investment but didn't think to mention the bright new hospital he'd just cut the ribbon on a few hectic hours before.

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