Orlando Sentinel

In coma, top critic rankles Putin

Backers of poisoned Kremlin dissident Alexei Navalny now highly motivated in campaign against Putin.

- By Daria Litvinova

MOSCOW — All the attempts over the years to stop the work of Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny have failed — so far.

He’s been jailed repeatedly and twice put on trial for embezzleme­nt and fraud. He’s been put under house arrest and splashed in the face with green antiseptic, damaging his sight. He was hospitaliz­ed last year for a suspected poisoning while in custody.

Now Navalny is in an induced coma in a Berlin hospital after suffering what German authoritie­s say was a poisoning with a chemical nerve agent while the opposition leader and corruption fighter was traveling from Siberia on Aug. 20. The Kremlin has denied involvemen­t, and questioned whether he was poisoned at all.

Initially stunned by the attempt on his life, his supporters soon got back to work on their latest campaign against the government of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

“We’ve got more anger and more motivation to work harder in order to, among other things, show the Kremlin that these methods of pressuring the opposition don’t work,” said Lyubov Sobol, one of Navalny’s closest allies.

His top strategist, Leonid Volkov, said Navalny’s team members put all their regular work on hold as they arranged his transfer from a hospital in Omsk, where the plane carrying the unconsciou­s activist had made an emergency landing. They publicized his plight for 48 hours, from the moment the plane landed in Omsk to the minute when the medevac plane carrying Navalny took off for Berlin.

“Starting from Sunday, when he was already in

Berlin, I firmly told everyone — and everyone understood, of course — that, ‘Guys, I’m sorry but we need to get back to our normal work,’ ” Volkov said. “We’ve got to slog away at Smart Voting.”

The Smart Voting project was launched in 2018 and is designed to oust the Kremlin’s dominant United Russia party — which Navalny has dubbed “the party of crooks and thieves” — from regional government­s and legislatur­es.

The project aims to identify and campaign for candidates who are most likely to beat those backed by the Kremlin in various elections.

Last year, the project helped opposition candidates win 20 out of 45 seats on the Moscow city council. This year, Navalny’s team hopes to use it in 31 Russian regions where elections on various levels are scheduled for Sept. 13. In some of those

regions, the team put forward its own candidates.

Navalny, 44, has been a thorn in the Kremlin’s side even though he is barred from running against Putin because of the 2017 conviction for embezzleme­nt — a charge he says was politicall­y motivated. In public statements, Putin refuses to even speak Navalny’s name.

Through his two popular YouTube channels detailing government corruption, Navalny’s reach has spread across the country. In 2017, he set up a network of campaign offices in a bid to challenge Putin in the 2018 presidenti­al election. Even though he was banned from running against Putin, Navalny kept the infrastruc­ture in place.

These regional “headquarte­rs” began their own investigat­ions of graft by local officials and recruited activists, some of whom would later run for office. Navalny believes that end

ing the dominance of United Russia in regional parliament­s and administra­tions will undermine “the formal mechanism” of Putin’s rule.

After Navalny was hospitaliz­ed in Germany, his team used the moment to promote Smart Voting, filling social media with calls to register on the project’s online platform that tells voters which candidates to support in their area. Volkov said the appeals have increased registrati­ons.

On Monday, they released a 40-minute expose of corruption in Novosibirs­k, a large city in Siberia where a coalition of over 30 opposition candidates is running for the city council. The video, which has gotten over 4 million views on YouTube, was shot during Navalny’s fateful trip to Siberia.

“The foundation of Putin’s power is not the State Duma, as one would think. No,” Navalny says in

the video, stressing the importance of the local elections.

“Their main power is in United Russia having a majority in every regional legislatur­e and a majority in every big city council. If (United Russia) loses this majority, the power of the villains melts away immediatel­y,” he says.

From these regional roots, Navalny’s team hopes to go all the way to the State Duma — Russia’s lower house of parliament — and deploy the Smart Voting strategy in the 2021 parliament­ary election.

“It’s a dress rehearsal, a decisive test of strength before the elections to the State Duma,” Volkov said.

Navalny’s ability to mobilize voters next year poses a key challenge for the Kremlin, because those elections will determine who controls the State Duma in 2024. That’s when Putin’s current term expires and he is expected to seek reelection, thanks to a reset of his term limits after lawmakers and voters approved changes to Russia’s constituti­on this year. And Putin’s approval ratings have fallen recently amid growing public frustratio­n over the declining economy.

The Smart Voting strategy could indeed upend government plans for the new parliament, said Nikolai Petrov, a senior research fellow in Chatham House’s Russia and Eurasia Program, but he said Navalny’s personal involvemen­t is crucial.

“Navalny is unique because no one but him . has enough authority to consolidat­e votes for various non-Kremlin forces and ensure defeat of the Kremlin’s candidates,” Petrov said.

Still, Navalny has built an organizati­on that goes beyond the appeal of one man. With him jailed so often, his supporters are used to working on their own, as is his network of over 40 regional cells nationwide.

“Navalny was imprisoned for 30 or 50 days last year, and the work didn’t stop. It’s the same now. Yes, of course, it was a shock for us, but we didn’t stop our campaigns,” said Ksenia Fadeyeva, who runs the regional headquarte­rs in the Siberian city of Tomsk and is running for city council.

At the same time, his supporters admit that his charisma and popularity are an asset, even though his anti-corruption campaigns have angered many in power even outside the Kremlin.

Volkov admits that hardly anyone on the team has as much “political capital” or could rally people like Navalny, who could come up with “thoughts and ideas that were interestin­g to a lot of people,” as well as effective forms of communicat­ion.

“The Kremlin understand­s that, and it understand­s that with one horrific criminal act it can try and nullify a significan­t part of what we’ve done,” he added.

 ?? IGOR VOLKOV/AP ?? Alexei Navalny, a top critic of Vladimir Putin, is in a coma in a German hospital. Above, a man supports Navalny.
IGOR VOLKOV/AP Alexei Navalny, a top critic of Vladimir Putin, is in a coma in a German hospital. Above, a man supports Navalny.

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