The Denver Post

Butina now sits in Russia’s parliament

- By Valerie Hopkins

MOSCOW» When Russia’s lower house of parliament, or Duma, assembled last month for the first time after elections in September, one of its newest members was a name more familiar in the United States than in her home country.

Maria V. Butina made headlines across America when she was convicted three years ago of operating as an unregister­ed foreign agent trying to infiltrate influentia­l conservati­ve political circles before and after the 2016 election.

She is now focused on playing a prominent role in Russia’s political system — through legal means this time, and with the support of President Vladimir Putin’s United Russia party.

Butina, 33, who returned to Russia in October 2019 after spending 15 months in several U.S. penitentia­ries, including four months in solitary confinemen­t, now represents the impoverish­ed Kirov region in the Duma.

Her critics have characteri­zed her rapid political rise as a thankyou from the Kremlin, a claim she rejects.

“It’s not a reward,” Butina said in an interview at a cafe in central Moscow near where she lives. “I wasn’t a spy. I wasn’t working for the government. I was just a civilian.”

But in December 2018, Butina pleaded guilty to conspiring, under the direction of a Russian official, to “establish unofficial lines of communicat­ion” with high-level Republican­s on behalf of Russia’s government from 2015-17.

Prosecutor­s said she had tried to broker a meeting between then-candidate Donald Trump and Putin during the 2016 presidenti­al campaign, and the judge at her sentencing hearing noted she had been sending political reports to Russia at the same time Russian intelligen­ce operatives were trying to sway the election.

Since coming home, Butina has used her experience­s with Washington insiders — and the time she spent in prison — to cast herself as an expert on America and penal systems.

That was evident in April when she ambushed Russia’s most famous political prisoner, the opposition politician Alexei A. Navalny, on a surprise visit to the penal colony where he is held and which is notorious for harsh treatment.

Granted access as part of a civilian monitoring program, Butina favorably compared Navalny’s conditions to the U.S. prisons where she had served time.

In a widely seen video broadcast by the state-owned Rossiya24 television network, she said she was impressed by the facility’s food and medical services. Then she confronted Navalny, who at the time of her visit was one week into a 24-day hunger strike declared because he had been denied medical treatment for severe pain in his back and right leg.

“You can walk normally,” Butina tells Navalny, who did not consent to be filmed.

Navalny repeated to her that he was being denied access to his doctor, and walked off.

“I don’t judge Navalny. I said in that video what I saw,” Butina said in her interview.

Maria Pevchikh, who leads the investigat­ive unit of Navalny’s organizati­on, the Anti-corruption Foundation, said she believes Butina’s Duma seat was a gift not for her activities in the United States but for her harassment of Navalny. He had embarrasse­d Putin by exposing the government’s plot to kill him, and revealing the luxurious nature of a Black Sea palace believed to be purpose built for the Russian president.

“If anything, this was a reward for what she did by visiting Navalny in prison, and that TV episode, which was highly embarrassi­ng and disgusting,” Pevchikh said. “Not many people would agree to do that. And she did.”

In the United States, Butina’s case was treated like the plot of a Cold War thriller, and her love life — including a relationsh­ip with a Republican operative, Paul Erickson, whom she met in Russia in 2013 and who later would be convicted of financial crimes and pardoned by Trump — was dissected in lurid detail on cable news.

In Russia, however, the progovernm­ent media portrayed her story as a miscarriag­e of justice. Butina was seen as a scapegoat for Democrats’ failure to come to grips with Trump’s victory. Russia’s Foreign Ministry said it exemplifie­d America’s rampant “Russophobi­a.”

Over a caviar-laden meal at a restaurant featuring cuisine from her native Siberia, Butina insisted she wants to use her new status as a national lawmaker to improve relations between Washington and Moscow.

“I believed in the friendship between the two nations, and I still do believe in it,” Butina said. “We can be friends; we must be.”

Yet in her frequent TV appearance­s and on social media, she has been outspoken in her criticisms of America, especially when it comes to meddling in the affairs of other countries and race relations.

“She is quite a good trophy” for the ruling party, Pevchikh said. “Just talking nonstop about how bad things in America are.”

Before the recent Duma elections, she published a post about U.S. interferen­ce in foreign elections during the Cold War on Telegram, the social-media platform. “Their logic is that the U.S. can intervene in the elections of other countries, but Russia cannot,” she wrote.

Butina, who worked before joining the Duma for RT, a government-backed television channel, frequently comments on systemic racism in America, as pro-kremlin figures have done for decades.

In October 2020, Butina published a memoir, “Prison Diaries,” which discusses how her imprisonme­nt affected her political views.

While her time in prison did not make her any less of a gun-rights advocate — she said losing her lifetime NRA membership stung — it did diminish her affinity for the Republican Party, she said, as she witnessed America’s structural inequality first hand.

Much of the book explores her experience­s with Black inmates, and she said her time in prison had broken down a lot of stereotype­s she once held — and showed her how racist the views were of many of those American influencer­s she had been close to.

Butina wants to use her new Duma platform to help Russians imprisoned abroad, saying she was eager to campaign against solitary confinemen­t and torture. But when she was asked about a recent leaked cache of graphic videos that purported to show torture and rape in Russian prisons, Butina hesitated to comment, saying they needed to be verified.

Some of the Russian figures she has supported publicly include the convicted arms dealer Viktor Bout, known as the “Merchant of Death.”

Butina — who, during her time in the United States, earned a master’s degree in internatio­nal relations, with a focus on cybersecur­ity, from American University in Washington — continues to be highly active on social media. That was certainly the case in the United States, too, before she attracted the attention of FBI investigat­ors with her photograph­s with prominent Republican­s such as Donald Trump Jr., Rick Santorum and Scott Walker, as well as NRA leader Wayne Lapierre.

Her connection to Russian government figures predates her time in the Duma, and the United States. She arrived in Moscow from her native Siberian city of Barnaul in 2011 and soon after was hired as special assistant by a Russian senator, Alexander P. Torshin, an influentia­l member of United Russia who would become deputy governor of Russia’s Central Bank.

Still, in Russia, she is not a wellknown personalit­y, said Andrei Pertsev, a political journalist with the independen­t news outlet Meduza.

“The broad masses do not know her,” he said.

Butina was now just one among many “propagandi­sts” in the 450member Duma, Pertsev said, adding that in his view her elevation to the body — her seat was given to her by the governor of the Kirov region — was a way for the government to imbue her statements against America with more heft.

With her new job, “it is as if the speaker’s status rises, and these things, they sound more weighty,” said Pertsev, who shares something unwelcome in common with Butina.

His media outlet, Meduza, was designated a “foreign agent” by Russian authoritie­s this year, a charge that echoes the one against Butina, who failed to register her activities with the Justice Department as required by U.S. law.

But in Russia, the foreign agent label is primarily wielded against Russian citizens engaged in independen­t journalism or human rights work, and it has been applied increasing­ly to organizati­ons and individual­s whose work displeases the Kremlin.

“Don’t compare our law with your law,” Butina said, adding that she found the Russian law less onerous in its requiremen­ts than the American one.

As part of her U.S. plea deal, Butina had to admit to being part of an organized effort, backed by Russian officials, to persuade powerful conservati­ves that Russia should be counted as friend, not foe.

During her defense, her American lawyers argued in court that Butina’s efforts had been well-intentione­d and stressed that she had never tried to hide what she called her “diplomacy project.” Back in Russia, she denies ever having been part of a broader plot and insists she acted on her own.

“If I had known that I have to register to build peace between the two nations by my own initiative,” she said, “I would have loved to.”

 ?? Sergey Ponomarev, © The New York Times Co. ?? Maria V. Butina made headlines across America when she was convicted three years ago of operating as an unregister­ed foreign agent trying to infiltrate influentia­l conservati­ve political circles before and after the 2016 election. Now she represents the impoverish­ed Kirov region in the Russian parliament.
Sergey Ponomarev, © The New York Times Co. Maria V. Butina made headlines across America when she was convicted three years ago of operating as an unregister­ed foreign agent trying to infiltrate influentia­l conservati­ve political circles before and after the 2016 election. Now she represents the impoverish­ed Kirov region in the Russian parliament.

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