The Guardian (USA)

He cheated death, but can Navalny ever break Putin’s grip on Russia?

- Shaun Walker in Tomsk

It has been an eventful few weeks for Ksenia Fadeyeva, who runs Alexei Navalny’s operations in the Siberian city of Tomsk. In mid-August, she welcomed the Russian opposition leader to this university town in the heart of the country’s vast landmass, to make a preelectio­n video about local corruption, as part of Fadeyeva’s bid to win election to the city council.

It was on the plane back to Moscow from Tomsk that Navalny suddenly fell ill, and ended up in a coma, fighting for his life. German doctors say he was poisoned with a novichok nerve agent, apparently in his Tomsk hotel room.

Fadeyeva had said goodbye to Navalny late the previous evening, and was scrolling through her phone that morning when she saw the news on Twitter. “It was something unbelievab­le. I don’t think anyone expected it,” she recalled in an interview last week at her office at Navalny’s Tomsk HQ, a modest room in a red-brick office block, with the walls painted sky-blue and adorned with a large map of Tomsk divided into electoral districts.

Shaken but not deterred, Fadeyeva continued with her election campaign. She was buoyed by the fact that almost everyone in the city had watched Navalny’s video, made before the poisoning and released after, which implicated local bigwigs in various corrupt schemes. Navalny explained how officials from United Russia, the ruling party that backs president Vladimir Putin, skimmed money from the utility payments that all Tomsk residents pay. Navalny’s team flew drones over their vast mansions outside town to illustrate the corruption for the video.

“Everyone understand­s that officials steal, but when it’s shown exactly who, how, when and how much, the effect is different,” said Fadeyeva. The election came three weeks after Navalny’s poisoning, and Fadeyeva and her colleague, Andrei Fateyev, both won seats on the town council, as did a slew of candidates backed by a tactical voting project developed by Navalny’s team. Previously, United Russia held 32 of 37 seats on the council; now it will have just 11.

A city of 550,000 inhabitant­s a fourhour flight from Moscow, Tomsk is known for its universiti­es and hundreds of stunning wooden houses, built during the tsarist period when Tomsk was inhabited by exiles and adventurer­s. In the grand scheme of Russian politics, losing control of Tomsk city council is hardly a crushing blow to Putin. But United Russia’s dismal results in Tomsk and elsewhere hint at a broader malaise in Russian politics, which the Kremlin is trying hard to address ahead of parliament­ary elections next year.

On the surface, Putin’s position seems more commanding than ever: in July, Russians approved a constituti­onal amendment that allows him to rule until 2036, and while his approval ratings may be far from the high point prompted by the 2014 annexation of Crimea and war in Ukraine, they still hover in the 60s, enviably high in comparison to most western politician­s.

On the other hand, the sudden transforma­tion of neighbouri­ng Belarus from paragon of stability to revolution­ary hotbed in recent weeks is giving policymake­rs in the Kremlin something to think about. Additional­ly, protesters in Khabarovsk, a city in Russia’s far east, have taken to the streets all though the summer, angry at the arrest of the popular local governor, Sergei Furgal, who defeated the Kremlin’s candidate.

Some people see the brazen attack on Navalny as a reaction to these events, noting the almost overnight transforma­tion of Svetlana Tikhanovsk­aya in Belarus from a political nobody to figurehead of a revolution. When the door to an alternativ­e political reality finally eased ajar, it turned out almost everyone in Belarus wanted to walk through it.

“Belarus is telling Putin one thing: there should never be a candidate at elections who can consolidat­e the protest mood in society,” said Georgy Alburov, one of Navalny’s closest associates, in an interview at the HQ of his Anti-Corruption Foundation in Moscow. “Instead, they will try to use people who once had a reputation for opposition, but have long ago sold out.”

During Putin’s two decades in charge, there has been a tradition of these “systemic” opposition parties, which engage in politics within certain agreed boundaries, and on the whole refrain from criticism of the president. They can even get into real battles with United Russia, to give the impression of political skirmishes, but Putin should remain above the fray.

With the old systemic parties now feeling stale, the Kremlin has facilitate­d the creation of several new ones in recent months. Separately, a Kremlinbac­ked programme called Leaders of Russia is meant to train the next generation of politician­s, who will be younger, more critical but ultimately remain loyal. “There is a need to refresh the political scene, to bring in some fresh air,” conceded one official in Moscow.

Navalny has always refused to play by these rules. A charismati­c and dogged anti-corruption activist who reposition­ed himself from unsavoury nationalis­t to liberal darling, his danger to the system comes from the fact that he is able to persuasive­ly and eloquently dispel the official narrative that Putin is the “good tsar” trying to sort out the unruly and crooked regional leaders.

Through well-produced videos, he explains how corruption in the regions leads directly to the Kremlin and is an integral part of Putin’s system. He’s banned from state television (though in recent weeks he has made many appearance­s as anchors accuse him of faking his poisoning) but racks up views online. His Tomsk video has 4 million views on YouTube.

In 2017, Navalny announced he was setting up a network of regional headquarte­rs across Russia to back a presidenti­al run against Putin in 2018. He was not allowed to stand, but the campaign resulted in a network of dedicated regional leaders like Fadeyeva. She formerly worked in marketing for a network of florists but had always been politicall­y engaged, and jumped at the chance to work for Navalny.

Soon after starting the job, someone slashed her car tyres, and the door of her apartment was sealed closed to stop her leaving. Since then, she’s had her computer seized and not returned, and has spent 25 days in prison in two stints. It’s standard fare for Navalny’s regional acolytes, who deal with a constant stream of attacks that are one part trolling, several parts sinister. Just this week, Andrey Borovikov, coordinato­r of Navalny’s office in the northern city of Arkhangels­k, was subjected to a police search and told he would be charged with distributi­ng pornograph­y, apparently due to a music video he shared on social media six years ago.

Fadeyeva said this had not shaken her determinat­ion to continue her work but conceded that the poisoning changes the equation. “Actually trying to kill someone, it’s pretty scary. There

were always people throwing eggs or paint at him, but this is a new level,” she said.

The night before he left Tomsk, Navalny held an informal meeting with 15 volunteers. One posed a question he gets asked frequently: why haven’t they killed you yet? Fadeyeva recalled Navalny’s response: “He joked sarcastica­lly about this being his favourite question. Then he said he guessed the Kremlin had decided it was better to paralyse him with court cases, jail sentences and police searches rather than kill him and make a hero of him.”

After the meeting, a small group went to take a late dip in the river Tom, which flows through the town, and then Fadeyeva drove Navalny back to the Xander hotel and they said their goodbyes. Less than 12 hours later, his plane made an emergency landing in Omsk with the politician on the brink of death.

Navalny appears to be well on the road to recovery now and says he plans to return to Russia. He still has relatively low political ratings, though approval of his activities has risen from 9% to 20% over the past year, according to a poll last week, though he is seen as enough of a threat to be kept off the ballot by authoritie­s, and even subjected to a poison attack, despite them simultaneo­usly denigratin­g him as irrelevant.

While isolated candidates like Fadeyeva are sometimes allowed to stand, Navalny’s party has been denied registrati­on, and it appears authoritie­s may try to prevent him from returning to Russia after he has recovered in Germany.

Aside from novichok, perhaps the biggest problem for any politician in Russia now is apathy, and the feeling that sociologis­ts call “learned helplessne­ss” – a decision based on experience that attempts to change things are pointless.

“For years, people have thought that whatever you do, it can’t change anything, so when you knock on doors there are a lot of people who just aren’t interested, even if they want change,” said Fadeyeva, recounting her visits to the city’s Soviet-era apartment blocks to drum up support. Most people she tried to speak to simply told her they did not think politics could change anything, though this also worked in her favour. With turnout in the vote at under 20%, it took only a few thousand votes to flip the Tomsk council.

She said she believed Navalny can eventually take advantage of a deepseated desire for change that lurks below this widespread apathy. “He’s the only person in Russia who’s really doing politics. He’s built this network, and I think people can see he’s willing to risk everything to bring change, including his life, it turns out.”

The presidenti­al administra­tion is instead focusing on the newer, more agreeable opposition forces to provide this sense of change without rocking the boat. “The final goal is to have a pool of candidates who would be chosen by the Kremlin and could participat­e in state Duma elections next year to create a feeling of rotation,” said political analyst Tatiana Stanovaya.

In Tomsk, New People, a newly minted party led by businessma­n Alexei Nechayev, took second place in the vote, despite only existing for a few months and featuring bland slogans about change and renewal.

New People’s candidate against Fadeyeva was Yulia Mustafina, a 34-yearold businesswo­man who ran on a platform of improved services for pregnant women and mothers. She described herself as opposition-minded, and against Putin, but didn’t like Navalny’s radicalism and was against public protest. “We are not revolution­aries, we’re peaceful, we are not even really politician­s. We just want to make things better through dialogue,” she said.

Still, with so little political oxygen in the regions, even fake opposition parties can find themselves gasping for air. Last Monday, Mustafina organised a protest outside a maternity clinic which the city authoritie­s plan to turn into a Covid hospital as Russia grapples with the disease.

“They called me from the administra­tion and said, ‘Have you gone mad? Organising protests? Do you know what you’re getting into?’ ” On Thursday, officials from Russia’s health watchdog visited a gym owned by Mustafina and uncovered a range of supposed safety violations that could result in huge fines.

For now, this fits the Kremlin’s strategy of having opposition forces that challenge local authoritie­s while remaining ultimately loyal to Putin. But it’s a potentiall­y risky strategy. “You may want to create one thing but you don’t know what the result will be. Perhaps Dr Frankenste­in wants to make a beautiful lady but you can’t guarantee that that’s what’s going to happen,” said Alexei Shcherbini­n, a political science professor at Tomsk State University.

The most remarkable story from the recent elections came from the village of Povalikhin­o, about 300 miles from Moscow. The local United Russia chief asked Marina Udgodskaya, a cleaner working in the building, to run against him. She was meant to be a token candidate, to give the race an air of competitio­n, and did not campaign. She won 62% of the vote and will now take up office.

So far, the Kremlin’s problems are all similarly localised: a few isolated victories for Navalny supporters, some surprise wins for dark horses, protests over specific regional issues in Khabarovsk and elsewhere. Russia is perhaps too vast, and too diverse, for a Tikhanovsk­aya figure to emerge and consolidat­e opposition to Putin, or for a sustained, nationwide season of street protest. The Kremlin may be able to continue is careful political management for years to come. Equally, there could be a sudden, unexpected turn of events.

“There’s declining trust for every political institutio­n and leader. We have a huge political capital vacuum, and it has not yet been invested in Navalny, who is gaining in visibility but not significan­tly gaining in popularity,” said Moscow-based political scientist Ekaterina Schulmann. “There are great expectatio­ns and no one to project them on to. Such a figure may arise, and it may well be quite an accidental target.”

 ??  ?? Navalny’s video explained how officials from United Russia, the party that backs Vladimir Putin (right), skimmed money from utility payments. Photograph: Sputnik/
Navalny’s video explained how officials from United Russia, the party that backs Vladimir Putin (right), skimmed money from utility payments. Photograph: Sputnik/
 ??  ?? Alexei Navalny, left, with Ksenia Fadeyeva in Tomsk, Russia. Photograph: Andrei Fateyev/
Alexei Navalny, left, with Ksenia Fadeyeva in Tomsk, Russia. Photograph: Andrei Fateyev/

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