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Russian President Vladimir Putin delivers his annual address to the Federal Assembly in Moscow on April 21, 2021.
Russian President Vladimir Putin delivers his annual address to the Federal Assembly in Moscow on April 21, 2021.

Live Blog: Putin's Annual State-Of-The-Nation Address As It Happened

Follow as our team of Russia experts monitored the speech, highlighted the news, and offered personal takes on Putin's remarks.

  • Russian President Vladimir Putin used his 17th annual state-of-the-nation address to a joint session of the Russian parliament to issue threats against what he called foreign provocations, vowing amid several widening rifts with the West that Moscow would respond in a harsh and swift way.
  • Putin said that Moscow strived to have good relations with other countries, but warned no foreign state should cross Russia's "red lines" without elaborating. "Anyone who stages any provocations that threaten our safety will regret it in a way they've never regretted anything before," Putin said.
  • At the start of his address, Putin focused on the COVID-19 pandemic, which has hit Russia hard. Putin said that Russians should attain collective immunity from COVID-19 by this autumn and urged all citizens to get vaccinated against the coronavirus.
  • Read our news summary here.

*Time stamps on the blog refer to local time in Moscow.

12:50 21.4.2021

Says government will do more to encourage and protect private investment in order to reduce risks.

12:48 21.4.2021

Turns to discussing various ways of improving the business climate in Russia, including streamlining bureaucracy and inspections. "We have discussed this question many times," he admits.

12:43 21.4.2021

Turns his attention to energy and climate-change issues. Calls for new technologies and restructuring entire industries, including agriculture. Says these changes will create many modern and well-paid jobs. Says Academy of Sciences should be entirely devoted to improving the daily lives of Russian citizens.

12:41 21.4.2021

Putin suggests school history textbooks in Russia should be rewritten to emphasize the feats of the country's past heroes. "Sometimes I open one of these textbooks and it doesn't even say anything about the Battle of Stalingrad," he said. An old theme but an enduring one.

12:40 21.4.2021

12:40 21.4.2021

It looks like the Kremlin is turning to an age-old way to build goodwill and garner support from voters.

Cash.

Putin says the government will handing out one-time payments to families in the amount of 10,000 rubles (about $130) for each school-age child.

In August.

Which just happens to be about two months before the country holds national parliamentary elections, where the Kremlin-allied ruling party is seeing its approval ratings in the gutter.

Putin says expectant mothers will also be getting government benefits and more extended sick leave for mothers.

The income problem dovetails with the rising prices problem. And it's also a reflection of such how stagnant average Russians' income has been for much of the past decade.


12:39 21.4.2021

Says more money coming for "student parks," "business incubators," and the like.

12:38 21.4.2021

Claims Russia has best program of free higher education in the world.

12:37 21.4.2021

Urges schools to do a better job teaching the history of "multi-cultural Russia." Says he recently opened textbooks and was shocked by what was being taught.

12:34 21.4.2021

Government plans to buy 16,000 new school buses.

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