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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.

He says we must not allow "stability" to become "complacency."

Putin says he maintained the unity of the country and its democratic path through major economic and social changes.

Putin says the "significance of our every choice, every step" is extremely great.

Vladimir Ryzhkov, a prominent opposition figure: “Here is my prediction. Putin will promise to sign and implement new good decrees. Instead of the old and obsolete decrees. The ones that haven’t been implemented.”

Russian President Vladimir Putin is entering the hall for his annual address to the Federal Assembly.

First Debate Turns Into Circus

The first presidential election debate was aired on February 28, the morning after it was taped, featuring all seven of President Putin's challengers. (Putin has said he won't participate.)

Outspoken nationalist Vladimir Zhirinovsky lived up to his reputation as a disruptor, calling journalist and fellow candidate Ksenia Sobchak a "prostitute" and endlessly shouting through the presentations of other candidates.

Sobchak threw a glassful of water at him (video was shared here).

The incident was a weird echo of a 1995 televised debate between a much younger Zhirinovsky and liberal politician and then-Nizhny Novgorod Governor Boris Nemtsov, in which Zhirinovsky threw juice in Nemtsov's face and the two men nearly ended up brawling.

Nemtsov was shot dead outside the Kremlin on February 27, 2015, and Russians marked the third anniversary of the killing with memorials on February 25.

A View From Chelyabinsk

RFE/RL's Russian Service interviewed a small business owner, Putin critic, and self-styled election observer in Verkhny Ufaley, a so-called monocity in Chelyabinsk.

Nikolai Korshunov routinely posts politically charged messages in his six grocery stores, and says he runs into "opposition from law enforcement agencies and the administration of our small town." (Verkhny Ufaley has been notable for its rejection of ruling United Russia party candidates.) He appears to support the election boycott called for by Navalny.

It's worth a read (in Russian).

Korshunov argues that Putin's 18-year domination has taken a huge toll on his industrial community in the form of lost businesses and lost jobs, and that instead of so famously raising Russia "from its knees," Putin has it hurtling "at tremendous speed off a precipice."

Another Protest, Another Jailing

Our Russian Service picks up on reports that a local leader of The Other Russia, an unregistered opposition grouping, was jailed for nine days for an election-related action at Putin headquarters in St. Petersburg on February 21.

Two other Other Russia members were questioned after the group reportedly hung a banner opposite Putin campagn headquarters that read, "All Candidates - Clowns," then Andrei Dulov was taken into custody and charged.

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