Russia’s Navalny: From protests to prison to politics

Last year, Alexei Navalny led street rallies against Russian President Vladimir Putin. This year, President Putin pushed back.

Navalny was tried on charges of stealing timber. Two weeks ago, he was convicted and sentenced to five years behind bars. The sentence knocked Russia’s most popular opposition leader out of the country’s next presidential election in 2018.

Then the unexpected occurred. The morning after going to jail, Navalny was released to run for mayor of Moscow, Russia’s largest city. He is up against Sergei Sobyanin, Putin’s former chief of staff, who was appointed mayor three years ago.

“They want Moscow elections to be legitimate, to legitimize Sergei Sobyanin, and to get him re-elected having at least some viable opponent,” said, Lilia Shevtsova, who analyzes Russian politics for Carnegie Moscow Center, referring to Kremlin strategists. “And at the same time, they would like to play a chess game and to undermine Navalny’s potential, and they believe this is still possible.”

Sobyanin wants to earn the mayor’s title in elections scheduled for September 8.

Out on the street, there is strong support for Sobyanin, who is changing Moscow, creating new pedestrian streets, cutting traffic into downtown, rebuilding parks, and tearing down billboards and outdoor advertising.

Vagan Davidyants, a lawyer, has his office on one of the new car-free streets.

“For the last two years we have seen the changes, and I think he is at the halfway mark of his job, his plans,” he said one day after work. “So I think we have to give him the next four years or five years to do all the things he planned to do. Because two years is not enough, he’s on the first step of his changes for Moscow. So I’m going to vote for him.”

Yuliya Zueva, a pedicab driver, also likes the changes she sees. She said that Sobyanin did a good job running an oil-rich region of Russia five years ago and that now, he is making positive changes in Moscow.

Navalny is blocked from state-run television. His supporters communicate and raise money through the Internet. Others say Russia needs a change, what they call more political fresh air.

Maria, a retired theater director, voiced her support for Navalny as she stopped by a sidewalk campaign tent.

“I’m voting for Navalny, and not because he’s some kind of superhero, but because I think that he’s a real person,” she said.

Igor Tarasov, an IT worker, was handing out leaflets for Navalny and said, “With him the government will become more transparent, more democratic, and more pro-Western.”

But then a policeman intervened to stop volunteers from handing out the leaflets.

Later, Tarasov told VOA that the officer first wanted to arrest him, but that in a compromise, said only one person would be allowed to distribute the leaflets.

In Vladimir Putin’s Russia, old habits die hard. Many people predict that, once the mayoral election is over, the Kremlin will return Navalny to prison.

But this time, he would go bolstered by the votes of tens – maybe hundreds – of thousands of people in the nation’s capital.

Source: VOANews.com

(Alexey Navalny. Photo: valya Egorshin/flickr.com)

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James Brooke VOA Moscow Bureau Chief

James Brooke is VOA Moscow bureau chief, covering Russia and the former USSR. With The New York Times, he worked as a foreign correspondent in Africa, Latin America, Canada and Japan/Koreas. He studied Russian in college during the Brezhnev years, first visited Moscow as a reporter during the final months of Gorbachev, and then came back for reporting forays during the Yeltsin and early Putin years. In 2006, he moved to Moscow to report for Bloomberg. He joined VOA in Moscow last summer – the hottest on record. Follow Jim on Twitter @VOA_Moscow.