Boris Nadezhdin seeks to run in the March 17 presidential election in Russia. The question now is whether authorities will allow him on the ballot.

The stocky, bespectacled 60-year-old local legislator and academic has struck a chord with the public, openly calling for a halt to the conflict in Ukraine, the end of mobilizing Russian men for the military, and starting a dialogue with the West. He also has criticized the country’s repression of LGBTQ+ activism.

  • Axiochus@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Russian politics isn’t primarily about rigging the elections. That alone will create a dissatisfied populace, you don’t want this. You want complacency, fear, ignorance, apathy, patriotism, pragmatism. Ideally you want to maintain a strong authentic base that will preserve the status quo and keep you in power. Alternatives, in such a system, need to be destroyed, discredited, or assimilated, they can’t become a loudspeaker for growing dissatisfaction with the status quo.

    • Deceptichum@kbin.social
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      5 months ago

      And yet every election there is widespread fraud.

      Didn’t we even watch them on CCTV last time doing it or was that the time before? It gets hard to remember when, when there so much of it.

      • Axiochus@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Yup, there is. And it’s not a democratic system. But the point is that, even to the autocratic cannibals that are currently in power, it matters to keep a sizeable chunk of the population just content enough to be a majority supporter of the status quo. Thus, elections matter. They are a way to gauge the stability of the system. I have no doubt that, prior to the elections, the party will expend a lot of its resources to placate, inspire, threaten, confuse the population in its favor. Stuff like further mobilisations and austerity measures will come after the elections.