More On Putin's 'Cold'
After the Kremlin announced that President Putin "has a cold" and began canceling his public appearances, some on Russian social media immediately began joking that he was actually undergoing plastic surgery. There have been unconfirmed rumors for many years that the 65-year-old Putin uses botox injections and other medical procedures to keep up his appearance.
This meme, for example, says that "By the time of the election, Putin will look younger than Sobchak," who is 36.
Commission Asks State TV To Reconsider Stone-Putin Broadcasts
Vedomosti reports that the Central Election Committee has asked state-owned Channel One television to rethink plans to rebroadcast a series of interviews this week that filmmaker Oliver Stone conducted with President Putin in 2015-17.
The committee said that broadcasting the program would not violate the law because it does not urge people to vote in any particular way and does not include any positive or negative characterizations of any candidates, including Putin. However, the CEC told Channel One "it is necessary to act with a heightened degree of care" to prevent the appearance of a conflict of interest.
Earlier, the Yavlinsky and Sobchak campaigns complained about the four-part program, which began airing on February 12 and is scheduled to continue through February 15.
- By Carl Schreck
An interesting sample of the national "draw the president" contest that Robert Coalson flagged on this page yesterday.
Grudinin Says He Would Recognize Ukrainian Separatist Regions
During a campaign stop in Novosibirsk on February 13, Communist Party presidential candidate Pavel Grudinin said if he were elected president, he would recognize so-called Luhansk and Donetsk people's republics, the self-proclaimed separatist formations in eastern Ukraine that are battling against the Ukrainian government with Russian support.
He also said that Crimea, the Ukrainian region that was annexed by Russia in 2014, is "Russian territory."
"If Russian people want to live with us, we must take them in," he said. "That is what we did."
Human Rights Icon Kovalyov Joins Sobchak Campaign
Sergei Kovalyov, the 87-year-old Soviet-era human rights dissident and heir to the mantle of Andrei Sakharov, has agreed to become an official representative of Ksenia Sobchak's presidential campaign.
"There are many opposition politicians and many of them are honorable people," Kovalyov said during a livestream meeting with Sobchak filmed in his Moscow kitchen. "But they compete with one another. But you have a tendency to speak for civil society. That is very important."
Kovalyov said that he would write a letter to Yabloko candidate Grigory Yavlinsky to personally explain his decision to back Sobchak instead of him.
Kovalyov praised the journalist and socialite for her recent trip to Chechnya, where she highlighted the appalling human rights record in the region under Chechen strongman Ramzan Kadyrov.
For her part, Sobchak thanked Kovalyov for his support and pledged to do her best to live up to his expectations.
Speaking to Russian state television cameras, Sobchak said she wants to see a memorial to slain opposition politician Boris Nemtsov in Russia "sooner than a Nemtsov Square appears in the United States." She said the failure to erect a memorial in Russia was "shameful."
Sobchak is gathering signatures on a petition to the Moscow city government calling for a Nemtsov memorial.
Putin's Cold And The Campaign
In his column for Republic.ru, opposition journalist Oleg Kashin plays off the Kremlin's announcement that Putin has a cold and is cancelling public appearances and speculates what the election would look like if the Kremlin leader decided he "was too lazy to campaign at all." Would it even matter?
"When Putin is healthy, some of his 'working meetings' are shown on television. And when Putin is ill, they also show 'working meetings.' There is no difference at all, and that makes the news of Putin's cold cold senseless," Kashin writes.
'Sanctions Poker' Ahead Of Election?
Iwona Wisniewska of the Warsaw-based Center for Eastern Studies argues that Kremlin is "obsessively worried" that Washington might introduce new sanctions before the presidential election "with the aim of destabilizing the domestic political situation."
At the same time, she says, if Washington fails to impose sanctions with a bite, it could "encourage Moscow to harden its stance and become more assertive."
- By Mike Eckel
Presidential Debates To Begin February 26, Likely Without Putin
Coming to Russian TV and Radio Stations Beginning February 26: The Presidential Debates.
Central Election Commission official Maya Grishina tells reporters that the first of what will be several broadcast debates will be held on February 26, with other dates to be added later.
It’s unclear which of the eight registered candidates will be participating, but it’s a sure bet that the one who will most definitely not is the one who is most likely to win the March 18 vote: Vladimir Putin.
Money For Votes?
Moscow blogger Denis Styazhkin says he came across an announcement on the VKontakte social-media site offering to pay Muscovites to serve as election monitors in the March 18 election.
But when he called, Styazhkin says, the young man who answered said: "It isn't so much monitoring. You simply have to come to the election and vote. We'll pay 1,500 rubles ($26) for that. You can vote for whomever you want. We aren't pushing a particular candidate. If you agree, send me photos of the first three pages of your passport and show up for our one-hour instruction."
Sobchak Lawyers File Complaint With Electoral Officials Over State TV Airing Stone Documentary On Putin
Lawyers for presidential candidate Ksenia Sobchak have filed a complaint with the election commission over Channel One's decision to rebroadcast Oliver Stone's four-part series on Putin, arguing it amounts to illegal campaigning for the three-term incumbent, Ekho Moskvy reports.
Yavlinsky's campaign has filed its own complaint on the same topic.