For nearly two decades, Russia has been thoroughly dominated by one man – Vladimir Putin. Yet, despite Putin’s iron grip on power, a new politician has proved to be a looming threat to Russia's current political order. His name is Alexei Navalny. (duh duh duhhhhh) Throughout his uneven political career, Navalny has sought to unseat Russia’s ruling party. As Navalny’s anti-corruption activities took off, so did his political career.
On paper, Russia is a democracy. The state regularly holds open elections, and many different political parties can put up candidates. However, in practice, the country falls short of these democratic practices – despite the alternatives on the ballot, the ruling party always wins when it counts.
Notes:
- Key message: For two decades, Alexei Navalny has shaken up the complex world of Russian politics. Personally I liked where Navalny used his wealth to launch a vast anti-corruption campaign. Navalny’s career as an anti-corruption activist began in 2006 with so-called shareholder activism. Navalny grew his movement into a lively activist and protest network.
- His mother was an accountant and his father a decorated officer in the Soviet Army. During his youth, Russia was still part of the Soviet Union, though the Navalny family weren’t supporters of the Soviet system. By the age of 17, Navalny had already identified himself as a political liberal, and when the USSR fell in 1991, he was optimistic. He hoped the rupture would usher in an economic system centered on a free-market and a political order beholden to democratic principles. Beginning in 1993, he studied law and economics at the People’s Friendship University of Russia and, after graduation, began a lucrative career in banking, stock trading, and real estate development.
- He’s earned a reputation as an idealistic anti-corruption activist, and, in 2012, he helped found Russia of the Future, a political party in opposition to Putin’s dominant Russia United party. Still, it’s difficult to distill Navalny’s personality and politics down to a simple narrative.
- Using leaked documents, Navalny found that Transneft, a major oil company, had mysteriously lost $4 billion when constructing the Eastern Siberia-Pacific Ocean pipeline. The allegations kicked off a major government investigation. While the inquiry was eventually sidelined with little resolution, it nonetheless made elite corruption a major topic in Russian media discourse.
- One reason this movement became such a success was Navalny’s strategic outreach to regions and localities all around Russia. The campaign dedicated resources to opening offices wherever possible, and made efforts to connect with local organizers and activist groups already at work in each area. When government officials tried to hamper the movement by denying its protest permits, these seasoned organizers could help set up rallies and meetings in private locations.
- Putin’s party actively works to keep opposition like Navalny from power. (Back in 2020, Navalny had been mysteriously poisoned. After recovering in Germany, the politician and activist returned to Russia, where authorities detained him for violating the conditions of his parole stemming from the previous charges of embezzlement.)
- Navalny remains in prison, but his political movement will continue. While more than 75 percent of Russians recognize him by name, polls indicate that only about 19 percent enthusiastically support his activities. Alexei Navalny is perhaps Russia’s best-known political dissident.