Zina Saunders
To start it off, the anti-Putin
coalition wanted to hold a Monday evening rally on Lubyanka, down the
street from Red Square. As we talk on Thursday night, an aide enters to
tell Mr. Navalny that the city and his opposition colleagues have agreed
instead to use Pushkin Square. He makes a sour face and bites his
tongue. Mr. Navalny wanted it in the center of town, but to keep
everyone happy he won't criticize the decision.
The Kremlin acts as if it fears Mr.
Navalny most of all the dissident figures. Websites and television
stations friendly to the regime have tried to smear him as a CIA
operative or Hitler-like nationalist. His emails were hacked into and
published. He is the sole opposition leader still barred from
state-controlled television.
"I'm on the very blackest part of the black list," says Mr. Navalny.
When television host and Putin family friend Ksenia Sobchak invited him
on her popular show on Russian MTV, it was yanked off the air—everyone
presumes on government orders. "Sometimes it seems to me that there is a
small crazy guy in the Kremlin who works for me," Mr. Navalny jokes.
"Relatively few people watch such shows. But because they banned it,
there are millions of Russians now who wonder, 'Who is he? Why do they
fear him so much?'"
Mr. Navalny, who is 35 years old, leads no party. He oversees a staff
of 11 and works from an office of four rooms and barren walls off the
Moscow ring road. A couple of young men sit behind laptops and work on
his latest civic Internet initiative to register election monitors for
Sunday's vote. The Kremlin barred credible challengers and put Mr. Putin
up against several stalking horses. Yet election day won't come without
suspense. Thousands of people in big cities are going to fan out to
prevent and document the fraud everyone expects will be needed to assure
Mr. Putin his first-round victory.
Russia last saw this level of civic engagement in the late
glasnost
years of the Soviet Union. Many of the people behind the current
protests have no memory of it. Until recently, opposition politics was
the province of marginal activists and Moscow intellectuals beaten down
by 12 years of Mr. Putin's "sovereign democracy."
Yet in a matter of weeks, politics went mainstream, even cool. How
much so is shown by the presence of Ms. Sobchak, a 30-year-old who runs
her own fashion line, at the rallies: The so-called "Paris Hilton of
Moscow" is the daughter of the former St. Petersburg mayor, Anatoly
Sobchak, who was Mr. Putin's mentor. "It's a very positive sign when all
this establishment—the TV people, the writers—who enjoyed life in the
Putin years are now escaping it," says Mr. Navalny. "They're deserters."
The Internet virtually created the Navalny phenomenon. Trained as a
lawyer, he got into politics through the liberal Yabloko (or Apple)
party. He missed out on the politics of the 1990s, a toxic decade of
economic chaos. In contrast with older, less popular opposition figures
like Boris Nemtsov or Mikhail Kasyanov who served in government, he
brings no baggage from that time.
Mr. Navalny dabbled with youth and nationalist groups in the 2000s.
Nothing took off. He then found a calling and voice as an anticorruption
activist. He bought small stakes in large companies and tried to invoke
shareholder rights to open their books. Another effort involves looking
into government procurement contracts to find fraud. In Russia, poking
into corruption is a serious health risk.
Mr. Navalny publicized his findings on his LiveJournal blog, which
has become one of the most popular blogs in Russia. His writing style in
posts and tweets is personal, emotional and direct. He can turn a
phrase, and stuck the memorable "party of crooks and thieves" label on
the ruling United Russia Party. He also brings a common touch, rare
among the Moscow liberal crowd, to his public speaking.
Internet entrepreneur Anton Nossik says the Web offered "a platform
for samizdat." It freed Mr. Navalny in another sense, providing an easy
way to raise money directly and quickly online. Other NGOs have since
adopted his funding model.
Three days before the elections, Mr. Navalny fields calls at his
office. Wearing blue jeans and a blue shirt, he has an easy charm about
him in his confident English. He is saltier in Russian. Mr. Navalny
spent a semester at Yale as a "world fellow" in 2010, which Kremlin
propagandists say was part of an American "program to initiate an
'orange coup' in Russia."
It would be inaccurate to say that Mr. Navalny leads the movement,
which includes many different faces from the worlds of media, art,
business and politics. There are also concerns voiced about his
"nationalist tendencies." He clashed with opposition leaders to let
ultra-nationalist speakers on stage at the rallies. He has called for a
visa requirement for people from Central Asia and said that ethnic
Russians are mistreated in neighboring ex-Soviet republics.
Yet for now, the nationalism seems to be worn lightly, and if
anything is a political asset. "The left liberals thought it was
dangerous to talk about such things—that it will bring problems because
it will touch the dark side of the Russian soul, and all that sort of
stuff, but it's totally bull—," he says. "People in their kitchens
discuss such problems. That's why I am supported more widely [than they
are] because I discuss these problems."
Others question his tactical judgment. He provoked the police into
arresting him after the first large rally in December. In jail for 15
days, he missed an opportunity to submit an application to run for
president. He says it was pointless; the Kremlin would have disallowed
his candidacy.
The Kremlin faces its own tough choices. Barring an Egypt-style
overthrow, any transition from Mr. Putin to someone new may have to
include security guarantees for him and his family. Previous leader
Boris Yeltsin negotiated such an arrangement with Mr. Putin. But the
former KGB colonel could also "escalate," to use Mr. Navalny's word, the
confrontation with the opposition.
Against Mr. Navalny's office wall sits a large framed photograph of
two men smiling and shaking hands: Libya's late Moammar Gadhafi and
Vladimir Putin. It is a gift from a real-estate mogul who relies on the
Kremlin for his good fortune but has turned against Mr. Putin. "The guy
told me, 'the worst enemy is the former friend,'" says Mr. Navalny.
'Putin did a lot of good stuff from 1999 until 2003," he says,
referring to Mr. Putin's early years, when the economy recovered and
some reforms were introduced. But it's the high price of oil that has
kept the economy going and notably enriched a clique of Putin friends
from St. Petersburg. "People don't believe in positive changes anymore.
It's 20 years that he wants to keep absolute power. It's obvious now
that his system of power is based on corruption, and people around him
depend only on money and corruption."
As his popularity has slid, Mr. Putin's rhetoric has hardened.
Earlier this week, he said the opposition would fake evidence of
electoral fraud to embarrass him—maybe even kill one of their leaders.
Mr. Putin also was badly rattled by the Arab uprising, most of all
Gadhafi's fall and murder.
Pointing to the dead Libyan leader in the photograph, Mr. Navalny
says, "The history of this guy drives [Putin] crazy. He thinks the only
way for him to be alive and healthy and rich is to be president. It's a
big problem for us. This guy is trapped."
Mr. Kaminski is a member of The Journal's editorial board.
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