Summoning the leader
Why has the Kremlin decided to reinstate Putin’s annual live call-in event this year?

The Kremlin last week announced its plan to reinstate the annual presidential call in and the end-of-year press conference with Russian President Vladimir Putin this year, merging the two events into one.
While the Presidential Administration hasn’t specified a date, sources involved in preparations for the event have suggested to the RBC media group that 14 December is the likely date.
Both events were cancelled last year due to the outbreak of the war in Ukraine. Why are both events being brought back now?
“Putin wants this ritual to be highly organised, because it is important for society. The more primitive a society is, the more important these ritual ceremonies are,” he says.
“My understanding is that Putin didn’t really want to answer workers’ questions after Ukraine had liberated Kherson. But now he has adapted, changed his world view and thinks everything is fine, so he wants to broadcast this confidence to voters. Voters really like that too. They like having a tough leader.”
It is no coincidence, say the experts, that the direct line and press conference are being merged this year. Krasheninnikov says this way the Kremlin can “drown out the inconvenient questions from foreign journalists in a sea of popular approval”.
Russians will also be expecting gifts from Putin, Schulmann notes, such as troop rotation.

‘Do you still need this war?’
A Russian teenager sentenced to six years for attempting to set fire to a military recruitment office speaks out in court

‘For the Putin regime, Muslims are now a very enticing prospect’
Social anthropologist and North Caucasus expert Denis Sokolov gives his analysis of last Sunday’s anti-Semitic riot in Dagestan

Never again… until now
The anti-Semitic riot in Dagestan has undermined the claims of religious harmony made by Russia’s religious leaders

Hallow gestures
Russian officials are attempting to supplant Halloween with a more Slavic but totally invented Pumpkin Feast

Unusual suspects
Migrants, soldiers, the LGBT community, and anyone critical of the war have all come under closer scrutiny by Russian prosecutors in the past year and a half

A losing battle worth the fight
Why Russian voters shouldn’t simply boycott next year’s sham presidential election

A woman who knew no fear
An anti-war activist in the city of Ivanovo, northeast of Moscow, dies in unexplained circumstances

‘My son couldn’t have lived differently’
A St. Petersburg region minor who suffers from an incurable disease is facing up to 15 years in jail for the attempted arson of a military recruitment office

Every man for himself
Long queues have formed at the only border crossing from Russia into Ukraine, forcing some people to spend the night in the cold, while others attempt to profit from the situation


