Pricking the witch
There are significant implications to the groundswell of public support for getting Boris Nadezhdin on the presidential ballot

Who could have predicted such excitement? It turns out that there has been life simmering away underneath a thick layer of asphalt all along — and that energy spilled into the streets last week as Russians lined up to support opposition politician Boris Nadezhdin’s efforts to collect the 100,000 signatures required to enter the presidential race.
The buzz is less about the candidate and more about the electorate being keen to show agency.
The higher the pressure in a boiler, the more imminent a rupture. You slap some duct tape onto one spot and it will simply burst elsewhere.
The only requirement for a sanctioned opposition candidate is to provide the beige background to Putin’s glittering victory, content with a tiny percentage of the vote so that the Kremlin can claim Russians united around their leader and his war effort.


Breaking the waves
The Kremlin’s latest attempt to quash Telegram echoes the Soviet Union’s war on foreign radio broadcasts

Moscow’s Gulag Museum renamed Museum of Memory and dedicated to ‘genocide of the Soviet people’

Deserting the paper army
How one woman refused to be a cog in Russia’s military machine

Russian journalist jailed over €3 donation to Navalny’s Anti-Corruption Foundation

Russian political prisoner dies after suffering heart attack in custody

Two Russian minors given 7-year sentences and massive fines for setting fire to military helicopter

Russia’s State Duma passes law allowing FSB to block individual communications

Russian man who declared himself a ‘foreign agent’ as a joke now faces criminal charges

Analysts say 2025 was deadliest year of war for both Ukrainian and Russian civilians




