Nearly half of Russians agree that a quiet anti-constitutional coup has
taken place in the country through changes of law that favor corrupt officials
in power, according to pollster the Levada Center.
The survey of 1,600 Russians was conducted at the end of December 2015 and
involved two groups of 800 people. The first was asked if “recent changes to
Russian legislation defending highly ranked corrupt officials at the top of the
national government and increasing the crackdown on those who deal in
criticizing and unmasking them are all testament of a quiet,
anti-constitutional coup in the country.”
Forty-two percent were either entirely in agreement or somewhat in
agreement, while only 4 percent completely disagreed. Thirty-six percent
struggled to respond.
The other group of 800 was asked virtually the same question but was also
told that this view was held by Kremlin critic Mikhail Khodorkovsky, who
recently said the Russian system was so flawed that a revolution was “inevitable”.
More found this question challenging, with only 31 percent either agreeing
entirely or somewhat, while 41 said they struggled to respond.
During the early days of Putin’s presidency, Khodorkovsky accused him of
condoning corruption and was eventually found guilty of fraud in a trial widely
thought to have been politically motivated.
A spokesman for the U.S. Treasury told the BBC’s Panorama program that
Putin “supposedly draws a state salary of something like $110,000 a year.”
“That is not an accurate statement of the man’s wealth, and he has
long-time training and practices in terms of how to mask his actual wealth,” added
Adam Szubin, who oversees Treasury sanctions. He branded this imbalance “a
picture of corruption.” However, the Kremlin dismissed the accusations as not
worth addressing seriously.
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