Putin remains firmly in charge. Vladimir Nikolayev/AFP/Getty Images

There is a brutal irony to the fact that the Russian word for “elections” — vybory — literally translates as “choices”. In reality, this weekend’s “election” is, by democratic standards, no such thing. Russians will have no choice but to side with Vladimir Putin. And indeed, the most reliable indicators of public opinion suggest that Russians are increasingly positive about their country’s situation. In voting for Putin, Russians will declare their fealty to a new, emboldened, and militaristic nation — one with a vision of a future dominated by war in Ukraine and beyond.
The decision to run an election when the outcome is certain may seem baffling. But we should see Russia’s election not as one in which voters have choices for leadership, but a singular choice: between aligning oneself with Putin’s Russian nation, which is locked in perpetual war, and aligning oneself with the nation’s enemies. State operatives have made this choice clear. As journalist Roman Golovanov put it in a Telegram post later shared by propagandist-in-chief Vladimir Solovyev, “the only important thing” in the electoral results “is Russia’s victory”. Whether Golovanov had in mind an abstract political victory or a literal military victory was left deliberately unclear.
In a country like Russia, the electoral ritual is vital to affirm public support for militarism. According to the state’s propaganda, the Russian Federation is purportedly surrounded by enemies, from Westerners to Ukrainians, fascists, and a supposed international LGTBQ alliance that has been legally deemed an “extremist” group. Every one of these enemies seeks to destroy Russia — and anybody who opposes Putin, who is synonymous with Russia, must therefore be on the side of the anti-Russians.
This year’s get-out-the-vote campaign — always important in Russia, where citizens are notoriously uninterested in directly engaging with political life, and as late as November 2023 only around half of the country was aware a presidential election was even in the offing — has therefore centred on the purported benefits of Russia’s war against Ukraine. Propagandists have spread photographs and videos of frontline troops taking advantage of early voting, declaring that turnout has (of course) been “close to 100%”. Residents in occupied territories — which Russia has declared to be a part of its own territory — are revealed to be voting with gusto, thus displaying their fealty to the state. One elderly lady in occupied Zaporizhzhia almost cried with joy as she fills out her early ballot, exclaiming “thank God for the chance to vote for the President of Russia!” For Moscow, the election is a chance to show off a newer, bigger, and bolder Russia — a Russia created through war.
In typical Kremlin style, every positive narrative is accompanied by the reminder that disaster is never far off. As the election nears, the state’s propagandists have summoned up the phantom spectre of foreign interference to rally Russians in opposition to a purported threat from the West. Earlier this week, Russia’s SVR spy agency publicly accused the USA — a country that Russians have overwhelmingly negative views about — of planning to interfere in the election by hacking the new electronic voting system.
At least some users on social media took the bait. Followers of one large pro-government Telegram channel, for instance, responded to the news with enthusiasm: “I wasn’t going to bother voting but now I definitely will!”; “Now I’ll show those Yankee fuckers and go vote… for Putin.” Voting becomes a symbolic act that bonds citizens in their opposition to Russia’s enemies. Choosing anyone but Putin is unthinkable. Participating in and talking about the election gives ordinary civilians a means to imagine themselves locked in a war with the West.
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