Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 16 – Eighty-five
percent of Russians continue to get their news from television stations which
are overwhelmingly controlled by the Kremlin, but the share of those who trust
this source to be accurate and reliable has fallen from 79 percent in 2009 to
only 41 percent now, according to the results of a new Levada Center poll.
That increasing skepticism in turn
has opened the way for a collapse in the assessment of Russians about the real
situation in the country, a triumph of the refrigerator over the television
that at some point will have political consequences, especially as Russia heads
into a new election year in 2016.
The Levada Center poll found that 24
percent of Russians preferred to get their news from friends, 21 percent
preferred Internet publications, and 13 percent social networks, newspapers and
radio. Only two percent said they get
their news from magazines and journals
Russians with lower incomes tended
to watch television more (90 percent) and not use the Internet (95 percent).
More Muscovites preferred radio (24 percent) than did rural Russians (nine
percent) and those with lesser amounts of education (eight percent), the
countrywide poll reported.
Thirty-nine percent of Muscovites
named word of mouth reports as their best source of news. Russians with higher
educations and active users of the Internet preferred online sources (32
percent), Muscovites identified social networks as their preferred source (23
percent) as did 21 percent of Russians with higher educations.
At the same time, trust in media
other than television also fell but by far smaller amounts. The share of those
saying they trusted online sources declined from 20 percent in 2009 to 18
percent now, newspapers from 14 percent to 12 percent, and radio from 13
percent to 11 percent, the Levada Center said.
At the same time, the share of Russians
who did not or could not identify any source they trusted doubled from four
percent to eight percent of the sample, yet another indication of growing
alienation.
And as trust in the government media
has declined, Russians are expressing increasing skepticism about the situation
they find themselves in. According to surveys conducted by sociologists at
Moscow’s Finance University, the index of social-economic attitudes of Russians
fell almost 50 percent over the last month (fa.ru/projects/macro/Documents/2015_11.pdf,
rg.ru/2015/12/16/nastroeniya-site.html
and kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5671223576623).
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