Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 14 – In advance of
the presidential elections, the Kremlin has put in place a mechanism to gather,
evaluate and disseminate through state-controlled media news about positive
developments inside Russia lest the current depressed state of Russian public
opinion continues.
Petr Kozlov of BBC’s Russian Service
reports that the Presidential Administration has taken this step because
officials there “want to improve the social self-assessments” of Russian
citizens lest the media’s focus on bad news overwhelms them and leads them to
blame the incumbent regime (bbc.com/russian/features-41601374).
Recently, Sergey Kiriyenko, the
first deputy head of the Presidential Administration, held a meeting with
federal officials and asked them to “systematize the collection and offering of
information which could be used to demonstrate that life is improving,”
according to a Kremlin source.
Subsequently, according to an
official in the office of the governor of Krasnodar kray, Kozlov says, the
Kremlin has made the same demand to regional officials and to companies as
well.
But he continues by observing that “positive
news is only part of the information strategy developed by the authorities in
advance of the presidential elections.” It is also working on a digital
strategy that is likely to be carried out by the Mail.ru group. And some
Kremlin supporters, if not the PA itself, plan for 100 regional channels in the
Telegram network as well.
Three developments appear behind
these moves, Kozlov suggests. First, polls show that Russians are increasingly
unhappy and ever more prepared to make demands of the regime. Second, the
structure of the media means that even outlets that want to boost Putin often
feature bad news to compete with others because bad news always gets more coverage
than good.
And third, while everyone agrees
that Putin will win re-election if he runs, his administration wants to make
sure that the election is as comfortable for him as possible, something that
will be all the more likely if Russians have been given a new diet of news
suggesting that things are getting better and better in this best of all
possible worlds.
The Kremlin is generally pleased
with the messages involved in coverage about international affairs. “There,”
one Moscow observer says, “everything is good, everyone understands that there
are problems in Ukraine, that we are winning in Syria and that Trump is a
strange man.” But domestically, there are problems.
Not only are more problems there
reported widely, observers in Moscow say; but the style of Russian media in
general and of Russian television in particular makes it unlikely that the
regime will be able to turn things around at least in any way that will have
the impact the Kremlin expects.
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