Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 14 – Because Vladimir
Putin is the incumbent and because he exercises enormous control over the
Russian media, it is no surprise that he is mentioned far more often than is
any one of his challengers. What is
striking, however, is that he is referred to just under twice as often as all of
them taken together.
Sociologists at the VTsIOM polling
agency found that during the six days from February 8 to February 13, Russian
media had materials on Putin 59,130 times – or nearly 10,000 a day (wciom.ru/index.php?id=236&uid=116696
and http://politsovet.ru/58060-smi-pishut-pro-putina-chasche-chem-pro-ego-sopernikov-vmeste-vzyatyh.html).
Over the same period, the
sociologists said Kseniya Sobchak had 7465 mentions, Pavel Grudinin 7107, Vladimir
Zhirinovsky 5556, Boris Titov 4648, Grigory Yavlinsky 4119, Sergey Baburin 3234
and Maksim Suraykin.
As the Politsoviet
portal put it, “it isn’t hard to calculation that even taken together the
reports about Putin’s opponents do not reach the number of publications about
the president.” Indeed, they collectively received just a few more than half as
many mentions, something that would have a major impact on the results even if
Putin had no other resources at his command.
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