Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 16 – The results of
a new Public Opinion Foundation poll about how many Russians know about the
harassment allegations against Duma deputy Leonid Slutsky says a great deal
about the Kremlin’s ability to keep even the most troubling charges from spreading
to the population at large and about Russian attitudes on gender roles and sexual
harassment.
The country-wide poll found that only
four percent of all Russians know about the accusations and another 17 percent
said they had “heard something about it.”
But 77 percent said they were hearing about the case for the first time
from those conducting the surveys (meduza.io/news/2018/04/16/tri-chetverti-rossiyan-ne-slyshali-ob-obvineniyah-deputata-slutskogo-v-domogatelstvah-a-te-kto-slyshal-ne-poverili).
And
among the 21 percent who knew or had heard about the accusation, more than 30
percent called the charges baseless, while 20 percent said they were
justified. Almost half – 48 percent – said
they find it difficult to say how they evaluate the charges by a series of
women against the senior Duma official.
Those
Russians who say the accusations are baseless argue that the women making the
charges are doing so to promote themselves and that Slutsky himself is “’a
worthy man.’” They agreed with the conclusion of the Duma ethics commission
that Slutsky is innocent of all their charges.
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