‘Russia has peacefully coexisted with Europe since Peter the Great’
Welcome to the Boris Nadezhdin show. Could this man possibly challenge the Kremlin dictator?

It remains unclear whether the Central Election Commission (CEC) will register the unlikely anti-war presidential hopeful Boris Nadezhdin to run in March’s presidential election, though his summons to appear before the commission on Monday over what it called “deficiencies” in the 105,000 signatures of support he submitted with his candidacy application doesn’t bode well.
Opinion polls have indicated varying levels of support for Nadezhdin among Russians. One study ordered by his campaign team indicated that 10% of voters would cast their ballots for Nadezhdin in March’s election, placing him second behind veteran incumbent Vladimir Putin. Another poll by the independent Levada Centre indicated that just 4% of voters would back Nadezhdin if the election took place today, however.
Novaya Gazeta Kazakhstan’s Yulia Latynina spoke with Nadezhdin about his chances of being registered as a candidate, his plans for peace with Ukraine, and his vision for a post-Putin Russia. Their conversation has been edited and adapted for international readers with permission from Novaya Kazakhstan.
Have you seen queues of people standing in the cold to give their support to Putin? Nobody has.
The conflict has reached a stage in which a decisive victory for either side is impossible. There is no military solution. All conflicts like this end in negotiations.
We need the West to stop seeing us as the Russia of Nicholas I, Stalin or Putin. We need them to see us as the Russia of Nadezhdin, Tolstoy and Dostoevsky.


The first draft of history
Julia Loktev discusses her critically acclaimed documentary about Russian journalists being branded foreign agents

Gulag laureate
Freed Belarusian Nobel laureate Ales Bialiatski has finally been able to collect his peace prize
The price of freedom
Director Alexander Molochnikov talks about Extremist, his short film about former political prisoner Sasha Skochilenko
The deep freeze
Activist Zhanna Nemtsova on why depriving small-time Russian investors of their assets in the West won’t help undermine Putin
The B team
A veteran diplomat explains how the upcoming Trump-Putin summit is amateurish and politically driven
Holding on to the light
Ukrainian documentary maker and former combatant Alisa Kovalenko discusses her new film

Charity begins at home
Exiled Russian activist Grigory Sverdlin discusses how the war in Ukraine is reshaping Russia’s charity sector

Fighting on
Exiled Russian Indigenous rights activist on defending marginalised communities and resisting propaganda

Rowing it alone
How Southampton-based anaesthesiologist Leonid Krivsky rowed across the Atlantic, collected £50,000 for Ukraine and found himself along the way
