Putin’s MPs
After the start of war, Russian MPs stopped pretending they are from different parties: all now vote unanimously, passing laws twice as quickly as before. A data study by Novaya-Europe

On 12 April, the State Duma, lower house of Russia’s Parliament, adopted amendments to the law On Military Service that radically change the army conscription system. Digital draft notices are now equal to regular ones, and draft dodgers can be stripped of their rights (banned from leaving the country, restricted from dealing with property, and so on). The way these amendments were passed came as a surprise even to MPs themselves: they were shown the nearly 60-page bill two hours before the vote, and the entire procedure, from announcement to adoption, took 20 hours. Novaya Gazeta Europe retraced the story of the Duma’s transformation into a legislative conveyor belt that is now sending Russians to war.
Less than a day — 20 hours and 40 minutes — passed between the first public mention and the third reading of a bill that could affect the fate of millions of Russians.
The most active party was Just Russia — For Truth. On average, 62% of its representatives voted for each bill.

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