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People's Freedom Party (Russia)

The People's Freedom Party (Russian: Партия народной свободы, romanizedPartija narodnoj svobody), often known by its short form PARNAS (Russian: ПАРНАС),[3] and formerly the Republican Party of Russia – People's Freedom Party,[4] and initially Republican Party of Russia,[5] was a liberal-democratic political party in Russia. It was one of the first opposition parties founded in the final years of the Soviet Union.

People's Freedom Party
Партия народной свободы
Partiya narodnoy svobody
PresidentMikhail Kasyanov
FoundersVladimir Lysenko,
Stepan Sulakshin,
Vyacheslav Shostakovsky
FoundedNovember 17, 1990 (1990-11-17) (RPR)
December 13, 2010 (2010-12-13) (PARNAS)
June 16, 2012 (2012-06-16) (merged as RPR–PARNAS)
July 5, 2015 (2015-07-05) (re-named as PARNAS)
RegisteredMarch 14, 1991 (1991-03-14)
May 5, 2012 (2012-05-05) (re-registered)
DissolvedMay 25, 2023
Merger ofForward, Russia!
Peasant Party of Russia
People's Freedom Party
United People's Party of Soldiers' Mothers
Preceded byDemocratic platform of the CPSU
HeadquartersMoscow
Youth wingPeople's Democratic Union of Youth
Youth committee of Solidarity
Membership (2011)46,158
IdeologyRepublicanism
Liberalism
Conservative liberalism
Federalism
Atlanticism
Anti-communism
Pro-Europeanism
Political positionCentre-right
National affiliationFree Russia Forum
European affiliationAlliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe Party
Colours  Dark violet
Before 2012:
  Orange
Slogan"For Russia without Lawlessness and Corruption"
(Russian: "За Россию без произвола и коррупции")[1]
Seats in the State Duma[2]
0 / 450
Seats in the Regional Parliaments
0 / 3,980
Website
parnasparty.ru

In 2007, it was denied re-registration and declared to be dissolved by the Russian Supreme Court. It was only after the European Court of Human Rights ruled that the denial of registration was unlawful that it could restore its official registration in May 2012.

The party was dissolved by Russia's Supreme Court on May 25, 2023 because it did not have the required number of branches and due to claims filed against existing branches by the Federal Taxation Service and the Ministry of Justice.[6][7]

History edit

Formation and early developments (1990–2006) edit

The Republican Party of Russia was founded in 1990 by members of the Democratic Platform of the CPSU who had become disillusioned with the party's unwillingness to reform. The foundation of the new party took place in November 1990. Nikolay Lysenko, Stepan Sulakshin and Vyacheslav Shostakovsky were elected as the three co-chairman. The Republican Party joined the Democratic Russia bloc, an umbrella organisation of pro-democracy movements. The Republican Party was close to the Social Democratic Party of Russia, which was founded earlier in 1990. The two parties shared similar program and there were attempts to merge. The Republican Party's program has been characterised as liberal and pragmatic; similarly to the Social Democratic Party, however, the Republican Party had internal factions: ranging from social democracy to social liberal to liberal conservative.

 
2005–2012 party logo

The RPR and the SDP formed a united faction (Объединенная депутатская группа РПРФ/СДПР) in the Russian Congress of People's Deputies (later, they fused with similar groups to form the faction 'Left Centre', which was pro-reform but more moderate than groups like the 'Radical Democrats', which advocated radical economic reforms). In contrast to the social democrats, the Republicans participated in the Movement of Democratic Reforms that was formed in summer, 1991 and included mostly liberal-minded former nomenklatura members (Alexander Yakovlev, Gavriil Popov et al.). The Republican Party initially supported both Yegor Gaidar's economic reforms and Boris Yeltsin in his conflict with the Supreme Soviet; later, some of the leaders turned more critical of Yeltsin. The Republican Party left the Democratic Russia bloc in October, 1993 due to disagreements with the bloc's policies.

Altogether, the party members won 12 seats in the newly elected parliament of 1993: 5 republicans within the Yabloko bloc and 7 from Democratic Choice of Russia. In the 1995 legislative election, the party ran within the Pamfilova – Gurev – N.Lysenko bloc, which failed to cross the 5% barrier. Lysenko and Ella Pamfilova won seat through majoritarian district.

At the end of 1998, Nikolay Lysenko, retaining the post of RP chairman, joined Yuri Luzhkov's Otechestvo bloc, whereas a number of the regional organisations of the Republican Party cooperated with small liberal parties like Right Cause or Sergey Kiriyenko's New Force etc.

In 1999, Lysenko won a parliament seat in a majoritarian district. In 2002, the party was reorganized into the Republican Party of Russia.[8]

The party was described as the 'torchbearer' of liberal anti-Kremlin opposition during Vladimir Putin's reign in the early 2000s.[9]

In 2006, Member of Parliament Vladimir Ryzhkov became party leader.[9]

Dissolution and re-establishment (2007–2011) edit

 
The first meeting of the coalition of democratic forces "For Russia without Lawlessness and Corruption" in Moscow on Bolotnaya Square on 9 October 2010

In 2007, the Russian Supreme Court ruled the party to be dissolved, according to Ryzhkov because of the opposition to the government.[why?] In 2011 the European Court of Human Rights ruled out the refusal to register the party was unlawful. Since 5 May 2012, the Justice Ministry has restored the state registration of the Republican Party of Russia.

In 2006–2010, the RPR was a member of the opposition coalition "The Other Russia". In 2010, Boris Nemtsov – one of president Putin's fiercest critics – set up the People's Freedom Party along with former Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov, former Member of Parliament Vladimir Ryzhkov and Vladimir Milov, which then formed a liberal coalition with the RPR entitled "For Russia without Lawlessness and Corruption".[9] The People's Freedom Party worked on the base of Republican Party, and the two parties eventually merged in 2012.[9]

In 2011, the party's dissolution was held to be unlawful by the European Court of Human Rights.[10] In June 2011 the party applied for re-registration, but the authorities blocked this on the grounds of "the inconsistency in the party's charter and other documents filed for the official registration", a decision Nemtsov and Kasyanov said was politically motivated and that meant the party could not participate in the 2011 Russian legislative election.[11] However, in January 2012, following the entry into force of the ECtHR's judgment, the Supreme Court of the Russian Federation quashed its 2007 decision to dissolve the party.[12]

Member of Parliament for the A Just Russia party Gennady Gudkov discussed planning rallies against Vladimir Putin with RPR party leader Vladimir Ryzhkov during 2011.[13] The Federal Security Service was closely monitoring Gudkov and secretly videotaped his discussions with Ryzhkov, which the FSB then released to the public to discredit him as a radical attempting to undermine the governing administration.[13] The Russian parliament subsequently voted to expel Gudkov for his open criticism of Putin, the first such expulsion since 1995.[13]

Merger, recent history and dissolution (2012–2023) edit

The Ministry of Justice recognized the merger of the Republican Party and the People's Freedom Party (RPR–PARNAS) on 2 August 2012, after the European Court of Human Rights ruled that the party should be restored in May of that year, and it supported the 2011–13 Russian protests, although since then the party has been mostly on the decline in influence among opposition circles.[14]

In August 2012 Boris Nemtsov attacked President Putin, saying he had used his power to acquire for his personal use palaces, yachts, planes and other property that really belonged to the state.[9] Nemtsov said that Putin had been taking state property for a long time, and said he "thinks it all belongs to him.".[9]

During 2012 RPR-PARNAS participated in regional elections in Barnaul, winning 1 seat, and Saratov Oblast, Tuva, winning 2 seats.

2013 electoral successes edit

Ratings of Sobyanin and Navalny among those who said they would vote in the 2013 Moscow mayoral election, according to Synovate Comcon polls
Time Sobyanin Navalny Ref
29 August–2 September 60.1% 21.9% [15]
22–28 August 63.9% 19.8% [16]
15–21 August 62.5% 20.3% [17]
8–14 August 63.5% 19.9% [18]
1–7 August 74.6% 15.0% [18]
25–31 July 76.2% 16.7% [19]
18–24 July 76.6% 15.7% [20]
11–16 July 76.2% 14.4% [21]
4–10 July 78.5% 10.7% [21]
27 June–3 July 77.9% 10.8% [21]

Between 2011 and 2013, a series of protests had swept across Russia against electoral fraud after the 2011 Russian legislative election, and RPR-PARNAS had involved itself in the Moscow protest movement.[22] Using its recently regained official party status, the party nominated a key leader of the protests and opposition figure Alexei Navalny for the September 2013 Moscow mayoral election, eliminating the need for Navalny to collect a huge number of signatures to be able to run.[22][23] Navalny was president Vladimir Putin's top critic, and analysts agreed that he had specifically been released from imprisonment and allowed to run in the Kremlin-controlled election to give it a false sense of legitimacy.[23][24][25] The pro-Putin candidate, Sergey Sobyanin of United Russia, even ordered the authorities to allow opposing parties to run against him, and personally requested that the Moscow municipal authorities helped Navalny collect the required number of signatures to run.[26][25] Despite this, during the campaign Navalny got only a quarter as many TV mentions as his United Russia rival, mostly in the context of corruption charges against him.[27]

In July Navalny was only polling around 8% and Sobyanin 78%.[23] However, Navalny rapidly gained support at the expense of Sobyanin and did surprisingly well in the election, winning 27% of the vote and nearly forcing a run off against Sobyanin who, according to official results, only managed to win just over 50% of the votes.[22][27][24] Navalny and his supporters maintained that the authorities had altered the results just enough to allow Sobyanin to cross the 50% threshold and avoid a runoff, which would have been a dramatic setback for the establishment.[24]

In the aftermath of the election, Navalny was offered a position as the fourth co-chairman of RPR-PARNAS alongside Kasyanov, Boris Nemtsov and Vladimir Ryzhkov.[28]

Despite the authorities banning the party from participating in some regions in the 2013 regional elections – likely for political reasons – RPR-PARNAS managed to achieve another electoral success in the autumn of 2013 when co-leader Nemtsov successfully managed to win a seat on the Yaroslavl regional parliament.[22][29] Nemtsov's victory meant that the party won the right to run in state legislative elections without having to collect signatures, since it held a seat in one of Russia's regional parliaments.[22] In turn, this made RPR-PARNAS the only "non-systemic" opposition party that had automatic access to the ballot in legislative elections.[22]

In the concurrent September 2013 gubernatorial elections, all of the party's candidates were disqualified from running by the authorities.[30]

It was in 2013 that Nemtsov also published a report on the upcoming 2014 Winter Olympics which were planned to be held in Sochi, Russia. He provided evidence there had been massive embezzlement by government officials, asserting that it amounted to about 50-60 percent of the stated final cost of the sporting event.[9]

Assassination of co-leader Nemtsov edit

 
Influential party co-leader and leading Russian opposition figure Boris Nemtsov was assassinated in front of the Kremlin in February 2015

One of the party's co-leaders at this time was Boris Nemtsov, the party's most influential and talented mediator and a leading Russian opposition figure.[22][31] Nemtsov had been one of Russia's leading economic reformers in the 1990s and also served as first deputy prime minister under President Boris Yeltsin.[31] Nemtsov was assassinated in Moscow on 28 February 2015, being shot by an attacker in a car while on a bridge by the Kremlin.[31] He died hours after appealing for support for an upcoming protest in Moscow against the war in Ukraine, and in a recent interview, Nemtsov had said he feared president Putin would have him killed because of his opposition to the war in Ukraine.[31] Ukrainian president Petro Poroshenko described Nemtsov as "a bridge between Ukraine and Russia" and added "the murderers' shot has destroyed it. I think it is not by accident".[31]

In the aftermath of the assassination, Kasyanov stated that he also feared for his life, noting that he was receiving death threats from nationalists.[32] On this, he commented: "The authorities want to stop my political activity with threats, they want to force me out of the country. Their aim is to frighten me. But I have decided that I am going to continue with my activity."[32]

Nemtsov's murder deprived RPR-PARNAS of one of its most influential figures and meant he was unable to complete his term as an elected member of the Yaroslavl regional parliament, the party's last remaining seat. However, because of the 5-year mandate Nemtsov won in 2013, the party would retain control of the seat until 2018.[22]

Democratic Coalition formed for elections edit

In July 2015, the party congress voted to shorten the party's name to just People's Freedom Party (PARNAS).[33] In April 2015 a number of opposition parties formed a unified Democratic Coalition to take part in the 2016 legislative election, as well as the 2015 regional elections as a test. This included PARNAS, as well as the Progress Party of Alexei Navalny, the Democratic Choice party of Vladimir Milov, as well as several others. The unregistered movements needed to band with PARNAS as they were rejected from the right to take part in elections as the necessary signatures they collected were deemed invalid, while PARNAS was officially registered as they still held the seat in the Yaroslavl Oblast Duma that had been won by Boris Nemtsov in 2013. In 2015, the coalition focused on four regions where their candidates were accepted by the Central Election CommissionNovosibirsk, Kaluga, Kostroma, and Magadan.[34] However, in all these regions the party was harassed while campaigning, its members were arrested in Kostroma, and it was eventually denied the possibility of running its party candidates for assembly seats in Novosibirsk and Kaluga as regional election commissions and courts ruled its voter petition signatures invalid.[35] They were only allowed to run in the Kostroma region in the end, where official results gave them 2.28% of the vote, not enough to obtain a seat in the regional legislature.[36]

Poisoning of Kara-Murza edit

 
Leading party figure and later deputy leader Vladimir Kara-Murza was poisoned three months after co-leader Boris Nemtsov's assassination

Three months after Nemtsov was assassinated another leading figure in the party, Vladimir Kara-Murza, was nearly killed after being poisoned.[37] Kara-Murza had been elected to the federal council of the party in June 2012, and was also elected to the Russian Opposition Coordination Council in October 2012.[38][39] While in a meeting, Kara-Murza fell severely ill and began vomiting violently, eventually losing consciousness and falling into a coma.[37] He was taken to hospital and spent a week in the coma.[37] When he woke up he was told by doctors he had been poisoned by an unknown substance, and tests subsequently found high levels of heavy metals in his blood.[37][40]

Kara-Murza's poisoning was widely believed to be politically motivated.[41] Kara-Murza had been a close friend of Nemtsov, and there was a history of the Russian security services poisoning opponents of the Kremlin, such as Alexander Litvinenko and Anna Politkovskaya.[42] Kara-Murza would be poisoned again in February 2017, again causing him to fall into a coma, but he also survived this attack.[41]

In 2021, it was discovered that Kara-Murza had been trailed before his poisonings by the same Federal Security Service unit that poisoned the most prominent Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny in 2020.[43] Navalny had previously been RPR-PARNAS's candidate for mayor in the 2013 Moscow mayoral election and worked closely with the party.

After his recovery, Kara-Murza went on to be elected deputy leader of RPR-PARNAS in July.[44]

Democratic Coalition and sabotaged 2016 legislative election campaign edit

Ultimately, the primary that was held to create the candidate list that would run for the coalition in the elections ended up breaking down, for multiple reasons. One key reason was the publication of a sex tape involving Mikhail Kasyanov and another PARNAS member, which caused Alexei Navalny and Ilya Yashin to call for Kasyanov to take part in the primaries himself rather than be permitted to be automatically placed on the candidate list (Kasyanov's position on the party ticket was part of the agreement in forming the coalition). State-run TV channel NTV also released a secretly-recorded video of Kasyanov criticising his coalition partners in private.[45] Members of the "December 5" party proposed to hold a vote to decide whether the reserved spots on the party ticket should exist or not, and while the others supported the idea, PARNAS vetoed it.[46] When Kasyanov refused to take part in the primaries they pulled their support, effectively ending the coalition. Yashin and several of his supporters also left the party.[22]

PARNAS went on to hold its own primary but this was disrupted when hackers posted the personal information of voters who took part in it online. Unexpectedly, ultranationalist populist Vyacheslav Maltsev became the frontrunner of the primary, but the hacked information revealed that many of the voting accounts had the same passwords, suggesting that someone had been using bots to inflate the votes of select candidates. Kasyanov refused to step down after the debacle and stood in the 2016 elections,[47] in which the party gained 0.7% of the vote and not a single seat in the 7th State Duma.[48] The party had faced significant challenges in some regions, with the press rejecting the party's ads and local TV stations blocking their candidates from TV appearances, despite this being mandated by law.[49]

In December 2016 deputy party leader Kara-Murza left PARNAS because of Maltsev's role in the party.[50]

2017 Moscow municipal election edit

During the 2017 Moscow municipal election, PARNAS partnered with the liberal party Yabloko in a coalition called 'United Democrats' to get candidates elected to local councils of deputies in municipal districts of Moscow. Specifically, PARNAS only gained two out of 1,502 seats up for election, but the coalition as a whole obtained over 260 seats.[51]

2018 presidential election edit

In October 2017, Kasyanov proposed that the liberal opposition candidates intending to run for the presidency in 2018—including Grigory Yavlinsky, Alexei Navalny, and Kseniya Sobchak—form a coalition and field a single candidate in order to increase their chances.[52] In early December PARNAS revealed that this coalition was never formed and announced that they supported the three opposition candidates, so the party did not have any of its own candidates run for the presidency.[53]

Contentious loss of last seat edit

In September 2018 regional elections were held in which the party's only seat in a legislature, the Yaroslavl regional parliament, was up for re-election.[22] The seat had originally been won by party co-chair Boris Nemtsov in 2013, before he was assassinated in 2015.[22] In August 2018 the party attempted to register their candidates for the election in Yaroslavl, but pro-Putin parties Patriots of Russia and the Liberal Democratic Party challenged the PARNAS party ticket in court claiming their candidates list violated certain regulations — a common tactic used by the authorities to bar the opposition from elections.[22][27] In late August the Yarslavl Regional Court denied PARNAS the right to run in the election, and, after an appeal by the party, the Russian Supreme Court upheld this decision on 7 September.[22] The decision meant that the party were condemned to losing their last seat, meaning that the party lost the right to automatically run in State Duma legislative elections.[22]

2023 dissolution edit

The party was dissolved by Russia's Supreme Court on May 25, 2023 because it did not have the required number of branches and due to claims filed against existing branches by the Federal Taxation Service and the Ministry of Justice.[6][7] The Supreme Court cited the absence of the party’s offices in at least half of the 83 federal subjects of Russia as the primary reason.[54] The Ministry of Justice claimed that the party’s number of branches had dropped from 47 to 40 since the start of 2023.[54] PARNAS claimed the party still had 44 offices and that it could not have offices in the four annexed territories of Ukraine by Russia on 30 September 2022 (who are internationally recognized as a part of Ukraine[55]), since (PARNAS alleged) those regions did not yet have full-fledged executive authorities.[54]

Ideology edit

The ideology of the RPR-PARNAS was liberalism, federalism and human rights.[citation needed] In his interview, Kasyanov said "there is no higher value for the government than human rights." He defined ideological stance of PRP-PARNAS as right-of-center liberalism.[56]

The main principles of the PARNAS party program included securing the individual rights of Russian citizens and equality of all before law, and that the government should be democratic, controlled by the public and should serve the interest of the people. The party condemned the Bolsheviks who seized power in 1917 and the existence of the Soviet Union, which it considered tyrannical, and modeled itself after the Constitutional Democratic Party that existed during the late Russian Empire. It also promised to declassify all KGB and other Soviet documents as part of a "decommunization" program and ban all promotion of the communist regime. For Russia's form of government it proposed to create a parliamentary republic and increase local self-governance. In addition, PARNAS wanted to reform the judiciary to be truly independent, remove government control over the mass media, and promote small business and entrepreneurs over oligarchs.[57]

The party considered the 2014 Russian annexation of Crimea illegal and vowed to return control of Crimea back to Ukraine; as such, PARNAS did not campaign in Crimea in the 2016 Russian parliamentary elections.[58] According to its 2015 election platform, it stated that it wanted Russia to become a partner of NATO and the European Union, as well as to end military interventions in other countries.[59]

Significance to the Russian opposition edit

In Russia, political opposition during Putin's presidency tends to be more visible through protest than in legislatures and executive offices.[60] The main three 'opposition' parties in parliament, often referred to as the 'systemic opposition', do not represent a serious threat to the government and dominant ruling party United Russia.[27] The Communist Party has declined in strength since the 1990s and also supports United Russia on various issues, while the far-right LDPR and socialist A Just Russia — Patriots — For Truth parties, both believed to be government creations, largely support President Putin and the government.[27][60][61] Most of the major parties fully support the president, and only the liberal Yabloko and PARNAS parties strongly condemn Putin's policies.[61] Thus, the most prominent democratic opposition parties in Russia have been Yabloko and PARNAS.[60][62] Experts consider these parties to be the two political forces that are true opposition parties, and they were the only two parties out of the 14 that competed in the 2016 legislative election that could be considered as such.[63]

When in 2012 new laws were introduced which allowed the formation of new parties, several new opposition parties sprang up, but RPR-PARNAS held an advantage over these other parties as it was led by several long-standing leaders of anti-Putin opposition such as Nemtsov and Kasyanov. This gave the party particular prominence.[29]

Yabloko and PARNAS are generally more politicized than the 'systemic opposition', leading campaigns against electoral fraud and corruption while voicing support for civil rights.[62] Both frequently demand the release of political prisoners, media freedoms, and changes in political regulations, and have advocated direct elections of mayors and opposed oppressive legislation such as laws and restrictions on public meetings.[62]

Amongst all parties, Yabloko and PARNAS have had the highest percentage of ballot-access denials by authorities, despite their overall limited number of attempts to register candidates.[64]

Leaders edit

 
Mikhail Kasyanov
Co-chairs
Federal Political Council of RPR-PARNAS

Bureau:

Others:

Electoral results edit

Legislative elections edit

Election Party leader Performance Rank Government
Votes % ± pp Seats +/–
1993 Run into the Yabloko and Choice of Russia lists
12 / 450
New 6th Opposition
1995 Ella Pamfilova 1,106,812
1.69%
New
2 / 450
  10   12th Opposition
1999 Only constituencies
1 / 450
  1   15th Opposition
2003 Did not contest
2007
2011 Party was part of For Russia without Lawlessness and Corruption coalition that boycotted the elections
2016 Mikhail Kasyanov 384,675
0.73%
  0.73
0 / 450
  0   11th Extra-parliamentary

See also edit

References edit

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  5. ^ Russian: Республиканская партия России; РПР; Respublikanskaja partija Rossii, RPR'
  6. ^ a b "Верховный суд ликвидировал ПАРНАС". РБК (in Russian). 2023-05-25. Retrieved 2023-05-25.
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  44. ^ "РПР-ПАРНАС сменила название и избрала Касьянова председателем" [RPR-PARNAS changed its name and elected Kasyanov as chairman]. 5 July 2015. Retrieved 27 February 2021.
  45. ^ Pertsev, Andrey (13 May 2016). "Splits Force Russia's Opposition to Rethink". Carnegie Moscow Centre. Retrieved 28 February 2021.
  46. ^ "Associates Navalny said about the collapse of the coalition Kasyanov". FreeNews English. 27 April 2016. Retrieved 7 May 2017.
  47. ^ "The strange death of Russia's 'Democratic Coalition'". 31 May 2016. Retrieved 7 May 2017.
  48. ^ "The Russian Democratic Opposition Has Become Completely Helpless". Middle East Media Research Institute. 2 January 2017. Retrieved 7 May 2017.
  49. ^ MacFarquhar, Neil (17 September 2016). "Kremlin Says It Wants a Spotless Election, but Locally It Is Marred". New York Times. Retrieved 28 February 2021.
  50. ^ "Зампредседателя ПАРНАСа Кара-Мурза-младший вышел из партии" [Deputy Chairman of PARNAS Kara-Murza Jr. left the party]. TASS. 17 December 2016. Retrieved 27 February 2021.
  51. ^ "United Democrats win over 260 seats in Moscow municipal assemblies – Gudkov. Johnson's Russia List". 11 September 2017. Retrieved 14 February 2018.
  52. ^ "ПАРНАС предложил Собчак, Навальному и Явлинскому создать предвыборную коалицию" [PARNAS invited Sobchak, Navalny and Yavlinsky to create an election coalition]. TASS. 30 October 2017. Retrieved 6 December 2017.(in Russian)
  53. ^ Sukhov, Denis (16 December 2017). В ПАРНАС не видят смысла в выдвижении своего кандидата на президентские выборы 2018 года. Komsomolskaya Pravda. Retrieved 16 December 2017.
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  55. ^ "Ukraine war: UN condemns Russian invasion ahead of anniversary". BBC News. 23 February 2023. Retrieved 25 May 2023.
  56. ^ "OnlineTV.ru — первое интерактивное телевидение". Retrieved 4 March 2015.
  57. ^ "За что мы боремся и к чему стремимся. Краткая программа ПАРНАС" [What we are fighting for and trying to reach. Shortened program of PARNAS]. PARNAS official website. 19 April 2017. Retrieved 7 May 2017.
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  59. ^ Oppositionist Kasyanov heads up renamed PARNAS. Russia Beyond the Headlines. Published 5 July 2015. Retrieved 6 May 2017.
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  63. ^ Goncharenko, Roman (18 September 2016). "Russian elections: Trying to look democratic". DW. Retrieved 28 February 2021.
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External links edit

  • Official website  
  • St Petersburg branch of RPR-PARNAS
  • (Internet Archive)
  • About the party
  • Partinform
Articles
  • Russia's Republican Party Legal Again
  • Two Russian parties merge in push against Putin

people, freedom, party, russia, eponymous, russian, party, dissolved, 2012, people, freedom, party, russia, without, lawlessness, corruption, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, russian, november, 2012, click, sho. For the eponymous Russian party dissolved in 2012 see People s Freedom Party For Russia without Lawlessness and Corruption You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Russian November 2012 Click show for important translation instructions Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Russian Wikipedia article at ru Partiya narodnoj svobody see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated ru Partiya narodnoj svobody to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation The People s Freedom Party Russian Partiya narodnoj svobody romanized Partija narodnoj svobody often known by its short form PARNAS Russian PARNAS 3 and formerly the Republican Party of Russia People s Freedom Party 4 and initially Republican Party of Russia 5 was a liberal democratic political party in Russia It was one of the first opposition parties founded in the final years of the Soviet Union People s Freedom Party Partiya narodnoj svobodyPartiya narodnoy svobodyPresidentMikhail KasyanovFoundersVladimir Lysenko Stepan Sulakshin Vyacheslav ShostakovskyFoundedNovember 17 1990 1990 11 17 RPR December 13 2010 2010 12 13 PARNAS June 16 2012 2012 06 16 merged as RPR PARNAS July 5 2015 2015 07 05 re named as PARNAS RegisteredMarch 14 1991 1991 03 14 May 5 2012 2012 05 05 re registered DissolvedMay 25 2023Merger ofForward Russia Peasant Party of RussiaPeople s Freedom PartyUnited People s Party of Soldiers MothersPreceded byDemocratic platform of the CPSUHeadquartersMoscowYouth wingPeople s Democratic Union of YouthYouth committee of SolidarityMembership 2011 46 158IdeologyRepublicanismLiberalismConservative liberalismFederalismAtlanticismAnti communismPro EuropeanismPolitical positionCentre rightNational affiliationFree Russia ForumEuropean affiliationAlliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe PartyColours Dark violetBefore 2012 OrangeSlogan For Russia without Lawlessness and Corruption Russian Za Rossiyu bez proizvola i korrupcii 1 Seats in the State Duma 2 0 450Seats in the Regional Parliaments0 3 980Websiteparnasparty wbr ruPolitics of RussiaPolitical partiesElectionsIn 2007 it was denied re registration and declared to be dissolved by the Russian Supreme Court It was only after the European Court of Human Rights ruled that the denial of registration was unlawful that it could restore its official registration in May 2012 The party was dissolved by Russia s Supreme Court on May 25 2023 because it did not have the required number of branches and due to claims filed against existing branches by the Federal Taxation Service and the Ministry of Justice 6 7 Contents 1 History 1 1 Formation and early developments 1990 2006 1 2 Dissolution and re establishment 2007 2011 1 3 Merger recent history and dissolution 2012 2023 1 3 1 2013 electoral successes 1 3 2 Assassination of co leader Nemtsov 1 3 3 Democratic Coalition formed for elections 1 3 4 Poisoning of Kara Murza 1 3 5 Democratic Coalition and sabotaged 2016 legislative election campaign 1 3 6 2017 Moscow municipal election 1 3 7 2018 presidential election 1 3 8 Contentious loss of last seat 1 3 9 2023 dissolution 2 Ideology 3 Significance to the Russian opposition 4 Leaders 5 Electoral results 5 1 Legislative elections 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory editFormation and early developments 1990 2006 edit The Republican Party of Russia was founded in 1990 by members of the Democratic Platform of the CPSU who had become disillusioned with the party s unwillingness to reform The foundation of the new party took place in November 1990 Nikolay Lysenko Stepan Sulakshin and Vyacheslav Shostakovsky were elected as the three co chairman The Republican Party joined the Democratic Russia bloc an umbrella organisation of pro democracy movements The Republican Party was close to the Social Democratic Party of Russia which was founded earlier in 1990 The two parties shared similar program and there were attempts to merge The Republican Party s program has been characterised as liberal and pragmatic similarly to the Social Democratic Party however the Republican Party had internal factions ranging from social democracy to social liberal to liberal conservative nbsp 2005 2012 party logoThe RPR and the SDP formed a united faction Obedinennaya deputatskaya gruppa RPRF SDPR in the Russian Congress of People s Deputies later they fused with similar groups to form the faction Left Centre which was pro reform but more moderate than groups like the Radical Democrats which advocated radical economic reforms In contrast to the social democrats the Republicans participated in the Movement of Democratic Reforms that was formed in summer 1991 and included mostly liberal minded former nomenklatura members Alexander Yakovlev Gavriil Popov et al The Republican Party initially supported both Yegor Gaidar s economic reforms and Boris Yeltsin in his conflict with the Supreme Soviet later some of the leaders turned more critical of Yeltsin The Republican Party left the Democratic Russia bloc in October 1993 due to disagreements with the bloc s policies Altogether the party members won 12 seats in the newly elected parliament of 1993 5 republicans within the Yabloko bloc and 7 from Democratic Choice of Russia In the 1995 legislative election the party ran within the Pamfilova Gurev N Lysenko bloc which failed to cross the 5 barrier Lysenko and Ella Pamfilova won seat through majoritarian district At the end of 1998 Nikolay Lysenko retaining the post of RP chairman joined Yuri Luzhkov s Otechestvo bloc whereas a number of the regional organisations of the Republican Party cooperated with small liberal parties like Right Cause or Sergey Kiriyenko s New Force etc In 1999 Lysenko won a parliament seat in a majoritarian district In 2002 the party was reorganized into the Republican Party of Russia 8 The party was described as the torchbearer of liberal anti Kremlin opposition during Vladimir Putin s reign in the early 2000s 9 In 2006 Member of Parliament Vladimir Ryzhkov became party leader 9 Dissolution and re establishment 2007 2011 edit nbsp The first meeting of the coalition of democratic forces For Russia without Lawlessness and Corruption in Moscow on Bolotnaya Square on 9 October 2010 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Case of Republican Party of Russia In 2007 the Russian Supreme Court ruled the party to be dissolved according to Ryzhkov because of the opposition to the government why In 2011 the European Court of Human Rights ruled out the refusal to register the party was unlawful Since 5 May 2012 the Justice Ministry has restored the state registration of the Republican Party of Russia In 2006 2010 the RPR was a member of the opposition coalition The Other Russia In 2010 Boris Nemtsov one of president Putin s fiercest critics set up the People s Freedom Party along with former Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov former Member of Parliament Vladimir Ryzhkov and Vladimir Milov which then formed a liberal coalition with the RPR entitled For Russia without Lawlessness and Corruption 9 The People s Freedom Party worked on the base of Republican Party and the two parties eventually merged in 2012 9 In 2011 the party s dissolution was held to be unlawful by the European Court of Human Rights 10 In June 2011 the party applied for re registration but the authorities blocked this on the grounds of the inconsistency in the party s charter and other documents filed for the official registration a decision Nemtsov and Kasyanov said was politically motivated and that meant the party could not participate in the 2011 Russian legislative election 11 However in January 2012 following the entry into force of the ECtHR s judgment the Supreme Court of the Russian Federation quashed its 2007 decision to dissolve the party 12 Member of Parliament for the A Just Russia party Gennady Gudkov discussed planning rallies against Vladimir Putin with RPR party leader Vladimir Ryzhkov during 2011 13 The Federal Security Service was closely monitoring Gudkov and secretly videotaped his discussions with Ryzhkov which the FSB then released to the public to discredit him as a radical attempting to undermine the governing administration 13 The Russian parliament subsequently voted to expel Gudkov for his open criticism of Putin the first such expulsion since 1995 13 Merger recent history and dissolution 2012 2023 edit The Ministry of Justice recognized the merger of the Republican Party and the People s Freedom Party RPR PARNAS on 2 August 2012 after the European Court of Human Rights ruled that the party should be restored in May of that year and it supported the 2011 13 Russian protests although since then the party has been mostly on the decline in influence among opposition circles 14 In August 2012 Boris Nemtsov attacked President Putin saying he had used his power to acquire for his personal use palaces yachts planes and other property that really belonged to the state 9 Nemtsov said that Putin had been taking state property for a long time and said he thinks it all belongs to him 9 During 2012 RPR PARNAS participated in regional elections in Barnaul winning 1 seat and Saratov Oblast Tuva winning 2 seats 2013 electoral successes edit Ratings of Sobyanin and Navalny among those who said they would vote in the 2013 Moscow mayoral election according to Synovate Comcon polls Time Sobyanin Navalny Ref29 August 2 September 60 1 21 9 15 22 28 August 63 9 19 8 16 15 21 August 62 5 20 3 17 8 14 August 63 5 19 9 18 1 7 August 74 6 15 0 18 25 31 July 76 2 16 7 19 18 24 July 76 6 15 7 20 11 16 July 76 2 14 4 21 4 10 July 78 5 10 7 21 27 June 3 July 77 9 10 8 21 Between 2011 and 2013 a series of protests had swept across Russia against electoral fraud after the 2011 Russian legislative election and RPR PARNAS had involved itself in the Moscow protest movement 22 Using its recently regained official party status the party nominated a key leader of the protests and opposition figure Alexei Navalny for the September 2013 Moscow mayoral election eliminating the need for Navalny to collect a huge number of signatures to be able to run 22 23 Navalny was president Vladimir Putin s top critic and analysts agreed that he had specifically been released from imprisonment and allowed to run in the Kremlin controlled election to give it a false sense of legitimacy 23 24 25 The pro Putin candidate Sergey Sobyanin of United Russia even ordered the authorities to allow opposing parties to run against him and personally requested that the Moscow municipal authorities helped Navalny collect the required number of signatures to run 26 25 Despite this during the campaign Navalny got only a quarter as many TV mentions as his United Russia rival mostly in the context of corruption charges against him 27 In July Navalny was only polling around 8 and Sobyanin 78 23 However Navalny rapidly gained support at the expense of Sobyanin and did surprisingly well in the election winning 27 of the vote and nearly forcing a run off against Sobyanin who according to official results only managed to win just over 50 of the votes 22 27 24 Navalny and his supporters maintained that the authorities had altered the results just enough to allow Sobyanin to cross the 50 threshold and avoid a runoff which would have been a dramatic setback for the establishment 24 In the aftermath of the election Navalny was offered a position as the fourth co chairman of RPR PARNAS alongside Kasyanov Boris Nemtsov and Vladimir Ryzhkov 28 Despite the authorities banning the party from participating in some regions in the 2013 regional elections likely for political reasons RPR PARNAS managed to achieve another electoral success in the autumn of 2013 when co leader Nemtsov successfully managed to win a seat on the Yaroslavl regional parliament 22 29 Nemtsov s victory meant that the party won the right to run in state legislative elections without having to collect signatures since it held a seat in one of Russia s regional parliaments 22 In turn this made RPR PARNAS the only non systemic opposition party that had automatic access to the ballot in legislative elections 22 In the concurrent September 2013 gubernatorial elections all of the party s candidates were disqualified from running by the authorities 30 It was in 2013 that Nemtsov also published a report on the upcoming 2014 Winter Olympics which were planned to be held in Sochi Russia He provided evidence there had been massive embezzlement by government officials asserting that it amounted to about 50 60 percent of the stated final cost of the sporting event 9 Assassination of co leader Nemtsov edit nbsp Influential party co leader and leading Russian opposition figure Boris Nemtsov was assassinated in front of the Kremlin in February 2015One of the party s co leaders at this time was Boris Nemtsov the party s most influential and talented mediator and a leading Russian opposition figure 22 31 Nemtsov had been one of Russia s leading economic reformers in the 1990s and also served as first deputy prime minister under President Boris Yeltsin 31 Nemtsov was assassinated in Moscow on 28 February 2015 being shot by an attacker in a car while on a bridge by the Kremlin 31 He died hours after appealing for support for an upcoming protest in Moscow against the war in Ukraine and in a recent interview Nemtsov had said he feared president Putin would have him killed because of his opposition to the war in Ukraine 31 Ukrainian president Petro Poroshenko described Nemtsov as a bridge between Ukraine and Russia and added the murderers shot has destroyed it I think it is not by accident 31 In the aftermath of the assassination Kasyanov stated that he also feared for his life noting that he was receiving death threats from nationalists 32 On this he commented The authorities want to stop my political activity with threats they want to force me out of the country Their aim is to frighten me But I have decided that I am going to continue with my activity 32 Nemtsov s murder deprived RPR PARNAS of one of its most influential figures and meant he was unable to complete his term as an elected member of the Yaroslavl regional parliament the party s last remaining seat However because of the 5 year mandate Nemtsov won in 2013 the party would retain control of the seat until 2018 22 Democratic Coalition formed for elections edit In July 2015 the party congress voted to shorten the party s name to just People s Freedom Party PARNAS 33 In April 2015 a number of opposition parties formed a unified Democratic Coalition to take part in the 2016 legislative election as well as the 2015 regional elections as a test This included PARNAS as well as the Progress Party of Alexei Navalny the Democratic Choice party of Vladimir Milov as well as several others The unregistered movements needed to band with PARNAS as they were rejected from the right to take part in elections as the necessary signatures they collected were deemed invalid while PARNAS was officially registered as they still held the seat in the Yaroslavl Oblast Duma that had been won by Boris Nemtsov in 2013 In 2015 the coalition focused on four regions where their candidates were accepted by the Central Election Commission Novosibirsk Kaluga Kostroma and Magadan 34 However in all these regions the party was harassed while campaigning its members were arrested in Kostroma and it was eventually denied the possibility of running its party candidates for assembly seats in Novosibirsk and Kaluga as regional election commissions and courts ruled its voter petition signatures invalid 35 They were only allowed to run in the Kostroma region in the end where official results gave them 2 28 of the vote not enough to obtain a seat in the regional legislature 36 Poisoning of Kara Murza edit nbsp Leading party figure and later deputy leader Vladimir Kara Murza was poisoned three months after co leader Boris Nemtsov s assassinationThree months after Nemtsov was assassinated another leading figure in the party Vladimir Kara Murza was nearly killed after being poisoned 37 Kara Murza had been elected to the federal council of the party in June 2012 and was also elected to the Russian Opposition Coordination Council in October 2012 38 39 While in a meeting Kara Murza fell severely ill and began vomiting violently eventually losing consciousness and falling into a coma 37 He was taken to hospital and spent a week in the coma 37 When he woke up he was told by doctors he had been poisoned by an unknown substance and tests subsequently found high levels of heavy metals in his blood 37 40 Kara Murza s poisoning was widely believed to be politically motivated 41 Kara Murza had been a close friend of Nemtsov and there was a history of the Russian security services poisoning opponents of the Kremlin such as Alexander Litvinenko and Anna Politkovskaya 42 Kara Murza would be poisoned again in February 2017 again causing him to fall into a coma but he also survived this attack 41 In 2021 it was discovered that Kara Murza had been trailed before his poisonings by the same Federal Security Service unit that poisoned the most prominent Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny in 2020 43 Navalny had previously been RPR PARNAS s candidate for mayor in the 2013 Moscow mayoral election and worked closely with the party After his recovery Kara Murza went on to be elected deputy leader of RPR PARNAS in July 44 Democratic Coalition and sabotaged 2016 legislative election campaign edit Ultimately the primary that was held to create the candidate list that would run for the coalition in the elections ended up breaking down for multiple reasons One key reason was the publication of a sex tape involving Mikhail Kasyanov and another PARNAS member which caused Alexei Navalny and Ilya Yashin to call for Kasyanov to take part in the primaries himself rather than be permitted to be automatically placed on the candidate list Kasyanov s position on the party ticket was part of the agreement in forming the coalition State run TV channel NTV also released a secretly recorded video of Kasyanov criticising his coalition partners in private 45 Members of the December 5 party proposed to hold a vote to decide whether the reserved spots on the party ticket should exist or not and while the others supported the idea PARNAS vetoed it 46 When Kasyanov refused to take part in the primaries they pulled their support effectively ending the coalition Yashin and several of his supporters also left the party 22 PARNAS went on to hold its own primary but this was disrupted when hackers posted the personal information of voters who took part in it online Unexpectedly ultranationalist populist Vyacheslav Maltsev became the frontrunner of the primary but the hacked information revealed that many of the voting accounts had the same passwords suggesting that someone had been using bots to inflate the votes of select candidates Kasyanov refused to step down after the debacle and stood in the 2016 elections 47 in which the party gained 0 7 of the vote and not a single seat in the 7th State Duma 48 The party had faced significant challenges in some regions with the press rejecting the party s ads and local TV stations blocking their candidates from TV appearances despite this being mandated by law 49 In December 2016 deputy party leader Kara Murza left PARNAS because of Maltsev s role in the party 50 2017 Moscow municipal election edit During the 2017 Moscow municipal election PARNAS partnered with the liberal party Yabloko in a coalition called United Democrats to get candidates elected to local councils of deputies in municipal districts of Moscow Specifically PARNAS only gained two out of 1 502 seats up for election but the coalition as a whole obtained over 260 seats 51 2018 presidential election edit In October 2017 Kasyanov proposed that the liberal opposition candidates intending to run for the presidency in 2018 including Grigory Yavlinsky Alexei Navalny and Kseniya Sobchak form a coalition and field a single candidate in order to increase their chances 52 In early December PARNAS revealed that this coalition was never formed and announced that they supported the three opposition candidates so the party did not have any of its own candidates run for the presidency 53 Contentious loss of last seat edit In September 2018 regional elections were held in which the party s only seat in a legislature the Yaroslavl regional parliament was up for re election 22 The seat had originally been won by party co chair Boris Nemtsov in 2013 before he was assassinated in 2015 22 In August 2018 the party attempted to register their candidates for the election in Yaroslavl but pro Putin parties Patriots of Russia and the Liberal Democratic Party challenged the PARNAS party ticket in court claiming their candidates list violated certain regulations a common tactic used by the authorities to bar the opposition from elections 22 27 In late August the Yarslavl Regional Court denied PARNAS the right to run in the election and after an appeal by the party the Russian Supreme Court upheld this decision on 7 September 22 The decision meant that the party were condemned to losing their last seat meaning that the party lost the right to automatically run in State Duma legislative elections 22 2023 dissolution edit The party was dissolved by Russia s Supreme Court on May 25 2023 because it did not have the required number of branches and due to claims filed against existing branches by the Federal Taxation Service and the Ministry of Justice 6 7 The Supreme Court cited the absence of the party s offices in at least half of the 83 federal subjects of Russia as the primary reason 54 The Ministry of Justice claimed that the party s number of branches had dropped from 47 to 40 since the start of 2023 54 PARNAS claimed the party still had 44 offices and that it could not have offices in the four annexed territories of Ukraine by Russia on 30 September 2022 who are internationally recognized as a part of Ukraine 55 since PARNAS alleged those regions did not yet have full fledged executive authorities 54 Ideology editThe ideology of the RPR PARNAS was liberalism federalism and human rights citation needed In his interview Kasyanov said there is no higher value for the government than human rights He defined ideological stance of PRP PARNAS as right of center liberalism 56 The main principles of the PARNAS party program included securing the individual rights of Russian citizens and equality of all before law and that the government should be democratic controlled by the public and should serve the interest of the people The party condemned the Bolsheviks who seized power in 1917 and the existence of the Soviet Union which it considered tyrannical and modeled itself after the Constitutional Democratic Party that existed during the late Russian Empire It also promised to declassify all KGB and other Soviet documents as part of a decommunization program and ban all promotion of the communist regime For Russia s form of government it proposed to create a parliamentary republic and increase local self governance In addition PARNAS wanted to reform the judiciary to be truly independent remove government control over the mass media and promote small business and entrepreneurs over oligarchs 57 The party considered the 2014 Russian annexation of Crimea illegal and vowed to return control of Crimea back to Ukraine as such PARNAS did not campaign in Crimea in the 2016 Russian parliamentary elections 58 According to its 2015 election platform it stated that it wanted Russia to become a partner of NATO and the European Union as well as to end military interventions in other countries 59 Significance to the Russian opposition editIn Russia political opposition during Putin s presidency tends to be more visible through protest than in legislatures and executive offices 60 The main three opposition parties in parliament often referred to as the systemic opposition do not represent a serious threat to the government and dominant ruling party United Russia 27 The Communist Party has declined in strength since the 1990s and also supports United Russia on various issues while the far right LDPR and socialist A Just Russia Patriots For Truth parties both believed to be government creations largely support President Putin and the government 27 60 61 Most of the major parties fully support the president and only the liberal Yabloko and PARNAS parties strongly condemn Putin s policies 61 Thus the most prominent democratic opposition parties in Russia have been Yabloko and PARNAS 60 62 Experts consider these parties to be the two political forces that are true opposition parties and they were the only two parties out of the 14 that competed in the 2016 legislative election that could be considered as such 63 When in 2012 new laws were introduced which allowed the formation of new parties several new opposition parties sprang up but RPR PARNAS held an advantage over these other parties as it was led by several long standing leaders of anti Putin opposition such as Nemtsov and Kasyanov This gave the party particular prominence 29 Yabloko and PARNAS are generally more politicized than the systemic opposition leading campaigns against electoral fraud and corruption while voicing support for civil rights 62 Both frequently demand the release of political prisoners media freedoms and changes in political regulations and have advocated direct elections of mayors and opposed oppressive legislation such as laws and restrictions on public meetings 62 Amongst all parties Yabloko and PARNAS have had the highest percentage of ballot access denials by authorities despite their overall limited number of attempts to register candidates 64 Leaders edit nbsp Mikhail KasyanovCo chairsMikhail Kasyanov 2012 2023 Vladimir Ryzhkov 2006 2014 Boris Nemtsov 2012 until his assassination on 27 February 2015 Federal Political Council of RPR PARNASBureau Mikhail Kasyanov Boris Nemtsov until his assassination on 27 February 2015 Ilya Yashin until 16 December 2016 Valentina Melnikova former co chair of the party Sergey Aleksashenko Konstantin Merzlikin Vadim Prokhorov Alexander BerstenevOthers Igor Stasovskiy Vladimir Vladimirovich Kara Murza until 16 December 2016 Vyacheslav Maltsev until 2017 Electoral results editLegislative elections edit Election Party leader Performance Rank GovernmentVotes pp Seats 1993 Run into the Yabloko and Choice of Russia lists 12 450 New 6th Opposition1995 Ella Pamfilova 1 106 812 1 69 New 2 450 nbsp 10 nbsp 12th Opposition1999 Only constituencies 1 450 nbsp 1 nbsp 15th Opposition2003 Did not contest20072011 Party was part of For Russia without Lawlessness and Corruption coalition that boycotted the elections2016 Mikhail Kasyanov 384 675 0 73 nbsp 0 73 0 450 nbsp 0 nbsp 11th Extra parliamentarySee also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Republican Party of Russia People s Freedom Party The Other Russia YablokoReferences edit V Moskve proshel 15 j vosstanovitelnyj i obedinitelnyj sezd Respublikanskoj partii Rossii Partii narodnoj svobody Moscow hosted the 15th Restorative and Unifying Congress of the Republican Party of Russia People s Freedom Party in Russian Republican Party of Russia June 16 2012 Archived from the original on June 19 2012 Retrieved March 6 2015 RPR Parnas proshla v gorodskuyu dumu Barnaula RPR Parnas passed to the City Duma of Barnaul Vedomosti in Russian 15 October 2012 Retrieved 12 May 2020 Two Russian parties merge in push against Putin Reuters 16 June 2012 Retrieved 4 March 2015 Russian Respublikanskaya partiya Rossii Partiya narodnoj svobody RPR PARNAS Respublikanskaja partija Rossii Partija narodnoj svobody RPR PARNAS Russian Respublikanskaya partiya Rossii RPR Respublikanskaja partija Rossii RPR a b Verhovnyj sud likvidiroval PARNAS RBK in Russian 2023 05 25 Retrieved 2023 05 25 a b Verhovnyj sud Rossii po isku Minyusta likvidiroval partiyu PARNAS Interfax ru in Russian 2023 05 25 Retrieved 2023 05 25 Respublikanskaya partiya rossijskoj Federacii Lider Vladimir Lysenko Republican Party of the Russian Federation Leader Vladimir Lysenko www panorama ru Retrieved 8 March 2022 a b c d e f g RPR PARNAS Republican Party of Russia People s Freedom Party globalsecurity org Retrieved 2 March 2021 HUDOC Search Page Retrieved 4 March 2015 Russian Opposition Party Denied Registration RFE RL 22 June 2011 Retrieved 28 February 2021 VS RF otmenil reshenie o likvidacii Respublikanskoj partii Rossii The Supreme Court of the Russian Federation canceled the decision to liquidate the Republican Party of Russia rapsinews ru 23 January 2012 a b c Bateman Aaron 2014 The Political Influence of the Russian Security Services The Journal of Slavic Military Studies 27 3 394 doi 10 1080 13518046 2014 932626 S2CID 143554771 RPR PARNAS Republican Party of Russia People s Freedom Party Global Security Retrieved 7 May 2017 Synovate Comcon O Kompanii Novosti Comcon 2 ru Archived from the original on 18 May 2015 Retrieved 27 December 2015 Synovate Comcon O Kompanii Novosti Comcon 2 ru Archived from the original on 18 May 2015 Retrieved 27 December 2015 Synovate Comcon O Kompanii Novosti Comcon 2 ru Archived from the original on 18 May 2015 Retrieved 27 December 2015 a b Synovate Comcon O Kompanii Novosti Comcon 2 ru Archived from the original on 18 May 2015 Retrieved 27 December 2015 Synovate Comcon O Kompanii Novosti Comcon 2 ru Archived from the original on 18 May 2015 Retrieved 27 December 2015 Synovate Comcon O Kompanii Novosti Comcon 2 ru 24 July 2013 Archived from the original on 18 May 2015 Retrieved 27 December 2015 a b c Synovate Comcon O Kompanii Novosti Comcon 2 ru Archived from the original on 13 April 2015 Retrieved 27 December 2015 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Andrey Kozenko Kevin Rothrock 7 September 2018 Boris Nemtsov s old party is about to lose its last seat in Russian politics Meduza Retrieved 25 February 2021 a b c Navalny Moscow mayoral bid accepted ahead of verdict Fox News 17 July 2013 Retrieved 26 February 2021 a b c Englund Will 9 September 2013 Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny has strong showing in Moscow mayoral race despite loss Washington Post Retrieved 26 February 2021 a b Golosov Grigorii V 2014 The September 2013 Regional Elections in Russia The Worst of Both Worlds Regional amp Federal Studies 24 2 240 doi 10 1080 13597566 2013 865606 S2CID 154769074 Navalnogo zaregistrirovali kandidatom v mery Moskvy Navalny was registered as a candidate for mayor of Moscow lenta ru a b c d e European Parliament December 2014 Russia political parties in a managed democracy PDF European Parliamentary Research Service Retrieved 26 February 2021 Ot Navalnogo trebuyut konkretiki Politika Nezavisimaya gazeta Navalny is required to be specific Politics Nezavisimaya Gazeta Ng ru Nezavisimaya Gazeta 8 October 2013 Archived from the original on 31 January 2016 Retrieved 27 December 2015 a b Golosov Grigorii V 2014 The September 2013 Regional Elections in Russia The Worst of Both Worlds Regional amp Federal Studies 24 2 234 doi 10 1080 13597566 2013 865606 S2CID 154769074 Golosov Grigorii V 2014 The September 2013 Regional Elections in Russia The Worst of Both Worlds Regional amp Federal Studies 24 2 239 doi 10 1080 13597566 2013 865606 S2CID 154769074 a b c d e Russia opposition politician Boris Nemtsov shot dead BBC News 28 February 2015 Retrieved 26 February 2021 a b Osborn Andrew 16 February 2016 Putin critic Mikhail Kasyanov I won t flee Russia despite death threats Reuters Retrieved 26 February 2021 PARNAS congress votes to shorten party name and elect Kasyanov as leader Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe official website 10 July 2015 Retrieved 7 May 2017 Milov Vladimir 11 August 2015 Democratic Coalition what next Free Russia Foundation retrieved 6 May 2017 Moses Joel 2017 Political Rivalry and Conflict in Putin s Russia Europe Asia Studies 69 6 968 doi 10 1080 09668136 2017 1364700 S2CID 158587872 Russian opposition party PARNAS to vie for State Duma seats in coalitions with Navalny TASS 19 September 2015 Retrieved 7 May 2017 a b c d Kramer Andrew 20 August 2016 More of Kremlin s Opponents Are Ending Up Dead New York Times Retrieved 27 February 2021 Sopredsedatelyami partii RPR PARNAS stali Nemcov Kasyanov i Ryzhkov Nemtsov Kasyanov and Ryzhkov became co chairs of the RPR PARNAS party 16 June 2012 Retrieved 27 February 2021 Rezultaty vyborov v KS Spisok 45 pobeditelej The results of the elections to the CC List of 45 winners 22 October 2012 Retrieved 27 February 2021 Kremlin critic Vladimir Kara Murza in critical state after organ failure The Guardian Agence France Presse 2 February 2017 Retrieved 27 February 2021 a b Vladimir Kara Murza Washington Post Retrieved 27 February 2021 Rainsford Sarah 4 June 2015 Russian activist s sudden illness fuels poisoning suspicion BBC News Retrieved 27 February 2021 Navalny Kara Murza Tailed by Same FSB Squad Before Alleged Poisonings Investigation Moscow Times 11 February 2021 Retrieved 27 February 2021 RPR PARNAS smenila nazvanie i izbrala Kasyanova predsedatelem RPR PARNAS changed its name and elected Kasyanov as chairman 5 July 2015 Retrieved 27 February 2021 Pertsev Andrey 13 May 2016 Splits Force Russia s Opposition to Rethink Carnegie Moscow Centre Retrieved 28 February 2021 Associates Navalny said about the collapse of the coalition Kasyanov FreeNews English 27 April 2016 Retrieved 7 May 2017 The strange death of Russia s Democratic Coalition 31 May 2016 Retrieved 7 May 2017 The Russian Democratic Opposition Has Become Completely Helpless Middle East Media Research Institute 2 January 2017 Retrieved 7 May 2017 MacFarquhar Neil 17 September 2016 Kremlin Says It Wants a Spotless Election but Locally It Is Marred New York Times Retrieved 28 February 2021 Zampredsedatelya PARNASa Kara Murza mladshij vyshel iz partii Deputy Chairman of PARNAS Kara Murza Jr left the party TASS 17 December 2016 Retrieved 27 February 2021 United Democrats win over 260 seats in Moscow municipal assemblies Gudkov Johnson s Russia List 11 September 2017 Retrieved 14 February 2018 PARNAS predlozhil Sobchak Navalnomu i Yavlinskomu sozdat predvybornuyu koaliciyu PARNAS invited Sobchak Navalny and Yavlinsky to create an election coalition TASS 30 October 2017 Retrieved 6 December 2017 in Russian Sukhov Denis 16 December 2017 V PARNAS ne vidyat smysla v vydvizhenii svoego kandidata na prezidentskie vybory 2018 goda Komsomolskaya Pravda Retrieved 16 December 2017 a b c Russia s Supreme Court dissolves Parnas political party Meduza 25 May 2023 Retrieved 25 May 2023 Ukraine war UN condemns Russian invasion ahead of anniversary BBC News 23 February 2023 Retrieved 25 May 2023 OnlineTV ru pervoe interaktivnoe televidenie Retrieved 4 March 2015 Za chto my boremsya i k chemu stremimsya Kratkaya programma PARNAS What we are fighting for and trying to reach Shortened program of PARNAS PARNAS official website 19 April 2017 Retrieved 7 May 2017 Russian Opposition Party Will Not Campaign In Annexed Crimea Radio Free Europe 19 August 2016 Oppositionist Kasyanov heads up renamed PARNAS Russia Beyond the Headlines Published 5 July 2015 Retrieved 6 May 2017 a b c Semenov Andrei 2020 Electoral Performance and Mobilization of Opposition Parties in Russia Russian Politics 5 2 236 237 doi 10 30965 24518921 00502005 S2CID 225675903 a b Shpagin Sergey Korgunyuk Yury Ross Cameron 2018 Party Reforms and the Unbalancing of the Cleavage Structure in Russian Regional Elections 2012 2015 Europe Asia Studies 70 2 165 166 a b c Semenov Andrei 2020 Electoral Performance and Mobilization of Opposition Parties in Russia Russian Politics 5 2 245 doi 10 30965 24518921 00502005 S2CID 225675903 Goncharenko Roman 18 September 2016 Russian elections Trying to look democratic DW Retrieved 28 February 2021 Smyth Regina Turovsky Rostislav 2018 Legitimising Victories Electoral Authoritarian Control in Russia s Gubernatorial Elections Europe Asia Studies 70 2 190 doi 10 1080 09668136 2018 1436697 S2CID 158875092 External links editOfficial website nbsp St Petersburg branch of RPR PARNAS The website of Vladimir Ryzhkov The 2011 website of the Republican Party Internet Archive About the party PartinformArticlesRussia s Republican Party Legal Again Two Russian parties merge in push against Putin Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title People 27s Freedom Party Russia amp oldid 1208958132, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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