Yevgeny V. Prigozhin’s failed revolt sharply dented his home help, however practically 30 % of Russians proceed to view the Wagner mercenary chief positively, in accordance with opinion polls whose outcomes had been launched Monday.
Outcomes from two surveys carried out in June by Russian Subject, a nonpartisan Moscow-based analysis firm, discovered that Mr. Prigozhin’s determination to march his Wagner mercenaries on Moscow on June 24 reversed a gentle rise in opinion polls that had made him one in all Russia’s hottest wartime leaders.
Mr. Prigozhin’s brief lived-rebellion, which he known as off inside hours, had posed essentially the most dramatic problem to President Vladimir V. Putin’s management in his 20 years in energy.
Mr. Prigozhin’s residual help is especially placing in gentle of a concerted effort by the Russian authorities to discredit him; the dearth of public help for the mutiny from Russian political and army leaders; and the deaths of a number of Russian army pilots who confronted Wagner’s rebels. The polls additionally came about amid an more and more draconian crackdown on free speech, which has seen Russians jailed for expressing anti-government views.
Consultants are divided over the accuracy of polling in Russia, the place criticizing the battle in Ukraine is prohibited. Some declare that repression prevents respondents from expressing their actual views. Polling companies defend their work by saying that well-designed surveys can nonetheless produce dependable outcomes.
Between 70 and 80 % of individuals reached by phone by Russian Fields refused to take part, highlighting the difficulties of capturing public opinion within the nation.
Russian Subject surveyed two separate teams of about 1,600 folks throughout Russia by cellphone, one shortly earlier than and the opposite shortly after Wagner’s mutiny. The polls had a margin of error of two.5 %.
Total, Mr. Prigozhin’s help fell by 26 share factors following the mutiny, in accordance with the ballot. Twenty-nine % of these surveyed mentioned they nonetheless seen Mr. Prigozhin in a constructive gentle, whereas practically 40 % mentioned they seen the mercenary chief negatively. One-third of respondents mentioned they weren’t acquainted with his actions or declined to reply.
The findings appeared to align with an evaluation carried out in June by FilterLabs.AI, a public opinion agency that screens social media and web boards to trace common sentiment in Russia. That evaluation discovered a pointy discount in Mr. Prigozhin’s help after the revolt.
As Mr. Prigozhin lodged more and more caustic assaults towards the Russian ruling class, his help steadily rose till he staged his high-stakes gambit towards the federal government, the polls by Russian Subject discovered. The share of Russians who supported him rose by 14 share factors, to 55 %, from February to early June, in accordance with the analysis firm, regardless of an absence of media protection from state-dominated tv networks, which proceed to be an influential supply of stories for Russians.
“Prigozhin’s ranking was based mostly on two pillars: the help of Vladimir Putin and trustworthy rhetoric. He known as issues by their identify and talked about issues that others had been afraid to talk of,” Artemiy Vvedenskiy, the founding father of Russian Subject, mentioned in written responses to questions.
The polls present that state propaganda has been partly profitable in altering these perceptions. Following the revolt, Mr. Prigozhin’s help fell most sharply amongst Russians over 60 and people who primarily acquire info from tv, in accordance with the polls.
Against this, Russians between 18 and 44 years previous had been practically evenly cut up amongst supporters and opponents of Mr. Prigozhin, the polls discovered. The mercenary chief and tycoon additionally maintained robust help amongst Russians who acquire their info primarily from the favored messaging app Telegram and web information websites, suggesting that his on-line media community has appreciable attain.
Mr. Prigozhin arrived final week in Belarus, in accordance with that nation’s pro-Russian president, Aleksandr G. Lukashenko, though he has not been seen publicly for the reason that revolt. The Russian authorities have blocked information and different web sites managed by the Wagner chief.
His future reputation will rely on how lively he stays publicly, on condition that few “straight shooters” stay in Russia’s tightly managed media area, Mr. Vvedenskiy mentioned.
Julian Barnes contributed reporting.