What does the routine of an election campaign independent of the Kremlin look like? It’s when you announce a meeting in yet another city, and the police immediately show up there with a search warrant and confiscate campaign materials.
And it happens in exactly this format: we won’t say who we are, we have no documents. We’re confiscating this and this. We’re just taking it away because we can.
Yesterday morning we announced that I’m going to Kaliningrad; yesterday evening, the Kaliningrad campaign office was searched.
By now, this is simply the standard pattern in our dealings with the authorities.
Well, that’s exactly why we’re running this campaign—we don’t want this kind of government.
I’m coming to Kaliningrad anyway. Here is the schedule of voter meetings for this week:
December 8 at 6:30 p.m. Barnaul, Titov Square, “Covered Market” stop
December 9 at 1:00 p.m. Novokuznetsk, square at the intersection of Karl Marx Street and 1 Maya Street
December 10 at 3:00 p.m. Kaliningrad, 83 Moskovsky Prospekt (landmark: Moskovsky supermarket)
Come. And don’t forget to support our campaign financially. They confiscate, and we print and distribute more.