
Alexei Navalny: This is what a post-Putin Russia should look like
Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny is serving a nine-year sentence in a maximum-security penal colony. This essay was conveyed to The Post by his legal team.

The 100 Most Influential People of 2022: Vladimir Putin
Perhaps Vladimir Putin’s true mission is to teach lessons. To everyone — from world leaders and pundits to ordinary people. He has been especially good at this in 2022.

The Man Putin Fears
On a cold morning in November, the family of Alexei Navalny, the Russian opposition leader, made the trip out to visit him at Penal Colony No. 2. The drive from Moscow took about two hours, though parts of it felt like traveling back in time. Coming off the highway from Russia’s high-tech capital, t

In His First Interview From Jail, an Upbeat Navalny Discusses Prison Life
Alexei’s first interview from prison, given to The New York Times in August 2021, a few months after his arrest and transfer to IK-2 in Pokrov (a penal colony in Russia). In it, he describes prison life in detail and with his trademark humor, comparing it to a “Chinese labor camp,” where the main fo

"My elimination would change nothing." An interview with Alexei Navalny about his recovery and return to Russia
Opposition politician Alexei Navalny remains in rehabilitation in Germany after being poisoned. He is working with physiotherapists and uses a computer and social media for a couple of hours a day—longer is not yet recommended. He is preparing to return to Russia as soon as his health allows.

Alexei Navalny on the poisoning attempt: “It wasn’t pain — it was something worse.”
In October 2020, Alexei Navalny spoke with Der Spiegel about the assassination attempt using a nerve agent, Putin’s role in the attempted killing, and Merkel’s visit to the hospital. In the interview, he says he wants to return to Russia as soon as possible — and not become an opposition leader in e

About Crooks and Thieves, Saffron Milk Caps and Shawarma, Black Grouse and Nationalism
“The Rules of Alexei Navalny’s Life” is a personal profile presented through a collection of short reflections on childhood, family, politics, fear, television, corruption, nationalism, religion, and everyday life.

I think power in Russia will not change hands as a result of elections.
In an interview with Yevgenia Albats, Alexei Navalny speaks about Russia’s political dynamics, arguing that a change of power in the country will not come through elections, but must emerge as a movement from below—through pressure from citizens and mass action.

Prison Diaries
The Russian opposition leader’s account of his last years and his admonition to his country and the world.

Alexei Navalny: “Corruption must be the main topic of international summits”
The Russian opposition figure and anti-corruption activist, who was the target of an attempted poisoning on August 20, 2020 and is now imprisoned, sets out five measures to combat the greed of leaders of autocratic regimes in an article for Le Monde, also published in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeit

Alexei Navalny: Only action against corruption can solve the world’s biggest problems
In a message from his prison cell, the jailed Russian opposition activist calls for the west to take sanctions against oligarchs.

Alexei Navalny: We must ask corrupt autocrats tough questions.
Corruption prevents us from addressing the most pressing political issues. It is high time to make the fight against it a matter of the highest national priority, writes imprisoned Russian opposition politician Alexei Navalny in this op-ed.

Alexey Navalny Has the Proof of His Poisoning
The Russian anti-corruption activist, who nearly died in August, talks about his recovery and his future.

The man who lived: An interview with Alexei Navalny, assassination survivor

“There was a plane, and I died on it.” An interview with Alexei Navalny
After being discharged from the Charité clinic, Alexei Navalny met with Mediazona editor-in-chief Sergei Smirnov in a forest on the outskirts of Berlin, while the politician’s brother Oleg Navalny drew illustrations for their conversation about Novichok, Svetlana Tikhanovskaya, Khabarovsk, smart vot

Kremlin Critic Navalny on the Former Chancellor “Schröder is Putin’s errand boy who protects murderers”
Exclusive interview with BILD He is Putin’s most important opponent and the world’s most famous poisoning victim: Russian opposition politician Alexei Navalny. On August 20, Navalny collapsed on a flight over Siberia, was admitted to a hospital in Omsk, and two days later was flown to Germany. A s

What Putin fears: Russians and Belarusians are tired of backwards-looking autocrats
The old tools of truncheon and syringe may keep them in power. But for how long?

Alexei Navalny's comment on the cancellation of the interview with Maria Zakharova - 2020-05-01

Alexei Navalny on Standing Up to Putin and His Murderous Minions
In an exclusive interview, Russia’s oft-imprisoned opposition leader talks about the threats against him and the long struggle against what the opposition calls Putinism.

A Conversation Between Dmitry Bykov and Alexei Navalny // "Sobesednik" (a Russian weekly newspaper), No. 42, October 31 - November 6, 2018
Alexei Navalny: Why am I alive? Well, somebody has to be alive...

"Living in your own home shapes a free and responsible person"
Alexei Navalny on a low-rise Russia of the future Russia must change the way everyday life is organized and make a civilizational choice in favor of low-rise development, says Alexei Navalny, founder of the Anti-Corruption Foundation (ACF). Living in your own home, among people who care about the f

Interview with Alena Vershinina from July 8, 2017

Navalny Became Reality
A campaign headquarters has opened in Pskov for the politician “who must not be named” The Pskov office became the 40th headquarters in Alexei Navalny’s election campaign — a politician who dominates the internet, but whose name is never spoken on television. On May 28, he stepped out of the virtua

Alexei Navalny interviewed by VTomske