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Opposition to Vladimir Putin

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Volodymyr Zelenskyy
President of Ukraine since 2019
John McCain
American politician (1936–2018)
Mitt Romney
American politician and businessman (born 1947)
Boris Nemtsov
Russian scientist, statesman and liberal politician (1959–2015)
Dalia Grybauskaitė
President of Lithuania fom 2009 to 2019 (born 1956)
Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya
Belarusian politician, educator, and pro-democracy activist (born 1982)
Pussy Riot
Russian punk-rock collective based in Moscow
Nikki Haley
American politician and diplomat (born 1972)
Wagner Group rebellion
2023 uprising in Russia led by Yevgeny Prigozhin
John Bolton
American lawyer and diplomat (born 1948)
Putin khuylo!
slogan deriding Vladimir Putin
Lindsey Graham
Lindsey Olin Graham is an American politician and attorney serving as the senior United States senator from South Carolina, a seat he has held since 2003. A member of the Republican Party, he chaired the Senate Committee on the Judiciary from 2019 to 2021. Graham served in the South Carolina House of Representatives from 1993 to 1995 and in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1995 to 2003.
white-blue-white flag
flag of Russian anti-war opposition to the 2022 invasion of Ukraine
Yabloko
The Russian United Democratic Party Yabloko (RUDP Yabloko; , ) is a social-liberal political party in Russia.
Radosław Sikorski
Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Poland
National Bolshevik Party
political party in Russia
2021 Russian protests
protests in opposition to Vladimir Putin and in support of Alexei Navalny
Freedom of Russia Legion
legion of the Armed Forces of Ukraine consisting of soldiers from the Russian Federation
2011–2013 Russian protests
protests in Russia against Vladimir Putin between December 2011 and July 2013
Putler
thumb|A protester holding up a sign with Putin's official presidential portrait with Hitler's hair and mustache drawn on it. Putler (), sometimes extended to Vladolf Putler (, ), is a derogatory neologism and portmanteau formed by merging the names of Vladimir Putin and Adolf Hitler. Often used in the slogan "Putler Kaput!" (; ) by people opposed to Putin, the term has a negative connotation.
Boris Nadezhdin
Russian politician
Adam Kinzinger
American military officer and politician (born 1978)
Russian Volunteer Corps
military unit of the Armed Forces of Ukraine consisting of naturalized citizens of the Russian Federation
protests against the Russo-Ukrainian war
overview of protests against the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine
The Other Russia
political organization
Leonid Ivashov
Russian politician and general
Russia of the Future
political party in Russia
The Other Russia of E. V. Limonov
unregistered political party of Russian National Bolsheviks
Left Front
Russian political coalition
National Republican Army
alleged Russian anti-Putin armed rebel group
Don Bacon
American politician (born 1963)
Putin Must Go
political protest against President Vladimir Putin of Russia
opposition to Vladimir Putin in Russia
movement aiming to remove Vladimir Putin from his offices
Solidarnost
United Democratic Movement "Solidarnost" (; Obyedinonnoye demokraticheskoye dvizheniye «Solidarnost», ODD "Solidarnost"), abbreviated ODD "Solidarnost" (Russian for "Solidarity", named after the Polish Solidarność), is a Russian liberal democratic political movement founded on 13 December 2008 by a number of well-known members of the liberal democratic opposition, including Garry Kasparov, Boris Nemtsov, Lev Ponomaryov and others from the Yabloko and Union of Right Forces (which had just merged with two pro-Kremlin parties, the Democratic Party of Russia and Civilian Power, to form the pro-Kre
Free Nations of Post-russia Forum
international community aimed for peaceful disintegration of Russia into separate sovereign independent States
Vanguard of Red Youth
political party in Russia
Sibir Battalion
military unit of the Armed Forces of Ukraine consisting of the citizens of the Russian Federation, notably from Siberia
Libertarian Party of Russia
political party
Russian emigration during the Russo-Ukrainian war
ongoing migration of Russian citizens in response to the 2022 invasion of Ukraine
Dissenters' March
series of Russian opposition protests
Party of crooks and thieves
popular expression used to refer to the ruling United Russia party
Noon Against Putin
initiative to come to the polling stations at 12 noon on 17 March in the 2024 Russian presidential elections
2024 Bashkortostan protests
demonstrations in Russia
Alexander Gabyshev
Yakut shaman and activist (1968-)
2017–2018 Russian protests
protests in Russia between March 2017 and October 2018 against Vladimir Putin's policies
2014 anti-war protests in Russia
March and September 2014 protests in Moscow and Saint Petersburg in Russia against the Russian military intervention in Ukraine
Combat Organization of Anarcho-Communists
Underground organization in Russia and Belarus
rail war in Belarus
sabotage of the Russian invasion of Ukraine
United Civil Front
political organization
Strategy-31
Strategy-31 () is a series of civic protests in support of the right to peaceful assembly in Russia guaranteed by Article 31 of the Russian constitution. Since July 31, 2009, the protests were held in Moscow on Triumfalnaya Square on the 31st of every month with 31 days.
Anti-War Committee
Russian civil society organization
Open Russia
organization
All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks
political party in Russia
grandpa in his bunker
pejorative nickname for Russian President Vladimir Putin
2019 Moscow protests
2019 Moscow City Duma elections protests
Putinversteher
thumb|A Putinversteher logo similar to what may be seen on T-shirts, mugs, and the like Putinversteher or Putin-Versteher (, female form Putinversteherin) is a German neologism (Putin + verstehen), which literally translates to "Putin understander", i.e. "one who understands Putin". It is a pejorative reference to politicians and pundits who express empathy to Vladimir Putin and may also be translated as "Putin-Empathizer". Similar words include Russlandversteher and Russland-Versteher ("Russia-Empathizer").
Free Russia Forum
political party in Russia
Oborona
Russian Youth Movement "Oborona" (; Rossiyskoye molodozhnoye dvizheniye «Oborona») (Russian for "Defense") is a non-partisan civic youth movement in Russia. The movement was established in 2005 and has no leader or centralized structure. Instead, it is based on the network principle and mostly horizontal relations.
Russian Socialist Movement
radical left-wing political organisation in Russia
Belarusian and Russian partisan movement
resistance against the Russian invasion of Ukraine