Russian President Vladimir Putin’s trust rating dropped from 55 percent to 53 percent during the week of January 17–24, according to the latest survey results from the Public Opinion Foundation (FOM). This is the lowest trust rating Putin has seen since January 2020 — over the course of last year, it hovered between 55 and 60 percent.
Meanwhile, the proportion of respondents who gave Putin a negative trust rating grew from 33 percent to 35 percent — the highest number seen in the past 10 months. Another 12 percent of respondents found it difficult to answer the question.
The survey was conducted from January 22–24, 2021. The FOM polled 3,000 respondents from 207 towns and cities in 73 of Russia’s regions.
The FOM conducted its survey on public opinion about Putin against the backdrop of Alexey Navalny’s Anti-Corruption Foundation releasing its “Putin’s Palace” investigation (January 19) and the mass arrests that accompanied the countrywide protests opposing Navalny’s detention (January 23).
Read more about Putin’s palace
- Following the money Alexey Navalny’s boldest investigation yet describes a vast network of shell companies and frontmen working to build and sustain Vladimir Putin’s supposed seaside getaway
- Putin’s palace Navalny’s Anti-Corruption Foundation investigates the Russian president’s billion-dollar residence on the Black Sea
- ‘They’re brainwashing our citizens’ Putin comments on his alleged ownership of billion-dollar residence
- January 23rd, in photos Meduza looks back on the countrywide protests and mass arrests that rocked Russia last Saturday