From The Moscow Times, Sept. 8, 2021, https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2021/09/08/russians-say-they-are-being-forced-to-vote-in-elections-this-time-online-a74999. Condensed text:
As Russia gears up to elect its national parliament, The Moscow Times spoke with seven state employees across the country who said they have been asked – and sometimes pressured – by their employers to vote online in elections seen as a crucial test of the ruling United Russia party’s grip on power.
All of them asked for their surnames to be withheld for fear of reprisals.
Critics say Russian elections have a long history of voter intimidation at work, especially in the bloated public sector, which accounts for a third of jobs in Russia.
A poll published by the state-funded All-Russia Center for the Study of Public Opinion polling agency on Wednesday [Sept. 8] said 14% of all employers working at industrial plants in Russia had been confronted with forced voting for the upcoming elections, while almost half of all employers said their bosses had mentioned the elections at work.
“While it’s too early to say, we haven’t seen any indication that voter mobilization will be lower this time,” said [US researcher Ora] Reuter.
Following each election, dozens of videos are posted online showing state business owners mobilizing their employees to vote and using “carousel techniques” – providing organized transportation of selected voters to multiple polling booths on the same election day, which allows them to vote twice.
In one such video from the 2011 Duma elections, the mayor of the city of Novokuznetsk, Valery Smolevo [sic; Smolego – Trans.], is seen instructing a council of the directors of the city’s biggest corporation to mobilize their employees to vote for United Russia.
“We should do these elections in the right manner so we won’t look bad. It’s obvious that United Russia should win,” he says in the video.
Kremlin critics and observers say that this time around, the authorities are trying to minimize such occurrences by urging voters to register and vote online.
“The methods have evolved. The Kremlin wants to avoid embarrassing images of ‘carousel voting’ and it’s much easier to get someone to vote online without any monitors in place,” said Roman Yuneman, a former independent politician who now runs the election watchdog Your Choice, which collects complaints from employees who say they are being pressured to vote.
Yuneman himself claims that e-voting fraud resulted in him losing in his run for the Moscow City Duma elections in 2019, the first time online voting was widely used.
Russia has since rapidly expanded its online voting program. In addition to Moscow, six other regions will allow people to vote online in the fall 2021 Duma elections. Over 1.5 million Muscovites have signed up for the online voting system, including Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin.
“It is quick, easy and safe. All it takes is two or three clicks without leaving the house,” Sobyanin told Russian media last week.
E-voting in Moscow will take place on a platform developed by the mayor’s office, while in other areas it will go through the Gosuslugi (government services) portal.
The first reports of municipal officials telling their employees to register for online voting started to appear in local media In July and August of this year.
The Russian Central Electoral Commission (CEC) has countered claims that voters are being mobilized, saying they have had “almost no complaints.”
Stanislav Andreichuk, cochair of the independent election watchdog Golos, said he was “very concerned about the prospect” of Russia moving toward online voting.
“It’s completely opaque. There are virtually no checks and balances,” he told The Moscow Times.
Golos – whose designation as a “foreign agent” last month will make it harder to monitor elections – also runs an online monitoring platform called Map of Violations that has been registering complaints from voters who say they are being pressured to cast their ballots.
“Traditionally, at least we would be able to send independent monitors to polling stations. With online voting we could have a situation where on the day of the vote, a factory boss will simply stand behind his workers’ computer screens and control whom they vote for,” Andreichuk said.
He also pointed to the complaints made by Muscovites during the United Russia primary elections last May, where there were instances of users logging onto Gosuslugi to find a vote had been recorded on their behalf. Russia’s Digital Development, [Communications and Mass Media] Ministry confirmed to business daily Kommersant that several accounts were indeed hacked “due to users having weak passwords.”
Another controversial feature of the online voting system in Moscow – which CEC head Ella Pamfilova has criticized – allows voters to go back and change their vote as long as voting is ongoing.
Andreichuk expects the authorities to roll out online voting across Russia by the 2024 presidential elections.
“For now, it’s a problem for a few regions where online voting is used. But this could be a sign of things to come. These could be the last physical elections,” he said.
With interest in politics at a 17-year low and ruling United Russia’s popular support at 27% – its weakest in 13 years – state employees will be pivotal for the outcome of this election, experts said, as United Russia is still expected to secure a large majority of seats from a small minority of the electorate.