Putin’s Approval Rating Drops for Third Straight Year

The opinion of Russian citizens toward President Vladimir Putin has become more negative for a third consecutive year as he pursues constitutional changes that will allow him to extend his rule through 2036, according to a survey published by independent pollster Levada Center on Tuesday.

The share of respondents who said they viewed Putin with positive feelings like admiration or sympathy stood at 29% in Levada’s latest poll, down from 32% in October 2019 and 42% in April 2017.

At the same time, the share of Russians who view Putin with negative emotions like antipathy or disgust rose to 8%, Levada said.

Putin’s approval rating reached an all-time high of 87% after Russia annexed Crimea from Ukraine in 2014, but has been slowly falling since then as Putin enacted controversial pension reforms and the Russian economy stagnated.

The percentage of Russians with neutral feelings toward Putin stayed relatively consistent at 60%, down from 61% in October 2019.

According to Levada, Russians are less likely to describe Putin as a determined, strong-willed person. Twenty-five percent of respondents said they would describe Putin with these characteristics, compared with 30% the last time Levada asked this question in July 2018.

Only 13% of respondents said they would describe him as “a true leader who can lead the people,” down from 17% in 2018. 

Conversely, 38% of respondents said they believe that Putin represents the interests of tycoons, bankers, and big business. Thirty-seven percent said the president represents the interests of Russia’s security forces, and 28% said he acts in the interests of bureaucrats.

Just 18% of respondents said that Putin pays attention to the needs of middle-class Russians and only 16% said pays attention to issues that face the working class.

According to Levada, 14% of Russians said Putin has ties with corrupt politicians and 13% percent of respondents said he has ties to big capital. At the same time, 43% of Russians said that “they do not see” anyone else “who they could rely on,” Levada said.