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Russian Watchdog’s Second Report on Moscow’s Meddling in Georgian Elections

Photo is taken from the website of Dossier Center

Dossier Center, a Russian investigative project established by Kremlin critic Mikhail Khodorkovsky, released the second report revealing planned campaign activities by the Alliance of Patriots (AoP), a nativist Kremlin-friendly opposition party of Georgia.

In its previous report published on August 24, Dossier accused the party of being aided by the Kremlin for the upcoming parliamentary elections, scheduled for October 31.

Dossier Center said it based its investigations on documents lifted from Chernov’s secretariat, including working documents, analytical reports, financial estimates, election manuals, and operational reports.

New Leaks, Abkhazia Excuses

The new leaks include pre-drafted instructions for the party’s response to the outcry over the controversial Abkhazia visit, the strategy of elections campaign, working plans, ‘agitator’s memo’ etc.

According to the watchdog, the Russians have allegedly drafted public excuses for party leaders MP Irma Inashvili and MP Giorgi Lomia on August 18 Abkhazia visit, which resulted in the resignation of Abkhaz leader’s aide Lasha Sakania.

The “theses” retrieved from Chernov’s Directorate, according to Dossier, include the following instructions:

Campaigning Tips and Scheduled Activities

According to the retrieved “agitator’s memo”, Patriots position themselves in the following way:

The leaked documents also highlight that, unlike the previous and current governments who reckon the interests of foreign powers, ‘Patriots’ declare that it is the national interests of Georgia that need to be defended.

The report says that Russia aids ‘Patriots’ in planning and organizing a set of campaign events, including:

The events at the end of the list aim at demonstrating the commonalities in beliefs held by the Georgian Orthodox Church and the party/ its leaders, such as the need for rapprochement with Russia and Russians as “brothers in faith”, or conservation of traditional and religious values.

This, in turn, must help win over religious voters, including those who have been supporting the ruling party or the opposition before.

Of Unhappy Political Strategists and “Patriot” Celebrities

As evident from a leaked correspondence between the AoP staff and Blashenkova from POLITSECRETS’, Russian campaigners are dissatisfied with the party’s low campaigning efforts and their slow actions, quoting Blashenkova as saying that the party cannot even pass a 10% threshold in elections on such pace and that AoP’s current ratings hardly achieve 5%.

A number of online campaign activities have also been planned, including attracting young bloggers to report on party’s meetings, organizing patriotic song contest, and an online video flash-mob with celebrities endorsing the Patriots. Some of the listed public personas include:

According to the correspondence, Russian campaigners have also requested data from Georgian voters – a so-called “passportization”, containing, at least, their addresses and the number of entrances and floors in each house. The AoP allegedly promised to submit data, expressing, however, their confusion over Russians’ interest in the numbers of floors and entrances.

Earlier Developments

Allegations from August 24 sparked outrage among Georgian opposition parties. MP Elene Khoshtaria, leader of the European Georgia party, even filed a request to the Prosecutor’s Office of Georgia on August 25, demanding an investigation.

Days later, on August 31, Khoshtaria said the Prosecutor’s Office refused to launch an investigation and referred the case to the Audit’s Office.

Denying allegations, MP Inashvili slammed the previous report as “absurd.”

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