Congresses and Docs

Memorandum of Political Alternative, an updated version of 1.03.2019

Memorandum of Political Alternative

YABLOKO's Ten Key Programme Issues

THE DEMOCRATIC MANIFESTO

YABLOKO's Political Platform Adopted by the 15th Congress, June 21, 2008

The 18th Congress of YABLOKO

RUSSIA DEMANDS CHANGES! Electoral Program for 2011 Parliamentary Elections.

Key resolutions by the Congress:

On Stalinism and Bolshevism
Resolution. December 21, 2009

On Anti-Ecological Policies of Russia’s Authorities. Resolution of the 15th congress of the YABLOKO party No 253, December 24, 2009

On the Situation in the Northern Caucasus. Resolution of the 15th congress of the YABLOKO party No 252, December 24, 2009

YABLOKO's POLITICAL COMMITTEE DECISIONS:

YABLOKO’s Political Committee: Russian state acts like an irresponsible business corporation conducting anti-environmental policies

 

Overcoming bolshevism and stalinism as a key factor for Russia¦µ™s transformation in the 21st century

 

On Russia's Foreign Policies. Political Committee of hte YABLOKO party. Statement, June 26, 2009

 

On Iran’s Nuclear Problem Resolution by the Political Committee of the YABLOKO party. October 6, 2009

 

Anti-Crisis Proposals (Housing-Roads-Land) of the Russian United Democratic Party YABLOKO. Handed to President Medvedev by Sergei Mitrokhin on June 11, 2009

Brief Outline of Sergei Mitrokhin’s Report at the State Council meeting. January 22, 2010

 

Assessment of Russia’s Present Political System and the Principles of Its Development. Brief note for the State Council meeting (January 22, 2010) by Dr.Grigory Yavlinsky, member of YABLOKO’s Political Committee. January 22, 2010

 

Address of the YABLOKO party to President of the Russian Federation Dmitry Medvedev. Political Committee of the YABLOKO party. October 9, 2009

 

The 17th Congress of YABLOKO

 

 

 

The 16th Congress of Yabloko

Photo by Sergei Loktionov

The 12th congress of Yabloko


The 11th congress of Yabloko


The 10th congress of Yabloko

Moscow Yabloko
Yabloko for Students
St. Petersburg Yabloko
Khabarovsk Yabloko
Irkutsk Yabloko
Kaliningrad Yabloko(eng)
Novosibirsk Yabloko
Rostov Yabloko
Yekaterinburg Yabloko
(Sverdlovsk Region)

Krasnoyarsk Yabloko
Ulyanovsk Yabloko
Tomsk Yabloko
Tver Yabloko(eng)
Penza Yabloko
Stavropol Yabloko

Action of Support

Archives

Categories

SOON!

FOR YOUR INTEREST!

Programme by candidate for the post of Russian President Grigory Yavlinsky. Brief Overview

My Truth

Grigory Yavlinsky at Forum 2000, Prague, 2014

YABLOKO-ALDE conference 2014

Grigory Yavlinsky : “If you show the white feather, you will get fascism”

Grigory Yavlinsky: a coup is started by idealists and controlled by rascals

The Road to Good Governance

Risks of Transitions. The Russian Experience

Grigory Yavlinsky on the Russian coup of August 1991

A Male’s Face of Russia’s Politics

Black Sea Palaces of the New Russian Nomenklatura

Realeconomik

The Hidden Cause of the Great Recession (And How to Avert the Nest One)

by Dr. Grigory Yavlinsky

Resoulution
On the results of the Conference “Migration: International Experience and Russia’s Problems” conducted by the Russian United Democratic Party YABLOKO and the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe (the ALDE party)

Moscow, April 6, 2013

International Conference "Youth under Threat of Extremism and Xenophobia. A Liberal Response"
conducted jointly by ELDR and YABLOKO. Moscow, April 21, 2012. Speeches, videos, presentations

What does the opposition want: to win or die heroically?
Moskovsky Komsomolets web-site, July 11, 2012. Interview with Grigory Yavlinsky by Yulia Kalinina.

Building a Liberal Europe - the ALDE Project

By Sir Graham Watson

Lies and legitimacy
The founder of the Yabloko Party analyses the political situation. Article by Grigory Yavlinsky on radio Svoboda. April 6, 2011

Algorithms for Opposing Gender Discrimination: the International and the Russian Experience

YABLOKO and ELDR joint conference

Moscow, March 12, 2011

Reform or Revolution

by Vladimir Kara-Murza

Is Modernisation in Russia Possible? Interview with Grigory Yavlinsky and Boris Titov by Yury Pronko, "The Real Time" programme, Radio Finam, May 12, 2010

Grigory Yavlinsky's interview to Vladimir Pozner. The First Channel, programme "Pozner", April 20, 2010 (video and transcript)

Overcoming the Totalitarian Past: Foreign Experience and Russian Problems by Galina Mikhaleva. Research Centre for the East European Studies, Bremen, February 2010.

Grigory Yavlinsky: Vote for the people you know, people you can turn for help. Grigory Yavlinsky’s interview to the Moskovsky Komsomolets newspaper, October 8, 2009

Grigory Yavlinsky: no discords in the tandem. Grigory Yavlinsky’s interview to the Radio Liberty
www.svobodanews.ru
September 22, 2009

A Credit for Half a Century. Interview with Grigory Yavlinsky by Natalia Bekhtereva, Radio Russia, June 15, 2009

Sergei Mitrokhin's Speech at the meeting with US Preseident Barack Obama. Key Notes, Moscow, July 7, 2009

Mitrokhin proposed a visa-free regime between Russia and EU at the European liberal leaders meeting
June 18, 2009

Demodernization
by Grigory Yavlinsky

European Union chooses Grigory Yavlinsky!
Your vote counts!

Reforms that corrupted Russia
By Grigory Yavlinsky, Financial Times (UK), September 3, 2003

Grigory Yavlinsky: "It is impossible to create a real opposition in Russia today."
Moskovsky Komsomolets, September 2, 2003

Alexei Arbatov: What Should We Do About Chechnya?
Interview with Alexei Arbatov by Mikhail Falaleev
Komsomolskaya Pravda, November 9, 2002

Grigory Yavlinsky: Our State Does Not Need People
Novaya Gazeta,
No. 54, July 29, 2002

Grigory Yavlinsky: The Door to Europe is in Washington
Obschaya Gazeta, May 16, 2002

Grigory Yavlinsky's speech.
March 11, 2002

Grigory Yavlinsky's Lecture at the Nobel Institute
Oslo, May 30, 2000

IT IS IMPORTANT!

 

Yabloko: Liberals in Russia

By Alexander Shishlov, July 6, 2009

Position on Some Important Strategic Issues of Russian-American Relations

Moscow, July 7, 2009

The Embrace of Stalinism

By Arseny Roginsky, 16 December 2008

Nuclear Umbrellas and the Need for Understanding: IC Interview With Ambassador Lukin
September 25, 1997

Would the West’s Billions Pay Off?
Los Angeles Times
By Grigory Yavlinsky and Graham Allison
June 3, 1991

Run-off against Putin would be ‘success’, say opposition

EUobserver, By ERIC MAURICE, AMSTERDAM, 7. DEC
As Vladimir Putin announced on Wednesday (6 December) that he will run again for president of Russia next year, the liberal opposition hopes to force him into a run-off, and trigger demands for more democracy.
“It would be very important to achieve a second round,” Emilia Slabunova, the chair of the Yabloko party, said in an interview.

“This is our goal, even if it is a very difficult thing to do in such a situation,” she said, adding that getting “as much votes as possible” would help the opposition “influence other developments”.
She said that if Yabloko’s candidate, the party’s founder Grigori Yavlinski, obtained 10 million votes in the first round, it would be “a success”.

It is the third time that Yavlinski is a candidate, after running against Boris Yeltsin in 1996 – he obtained 7.3 percent of the votes – and Putin in 2000 – getting 5.8 percent.

In the last presidential election, in 2012, over 109 million voters were registered.

Slabunova, who is a member of the parliament in Karelia, a region close to the border with Finland, spoke to EUobserver at the congress of the European liberal Alde party in Amsterdam, three days before Putin officially said he would be candidate for a fourth term.

She said that the election, which be held in March, was crucial for the political evolution of Russia.

She argued that the system put in place by Putin “cannot be reformed” and that political and economic reforms can happen “only by changing the government by elections”.

“A change of power through a democratic process is very important for us,” she said.

For now, she said, Russia is “in a deadlock”.

“The general situation is quite hard because we are experiencing a systemic crisis, which is a social, cultural, economic and managerial crisis,” she explained. “It is an anthropological crisis.”

‘A sauce of fake democracy’

She pointed out that after 18 years of Putin in power, the “sole principle” on which Russian institutions are based is “whether you are loyal or not” to the leader.

“Institutions don’t work,” she noted. “There is no division of power.”

“Law is enforced only to safeguard the regime, courts are not independent and elections have ceased to be real elections,” she said. “All this is cooked in a sauce of fake democracy.”

“We should stress there is a quite significant part of the population that is asking for change,” Slabunova said, however.

She pointed out that Putin has started to “talk about reforms” because “the demand for change has become more visible”.

But she insisted that to change the system, the political elites who run it would have to “change their rules and their values. And so far, Putin and the elites are “interested only in safeguarding their power.”

“Politics has killed our economy,” she said.

“Many people say that we need economic reforms, we say we won’t be able to do them unless we solve our political problems,” she argued.

“There should be other people in government, with absolutely other values and different goals,” she insisted.

Mobilising the ‘sofa party’

The Yabloko chair criticised Alexei Navalny, a blogger and anti-corruption activist who is running an election campaign but might be prevented from being a candidate because of previous convictions for organising meetings.

“He is working for his political perspective,” she said.

She noted that another potential candidate against Putin, Ksenia Sobchak, “is obviously not an independent person.”

She said that by pushing Sobchak, a 36-year old TV personality who is the daughter of Anatoly Sobchak, one of Putin’s political mentors, the Kremlin was “testing voters attitudes.”

“The presidential administration is trying to distract attention from Navalny, and to mobilise what we call the ‘sofa party’ – voters who usually abstain from voting because they say that their vote will change nothing,” she pointed out.

Asked whether the EU was doing enough to help democratic forces in Russia, Slabunova said that EU sanctions were actually “benefiting” Putin’s government.

“The EU thought that sanctions would help democratisation, but we can’t say that,” she noted.

She explained that the sanctions, and moreover Putins’s sanctions on EU agriculture products, “made the situation much worse for the people but did not change the behaviour of our politicians.”

“They have switched to mobilising mechanism: they have mobilised the population to be behind the government against international foes,” she said.

The Putin opponent argued that “the greatest help” the EU could bring to Russian democratic forces was to “strengthen democratic institutions in the EU”.

A stone on Russia’s feet

“The success of European democracies would be a very good model for Russian citizens, who can be inspired, and it would be a great obstacles for populists,” she said.

Slabunova also insisted that Europe should not antagonise Russia itself, which she insisted is different from the Putin regime.

“The EU will survive in the global economic competition against all other actors, such as the US and south-east Asia ‘tigers’ only together with Russia,” she said.

She insisted that “despite the strange actions of our present political regime we have to think ahead because Russia has always been and will always be a European country.”

She asked the EU not to let Russia follow Putin’s ‘special way’.

“There is no special way, there is a European road of development,” she insisted.

Looking at the March election, she noted that “if we have Putin for another term, we can hardly speak about any optimism”.

“He is a stone on the feet of the Russian nation. And having Russia in such a situation will affect Europe too.”

Source https://euobserver.com/foreign/140186