In late September, the Russian government submitted a draft budget for 2025â2027 to the State Duma for approval. The plan calls for a record-setting 41 percent of federal spending to go to national security and defense, leaving little doubt that the war in Ukraine is the Kremlinâs top priority. With many citizens struggling economically amid ongoing inflation and labor shortages, however, the Putin administration fears that news of a military spending boost will hurt the authoritiesâ approval ratings â and has instructed the pro-Kremlin media to cover the budget accordingly, Meduzaâs sources say.
The Putin administration is worried the governmentâs new budget will âcreate a negative perception among citizensâ and could lead to a decline in the governmentâs approval ratings, two sources close to the presidentâs political team told Meduza.
Immediately after Bloomberg published an article on the planned defense spending increase on September 23, the Putin administration sent instructions to Russiaâs state-backed and pro-Kremlin media telling them to ignore the report, the sources said. Two sources from these media outlets confirmed this to Meduza; one said that officials told reporters ânot to touch this topicâ because âthe budget hasnât been passed yet.â
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According to another source close to the presidentâs team, the Kremlin wants media coverage of the budget to inspire âsocial optimism, not pessimism, in the context that everything is going towards the war.â The source continued: âThe messaging around the special military operationâs goals is still unclear. So far, itâs been possible to portray military activity as happening somewhere far away and not affecting people directly. But the increase in military spending could become a trigger: What is the money being spent on and why?â
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