And hopefully a condemnation of the action to create this whole thing in the first place.
I'm wondering another thing. We know what you're facing and the difficulties of operating in the official election sphere in Russia. There is a question, I suppose, of where you go from here in terms of the campaign to bring about change inside the Russian Federation.
I'm wondering how you capture the spirit of the people inside Russia, who are seeking.... They don't like authoritarianism any more than anybody else does, but after the failure of the Soviet Union, for example, the situation did not lead to a widespread increase in people's standard of living or their ability to operate within a non-authoritarian regime. We have Mr. Putin offering this still, and we wonder whether people can be expected to believe that things might change under a different regime.
I'm wondering, then, when your campaign.... I'm looking at something that's published by Radio Free Europe about the creation of a new political party in 2018, which may have been the last time a new party was created. This is the Russia of the Future party, created in May 2019 by your organization, which talks about real changes and real reforms.
I would call these “generalizations”, to some extent, not creating, it seems to me, a vision for a new Russia or a new Russian federation with the kind of prosperity that might come to elevate people's standard of living. I wonder, do you have the kind of vision that attracts people? We see reports of opinion polls by Levada-Center—I don't know whether you believe those polls or not—showing that they don't seem to be totally pro-Putin but don't seem to be recognizing that your movement is as strong as we might want to see it or you might want to see it.