Russian
blogger’s fierce critique of Kremlin goes viral: ‘People are afraid of you’
Victoria
Bonya says authorities too scared to raise issues with Vladimir Putin, whose
approval ratings are declining
Pjotr
Sauer
Sat 18
Apr 2026 09.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/apr/18/russian-blogger-fierce-kremlin-critique-goes-viral
The
Kremlin is grappling with the fallout from the viral spread of a celebrity
blogger’s criticism of Russian authorities, as Vladimir Putin’s approval
ratings register their sixth consecutive weekly decline.
Victoria
Bonya, a household name in Russia who rose to fame in 2006 on Dom-2, the
country’s answer to the reality TV show Big Brother, posted a video on Monday
warning the Russian president that a string of mounting problems risked
spiralling out of control.
“The
people are afraid of you, artists are afraid, governors are afraid,” she said,
in the 18-minute video on Instagram, which has garnered 26m views and more than
1.3m likes in the past four days.
She
rattled off a list of issues she said no regional governor would dare raise
with Putin directly: flooding in Dagestan, oil pollution along the Black Sea
coast, livestock culls in Siberia, internet blackouts and a squeeze on small
businesses from rising prices and taxes.
“You know
what the risk is?” asked Bonya, who lives outside Russia. “That people will
stop being afraid, and they’re being squeezed into a coiled spring, and that one day that
coiled spring will shoot out.”
Moscow on
Thursday took the unusual step of publicly acknowledging the sharp
criticism, saying work was under way to address problems identified by Bonya.
The
influencer’s comments notably stopped short of directly targeting Putin himself
or the war in Ukraine, prompting speculation that the intervention may have
been coordinated with Moscow to signal that public grievances are being heard
before parliamentary elections later this year.
The
approach fits a familiar Kremlin playbook: casting Putin as the “good tsar”
kept in the dark by errant officials. The narrative has helped the president
deflect blame for the country’s problems on to subordinates, preserving his
personal standing even as discontent grows.
Political
analysts, however, said the outburst was unlikely to have been coordinated, but
rather reflected a spontaneous reaction to simmering discontent across the
country.
“War
fatigue is really starting to set in,” said Andrei Kolesnikov, a Moscow-based
political scientist and author of a recent book on Putin’s ideology. “It is
beginning to click in people’s minds that everything that is happening is a
consequence of the war.”
Kolesnikov
added that it had become increasingly difficult for the authorities to explain
away the war’s impact on everyday life, from the economic slowdown to
tightening internet restrictions.
Abbas
Gallyamov, an exiled former Putin adviser, said public appeals from Russian
celebrities such as Bonya could lead to further discontent among society.
“Bonya is bringing a fundamentally new audience into the opposition camp that
wasn’t there before,” he said.
“Their
dissatisfaction is also growing, there are problems with the internet, prices
in stores are rising, the war is getting on their nerves. The state is
intruding into their private lives,” he said.
Putin’s
approval and trust ratings have slipped to their lowest levels since the
February 2022 invasion of Ukraine, according to a string of recent opinion
polls from state and independent organisations.
At a
meeting with top officials on Wednesday, the president tacitly acknowledged
strains in the economy, pressing the government and the central bank to explain
why performance has fallen short of expectations this year.
Putin is
also facing simmering anger from the hawkish community of pro-war bloggers,
some of whom embed with frontline units, who have grown increasingly frustrated
with Moscow’s slow progress on the battlefield and mounting losses.
Andrey
Filatov, a reporter for Russia Today, wrote this week: “Actual losses are
either concealed entirely or spread out over time, creating the impression at
the top that the situation is not so critical. As a result, the army is not
adapting.”

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