#19 - JRL 2007-246 - JRL Home
Moscow Times
November 29, 2007
Nashi Spinoff Operating Exit Polls
By David Nowak
Staff Writer
Up to 20,000 activists from Nashi Vybory, a spinoff from the pro-Kremlin
youth movement Nashi, will conduct exit polls nationwide during Sunday's State
Duma vote.
"Dec. 2 is a test both for us and for the youth of Russia," Olesya Pelageina,
the group's spokeswoman, said Wednesday, explaining that Nashi Vybory had been
out trying to encourage young people to vote since June.
Two other bodies will be polling voters Sunday: the state-run All-Russia
Center for Public Opinion Monitoring, or VTsIOM, and the Public Opinion
Foundation, or FOM, which also has strong ties to the state.
Nashi Vybory, or "Our Elections," cooperates with one party -- United Russia
-- and supports the course of President Vladimir Putin, yet remains completely
independent, Pelageina said.
It is an independent entity from Nashi, she said.
Because Nashi is a volunteer movement, carrying out the polling will not
require any funding, Pelageina said.
She added that local authorities were providing rooms in municipal buildings
as operational centers for the polling activities free of charge.
As for the training and know-how to sample the voting accurately, experienced
public opinion analysts will be on hand to check the results of the exit polls,
Pelageina said.
Three activists will be on hand for Sunday's vote at each of more than 1,200
polling stations in 53 regions. The rest will provide "operational support" at
regional headquarters, she said.
VTsIOM, which is working for Channel One television and has the largest
financial and organizational resources of the three pollsters, will send two or
three interviewers to each of 1,200 polling stations in 57 regions, according to
information on its web site.
It hopes to have managed to talk to 120,000 voters after they have cast their
ballots by Sunday evening and will hand preliminary results to the television
channel, which will announce them after 9 p.m.
FOM, classified as a noncommercial organization, will poll around 80,000
voters, said Veronika Perevezentseva, its spokeswoman.
The independent Levada Center, as usual, will not be at the polls because it
does not have the "huge resources" required, said Oleg Savelev, its spokesman.
"Its too complex and expensive a process," Savelev said. "It requires
expenditures somewhere in the millions of dollars, not rubles."
Asked about Nashi Vybory's plans, he labeled the exercise "a big show."
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