Finally in the top-10
According to the Levada Centre’s survey, in May, Yevgeny Prigozhin made it to the top-10 ranking of most trusted Russian politicians for the first time. Four percent of the respondents said they trusted the head of PMC Wagner. This number rose by 3% in one month.
After proclaiming to have captured the Ukrainian city of Bakhmut, Prigozhin immediately went on tour of Russian big cities. In a few days, he managed to come to Yekaterinburg, Vladivostok, Novosibirsk, and Nizhny Novgorod. Everywhere, his visits were spontaneous and ended with hours-long meet-ups with journalists. “I wanted to travel around, speak [to people], hear [their] opinions, and make a decision on how to share information so that the public doesn’t become discouraged,” said Prigozhin in one of the interviews. “We captured Bakhmut — I have three free days.”
The leader of Wagner’s mercenaries talked about the fate of Russia, how the war is going, and possible scenarios of what comes next. He also presented his new project Second Front, whose goal is to provide ideological and information support not so much to PMC Wagner as to its owner personally.
In his speeches, Prigozhin spoke about the need for another mobilisation wave, to recruit one, or better two, million new soldiers. He praised Stalin and proposed going back to capital punishment. At least for the military and law enforcement. Furthermore, the Wagner leader said that the war would go on for many years to come, which would lead to Russia ending up in total isolation, just like North Korea.
The Second Front project, according to Prigozhin, is a “media community which will share accurate information about the state of the special military operation, how things really are”. The organisation is supposed to rally the people and make them “realise the actual threat level”.