Author and journalist at the place of
assassination of Boris Nemtsov in Moscow on 27 February 2021. Kara-Murza became a journalist at the age of 16. He worked as London correspondent for a succession of Russian media outlets, including
Novye Izvestia from 1997 to 2000, from September 2000 to June 2003, and the radio station
Ekho Moskvy from September 2001 to June 2003. Kara-Murza then briefly became foreign affairs correspondent of
Kommersant (July 2003 to April 2004) and Washington correspondent for the
BBC (December 2004 to December 2005). In 2002, he was editor-in-chief of the London-based financial publication
Russian Investment Review. In April 2004 he took over as the
Washington bureau chief of the
RTVi television network, a post he held for the next nine years. On 1 September 2012 he was dismissed from this job.
Documentarian In 2005, Kara-Murza produced a four-part TV documentary,
They Chose Freedom, dedicated to the history of the Soviet dissident movement. The documentary was based on interviews with Russian dissidents, including
Vladimir Bukovsky,
Elena Bonner and
Sergei Kovalev. It was first aired in October 2005. The documentary has since been screened at various locations in Europe and North America, with subtitles added in English. On 24 March 2014, Kara-Murza,
Anne Applebaum, and Vladimir Bukovsky took part in a discussion following a London screening of the film.
Author In 2011, Kara-Murza published his first book,
Reform or Revolution: The Quest for Responsible Government in the First Russian State Duma (in Russian only), which recounts the unsuccessful attempt by the Cadets or
Constitutional Democratic Party to form a government during the brief existence of the first Russian Parliament or Duma from April to July 1906. Based on the original 1906 parliamentary record and contemporary newspaper reports, as well as memoirs by participants of the events, the book was launched in both Moscow and
Saint Petersburg. As a result of this and other acts, Kara-Murza urged the
Council of Europe not to restore Russia's voting rights, suspended since the
annexation of Crimea. Kremlin SWAT teams, he wrote in December 2014, were breaking up opposition meetings. Putin's word was therefore "void of value", wrote Kara-Murza, citing as evidence the false statements made by the Russian President and his broken promises. Putin soft-pedaled his response to the opposition during the
Sochi Olympics, Kara-Murza wrote in an op-ed for
The Wall Street Journal, published on 26 February 2014. Now that the international event was over, the Russian president was rapidly returning to his former oppressive behaviour. Only hours after the closing ceremony in
Sochi, a Moscow court handed prison sentences to seven of the May 2012
Bolotnaya Square protestors. Pressure was brought to bear not only within Russia. Russia's nationwide TV had been broadcasting "hate-filled appeals to crush the protesters in Kiev" for several weeks early in 2014, noted Kara-Murza. For Putin, he explained, "maintaining the status quo in Ukraine was not primarily about preserving a post-Soviet sphere of influence or recreating a Moscow-led empire". The Russian president feared that "a democratic, pro-European Ukraine" would set "a 'dangerous' precedent for Russia" and that it would be "only a matter of time" before Russian citizens began to demand similar levels of political and economic freedom.
Russian politics From 1999 to 2001, Kara-Murza was a member of the
Democratic Choice of Russia party; from 2001 to 2008 he was a member of the
Union of Right Forces. Between 2000 and 2003 he served as an advisor to
State Duma opposition leader
Boris Nemtsov. He has been in
opposition to Vladimir Putin since 2000, backing liberal candidate
Grigory Yavlinsky in the
2000 presidential election. Kara-Murza was a candidate for election to the Russian parliament, or State Duma, in the
2003 parliamentary election, running in Moscow's Chertanovsky district. His candidacy was endorsed jointly by the Union of Right Forces and
Yabloko. During the campaign, various underhanded methods were used against Kara-Murza. The candidate from the
United Russia ruling party
Vladimir Gruzdev attempted to have him removed from the ballot; the lighting on Kara-Murza's campaign billboards and the sound during his televised debates were turned off; and unlawful
carousel voting was discovered on election day. British journalist Andrew Jack named the Chertanovsky district in south Moscow as a case of electoral manipulation in Russia's 2003 vote in his book ''Inside Putin's Russia''. According to the official results, Gruzdev received 149,069 votes (53.8%); Kara-Murza, 23,800 votes (8.6%); and
Communist Party candidate Sergei Seregin, 18,992 votes (6.9%). In January 2004, he co-founded the
Committee 2008, an umbrella opposition group led by Boris Nemtsov and
Garry Kasparov. In May 2007, Kara-Murza nominated the veteran human rights activist and writer
Vladimir Bukovsky as a democratic opposition candidate for the Russian presidency in the
2008 election. "The opposition needs a candidate for president – strong, uncompromising, decisive, with irreproachable political and, more importantly, moral authority," read the statement written by Kara-Murza on behalf of Bukovsky's campaign committee. "Russia needs its own Vaclav Havel, not a new successor from [the KGB]." From May to December 2007, Kara-Murza chaired Bukovsky's campaign committee, which included, among others, Academician
Yuri Ryzhov, writer and satirist
Victor Shenderovich, columnist
Andrei Piontkovsky, lawyer
Yuri Schmidt, human rights activist
Alexander Podrabinek, and political analyst
Vladimir Pribylovsky. In October 2007, Kara-Murza was one of organisers of the "Rally of Free People" held on Moscow's Triumfalnaya Square in support of Bukovsky's presidential nomination. On 16 December 2007, Bukovsky was duly nominated as a presidential candidate by 823 members of a voters' assembly in Moscow (the law required at least 500 people to support such a nomination). At the same meeting, Kara-Murza was elected as Bukovsky's plenipotentiary representative to Russia's Central Electoral Commission. On 22 December 2007 the Commission refused to register Bukovsky as a candidate for the presidency, thereby denying Bukovsky access to the ballot. At the founding convention of
Solidarnost, Russia's united democratic movement, in December 2008, Kara-Murza was elected to the movement's federal council, placing second out of 77 candidates, behind Nemtsov. He was re-elected to the Solidarnost council in 2010 and 2013. In 2012, he took part in the
street protests in Moscow against Putin's rule, the largest pro-democracy demonstrations in Russia since 1991. In June 2012, Kara-Murza was elected to the federal council of the
Republican Party of Russia – People's Freedom Party, co-chaired by Boris Nemtsov,
Mikhail Kasyanov, and
Vladimir Ryzhkov. In October 2012, he was elected to the
Coordinating Council of the Russian Opposition, placing 21st out of 169 candidates and receiving 20,845 votes.
Institute of Modern Russia Soon after, on 1 November 2012, Kara-Murza was hired by the Institute of Modern Russia as the organisation's senior policy advisor. "It is an honor for me to join this distinguished institute and contribute to its mission of keeping the spotlight on the situation in Russia and advocating for democracy, human rights, and the rule of law", said Kara-Murza, "These values should remain at the forefront of international relations." In February 2013, he took part in panel discussions about Russia's future at
The Heritage Foundation. In October 2013, with Pavel Khodorkovsky, son of the former entrepreneur and philanthropist
Mikhail Khodorkovsky and others, he participated in a similar discussion hosted by the
National Endowment for Democracy.
Open Russia Kara-Murza is a coordinator of the
Open Russia Foundation, founded by Mikhail Khodorkovsky. The organisation was created with the goal of promoting civil society and democracy in Russia, while revoking Putin's grip on power. Launched in 2014, Open Russia has been instrumental in educating Russian citizens on western democracy, whilst bringing opposition groups and activists in contact with support from the west. Kara-Murza is deputy chairman and heads Open elections project designed to promote free and fair elections in Russia; a task he has noted is exceedingly difficult given the government's ability to silence opposition and manipulate elections. He also frequently addresses international stages to promote further cooperation and discussion among nations.
Funeral pallbearer for John McCain In April 2018, United States Senator
John McCain sent Kara-Murza a message revealing that McCain had been diagnosed with brain cancer and requesting that Kara-Murza, who had worked with McCain on issues relating to Russia since 2010, serve as a pallbearer at the senator's eventual funeral. Kara-Murza later said that he was "speechless", "heartbroken", and "close to tears", and that doing so would be "the most heartbreaking honor that anyone could think of". McCain died on 25 August; Kara-Murza joined fourteen others chosen by McCain himself, including then-former Vice President
Joe Biden and actor
Warren Beatty, as a pallbearer at McCain's funeral at the
Washington National Cathedral on 1 September. McCain's choice of Kara-Murza was described by
Politico as a "final dig" at Putin, of whom McCain was a vocal critic, and at U.S. President
Donald Trump, for his apparent closeness to the Russian president. ==Magnitsky Act==