Come to the polling stations on 20 September, exactly at noon. Make your choice consciously — against fear, war and silence.
On 20 September 2026, elections to the State Duma will be held. Many are sure their vote changes nothing. That is exactly what they count on — our fatigue and our silence.
“Our Voice 2026” is a call to show up and be seen. One by one, we are easy to ignore and easy to rewrite. Together we are a majority that cannot be erased unnoticed. One day, one simple step, available to everyone and fully within the law.
Defeating the machine of falsification at honest elections is almost impossible today. But doing nothing is not an option.
On 20 September 2026 the authorities will again try to draw themselves an obedient State Duma. It is hard to call this a real election. And yet, amid war and mounting repression, it is the last legal day when we can leave home, reach a polling station and be seen.
Stories about a monolithic majority that supports everything are a propaganda myth. Under today's pressure, honest opinion polls are impossible, and the published figures only serve those in power.
We are not a handful. We are millions. And we want a different country.
We put forward a simple proposal: to make noon on election day the largest legal act of participation in years. To come to your polling station at exactly 12:00 and vote against United Russia — for any other party. The main thing is to show up and not leave your ballot blank.
Photos and videos of the noon queues at polling stations will say more than a thousand words. At that noon, we and the whole world will see the truth — and the illusion of universal support will vanish without a trace.
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To understand why to vote, it's worth taking an honest look at the country where these elections take place.
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Talk about the election with family, friends and neighbours. Share the date — 20 September — and invite them to come along.
Come to your polling station on 20 September at 12:00 local time.
Act only within the law. Don't bring prohibited symbols and avoid conflicts with the police.
Back any candidate or party other than United Russia. The main thing is that the ballot isn't left blank.
Become an observer, photograph the protocols and record any violations.
Stand by the polling station, talk with other voters and get to know them.
Stay as long as you like. Meet other voters, talk, exchange contacts and discuss the next steps.
Nine reasons to believe that one simple step — coming to your polling station at noon — really changes the picture.
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20 September is almost here. It is the last day of what is called the State Duma elections. And it could become the day of our shared answer.
The “Noon Against Putin” campaign became possible not because all its participants imagined Russia's future the same way. It worked because people with different beliefs, life experiences and political views took the same action at the same time for a common goal. Thousands saw for the first time that they were not alone, and felt part of a shared resistance.
Then as now, the authorities' task stays the same — to present fear, pressure and the absence of real choice as the voluntary support of the majority, to create an illusion of total unity. Yet over the past two years circumstances have shifted against them. More and more people long for peace and are tired of war, loss and a sense of hopelessness. So passing the continuation of war off as the single will of the whole society grows ever harder.
There is no universal solution: consolidation cannot be the work of one person or one organisation. My proposal stays simple — to unite around a common action on 20 September. Not to stop at words, but to take a step together. Perhaps, as before, the ballot will offer no real choice. But that does not remove the need to seek what can bring people together. Right now the main thing is to manage to consolidate.
Autumn 2026 is a perfect storm. A moment like this must not be wasted.
If on election day the real ballot boxes show a result that has to be rewritten not only in the capital but across the country; if the ruling party can't even fake a formal majority in a system built for itself — this becomes the ground for a new, open conversation between society and the authorities.
The difference from the last decade is enormous. Back then there was more money than the authorities could spend, no drawn-out war, no queues at petrol stations, no daily alarms, no budget on the brink. Stability seemed more attractive than change. Today there's nothing to offer in return — there is no stability left.
If the election passes quietly for those in charge, they will decide they can do anything. But there is a moment when the system can be made to feel it stands over an abyss. When all the trends will line up like this again — no one knows. That moment is now.
Everything we call for is legal. You don't join any movement and don't organise a rally. You simply come to vote.
Everything you call for is legal. Even if some slogan is deemed undesirable, it can always be shortened to something brief and neutral — and that's enough.
You came to vote at a time convenient for you, cast your ballot, and you may calmly stay near the polling station — all of it is legal. There's no grounds to expel or detain you.
There aren't enough police vans to bring to every polling station in the country. They can't ban you from coming, nor from talking while standing near a polling station.
Don't call it a rally. Just say: “I always vote at noon — I'll go on 20 September too, to vote for my country's future.”
Remember you're acting within the law. You can vote at any convenient time and invite others to come along.
Call only for what's legal. Standing by a polling station, voting, talking — all legal. Placards and chanting slogans — not.
Avoid conflict. If asked for your passport, show it — otherwise you may be detained and identified anyway.
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20 September 2026 · your polling station · local time
The aim is to show the authorities, the elites, the security forces, the whole world — but first of all ourselves — that the emperor has no clothes! There are more of us, and we are stronger, than it seems. We can shatter the illusion of nationwide support for the regime, overcome despair, and find hope and strength for further resistance.