• Russia is considering fines for those promoting a child-free lifestyle, according to a Putin ally.
  • He said the proposed law would target media and online content that encourages not having children.
  • Russia faces a demographic crisis with a 25-year low birth rate, worsened by the Ukraine war.

Russia’s parliament is working on a new law that would fine people the equivalent of thousands of dollars for promoting a child-free lifestyle, according to a close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Vyacheslav Volodin, the chairman of the State Duma, Russia’s lower house, said on Telegram that Russian legislators have begun to consider legislation that would outlaw “childlessness” propaganda.

The proposed law would ban the dissemination of material on the internet, in movies, and in advertising that encourages “a conscious refusal to have children,” Volodin said.

It would also impose fines of up to 400,000 rubles ($4,319) for individuals found guilty of sharing such content, 800,000 rubles ($8,639) for state officials who do so, and up to 5 million rubles ($53,995) for companies that proliferate it.

Volodin said the fines would be similar to those in place for a Russian anti-LGBTQ+ law, passed in 2022, which criminalized the promotion of what Russia considers “non-traditional sexual relations.”

He accused the so-called “child-free movement” of undermining the institution of family, which may be contributing to Russia’s low birth rate.

Russia has been in a demographic crisis for years, and the war in Ukraine has made the situation worse. Russia’s birth rate hit a 25-year low in the first half of 2024.

In an effort to combat this, Russia has tried a variety of incentives to boost the number of babies being born, including one-off payments for Russian mothers who have 10 or more children.

“A friendly and large family is the basis of a strong state,” Volodin said in his Telegram post.

According to a translation by Reuters, he also said: “Groups and communities on social networks often show disrespect for motherhood and fatherhood and aggression towards pregnant women and children, as well as members of large families.”

Earlier this month, Nina Ostanina, the head of Russia’s Committee for the Protection of Families, told RIA, a state news agency, that Russia needed to conduct another operation to counter falling birth rates.

She likened it to the war in Ukraine, saying: “Just like a special military operation — a special demographic operation.”

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