A personal initiative of Vladimir Putin himself, the movement now claims to have over 13 million members, having absorbed almost every previous youth project in the country. The “new Pioneers”, as many ominously call them, fill social media with choreographed dances, motivational slogans and patriotic soundtracks. Yet when you scroll through TikTok, it quickly becomes clear that most teens join not for ideology but for perks — free travel, school credits, trendy merch, or simply a break from class.
In one viral clip, two girls in white movement t-shirts dance to a pop song by the little-known artist Stas More. Behind them, the peach-coloured plaster walls and fluorescent strip lighting are redolent of a typical youth centre somewhere deep in the Russian provinces.
The video’s star, Kristina from the western Russian city of Belgorod, says a local youth worker asked her to film it. At the time she wasn’t part of the movement — but the clip hit a million views. “It was such joy when it blew up!” she laughs. “They praised us, showed our video as an example to other teams.”
Soon after, Kristina joined the Movement of the First, which has built a strong presence on TikTok, where members post near-identical dances and self-descriptions of their “active civic position”. The comments sections are as divisive as you might expect, with some users cheering them on, while others mock them for being “zombies”, “Putin’s pioneers” or “the Movement of the Last”.
“I love sport, choreography, filming videos — it’s fun … I just enjoy it,” Kristina says, remaining diplomatic about some of the online blowback. “There are a lot of angry people,” she says. “Maybe they had a bad experience or fought with someone in their team. We just ignore that.”