Abramovich was the first person to recommend to Yeltsin that
Vladimir Putin be his successor as the Russian president.
[51]: 135 When Putin formed his first cabinet as Prime Minister in 1999, Abramovich interviewed each of the candidates for cabinet positions before they were approved.
[34]: 102 Subsequently, Abramovich would remain one of Putin's closest confidants. In 2007, Putin consulted in meetings with Abramovich on the question of who should be his successor as president; Medvedev was personally recommended by Abramovich.
[51]: 135, 271
Chris Hutchins, a biographer of Putin, described the relationship between the Russian president and Abramovich as like that between a father and a favourite son. Abramovich has said that when he addresses Putin he uses the Russian language's formal "вы" (like Spanish "usted" or German "Sie"), as opposed to the informal "ты" (like Spanish "tú" or German "du"). Abramovich says that the reason is 'he is more senior than me'.
[52] Within the Kremlin, Abramovich is referred to as "Mr A".
[53]
In September 2012, the England and Wales
High Court judge Elizabeth Gloster claimed that Abramovich's influence on Putin was limited: "There was no evidential basis supporting the contention that Mr Abramovich was in a position to manipulate, or otherwise influence, President Putin, or officers in his administration, to exercise their powers in such a way as to enable Mr Abramovich to achieve his own commercial goals."
[54]
Gloster oversaw the case between Russian oligarchs
Boris Berezovsky and Abramovich. She found Berezovsky to be "an inherently unreliable witness" and sided with Abramovich in 2012. It later emerged that Gloster's stepson had been paid almost £500,000 to represent Abramovich as a barrister early in the case. Her stepson's involvement was alleged to be more than had been disclosed. Berezovsky stated, "Sometimes I have the impression that
Putin himself wrote this judgment". Gloster declined to comment.
[55][56][57]
U.S. media reports that the U.S. intelligence community believes Abramovich is a "bag carrier", a financial
middleman, for Putin.
[58]
Abramovich is one of many Russian "oligarchs" named in the
Countering America's Adversaries Through Sanctions Act, CAATSA, signed into law by President
Donald Trump in 2017.
[59] He is one of the
Navalny 35.
[60