Putin opponent finds no room at the inn on Russian campaign trail

(Repeats Tuesday item)

* Polls show Navalny would lose heavily to Putin

* Yet the opposition contender draws crowds

* Venue owner "advised" not to rent space to Navalny

* Tula city, regional governments deny exerting pressure

By Svetlana Reiter

TULA, Russia, May 30 (Reuters) - When aides to Russian opposition politician Alexei Navalny tried 28 venues to book a campaign meeting, the answer from all 28 was no. For a contender who apparently has no chance of winning the presidency next year, someone seems determined to block his way.

Kremlin officials dismiss him as a no-hoper, and opinion polls show that even if Navalny succeeds in contesting the 2018 election, he would lose heavily to President Vladimir Putin.

Yet Navalny is a threat to the Kremlin's tight grip on Russian political life because he can gather a crowd.

Navalny is pushing on with a tour of the Russian regions, stopping last weekend in the provincial city of Tula, but campaign staff say they found it impossible to rent a hall anywhere there to let him meet his supporters.

Meeting indoors is vital as an open-air rally would be considered an illegal demonstration, unless local authorities granted prior permission. That is something they routinely decline.

In Tula, the owner of one venue decided to turn down the booking after "calls started coming in from the (city) administration and they advised me not to rent out the venue for Navalny's meeting".

The owner, who spoke to Reuters on condition of anonymity for fear of repercussions, said the phone calls had been heeded because the venue "did not want any unpleasantness".

A representative of the Tula city administration denied it tried to impede Navalny's visit. "The administration did not call anyone planning to rent out premises for a meeting with Alexei Navalny," the representative told Reuters. "The city administration did not dissuade anyone from doing anything."

The governor of the wider Tula region is Alexei Dyumin, a former member of Putin's security detail who was elected to the post in September last year.

In a statement, the Tula regional government said the venues decided for themselves how their spaces would be used, and that staff in the regional administration had not contacted them or given them any recommendations about how to let their premises.

BECALMED POLITICS

Navalny has disrupted Russia's previously becalmed politics, where for years Putin has been so dominant that few rivals bothered to mount a challenge in earnest.

He has not been registered as a candidate in next year's presidential election, and may be barred because of a conviction for embezzlement that he said was politically-motivated. He is largely ignored by mainstream television stations, which are controlled by the state.