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Parliamentary elections in Estonia: Prime Minister Kallas' Reform Party is in the lead

2023-03-05T22:42:03.426Z


Estonia has elected a new parliament. According to preliminary figures, a victory for Prime Minister Kaja Kallas' reform party is on the horizon. The right-wing extremist EKRE party received the second most votes.


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Cast her vote for the parliamentary elections digitally: Estonia's Prime Minister Kaja Kallas

Photo: Pavel Golovkin / dpa

After counting the majority of votes in the parliamentary elections in Estonia, Prime Minister Kaja Kallas' Reform Party is ahead.

After evaluating the votes cast electronically and the paper ballots in almost all constituencies, the economically liberal force came to 31.8 percent.

Behind them are two opposition forces, according to data from the election commission in Tallinn on Sunday evening: the right-wing populist Estonian Conservative People's Party (EKRE) with 15.8 percent, ahead of the left-wing Center Party with 14.5 percent.

Liberal Party Estonia 200 in parliament for the first time

The biggest winner is the liberal Estonia 200 party, which, according to the counting results so far, is moving into parliament in Tallinn for the first time with 13.6 percent.

Kallas' two smaller coalition partners follow in the next places: the Social Democrats (9.4 percent) and the conservative party Isamaa (8.3 percent).

With the evaluation of the remaining votes, the balance of power should shift slightly.

If the result is confirmed and Kallas manages to form a coalition, it would consolidate the pro-European course of the Baltic country and its neighbor Russia.

The focus of the election campaign was Russia's war of aggression against Ukraine and its impact on national security and socio-political issues.

A special feature of the election was the possibility of voting via the Internet, which Estonia was the first country in Europe to introduce.

More than a third of all those entitled to vote took part in the so-called »e-voting«.

Overall, more than half of all votes cast were cast digitally - both a record.

101 seats in Parliament

A good 966,000 eligible voters were called upon to determine the 101 seats in Parliament in Tallinn.

Nine parties and ten independent candidates ran for the ninth election since Estonia regained independence from the Soviet Union in 1991.

Voter turnout was 63.7 percent, according to preliminary information.

With Kallas at the helm, Estonia would remain on course to use more green energy and continue to take in people fleeing the war in Ukraine.

Kallas became prime minister in 2021 and has emerged as one of Ukraine's staunchest supporters in Europe.

She is seeking a second term.

Her reputation was boosted by her international calls for sanctions to be imposed on Moscow.

jpa/Reuters/AP

Source: spiegel

All news articles on 2023-03-05

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