March 4, 2019
The opposition centre-right Reform party has won Estonia’s general election, beating the ruling Centre.
Reform, led by former MEP Kaja Kallas, took about 29% of the vote to 23% for Centre in Sunday’s ballot.
Meanwhile the far-right Conservative People’s Party of Estonia (EKRE), which has called for a referendum on EU membership, came a close third.
Ms Kallas – set to be Estonia’s first female prime minister – said all coalition options were on the table.
Speaking to public broadcaster ETV however she insisted EKRE were “not a choice for us”.
Nearly a quarter of Estonia’s 881,000 eligible voters cast their ballots by e-voting. Results from e-voting gave Reform an even higher score.
Estonia uses proportional representation to pick members in its 101-seat parliament.
What were the results?
The decisive result came despite opinion polls suggesting in advance that the vote would be tight.
Reform and Centre have alternated in power since the Estonia’s independence from the Soviet Union in 1991.
But the eurosceptic EKRE saw its popularity surge, more than doubling its previous election results and garnering about 18% of the vote.
During campaigning the party pushed anti-immigration rhetoric and promised to slash taxes.
The two main parties support continued austerity policies, which have left Estonia with the lowest debt level of any Eurozone country but have caused anger in rural communities who feel left behind.
The conservative Isamaa party and the Social Democrats – currently in the governing coalition with the Centre party – won 11.4% and 9.8% respectively, and could partner with either of the main parties.
Centre and Reform have governed in coalition in the past. Ms Kallas did not rule this out again but said her party has “strong differences” with Centre over tax, education and citizenship.
PM Juri Ratas told ETV that Centre would consider being the junior coalition partner, but did not give details.
What were the main issues?
Reform and Centre campaigned on tax changes, the former to help job creation and the latter to boost state revenues.
Estonia’s Russian minority, who make up a quarter of the population, were also a key issue in the campaign.
The Centre party wants to maintain the joint Estonian- and Russian-language school system – something both Reform and EKRE plan to abolish.
Both Centre and Reform strongly back EU and Nato membership.