Conservative People's Party of Estonia

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

Conservative People's Party of Estonia
Eesti Konservatiivne Rahvaerakond
Chairman Mart Helme
Founded 24 March 2012
Preceded by People's Union of Estonia
Estonian Patriotic Movement[1]
Headquarters Toompuiestee 4, Tallinn
Newspaper Konservatiivide Vaba Sõna
Youth wing Sinine Äratus
(Blue Awakening)
Membership  (2016) 7,771[2]
Ideology Estonian nationalism
National conservatism
Social conservatism
Euroscepticism
Direct Democracy
Political position Right-wing to Far-right[3]
Colours      Blue
Riigikogu
7 / 101
EU Parliament
0 / 6
Party flag
200px
Website
www.ekre.ee
Politics of Estonia
Political parties
Elections

The Conservative People's Party of Estonia (Estonian: Eesti Konservatiivne Rahvaerakond, EKRE) is a national conservative political party in Estonia. Current chairman of the party is Mart Helme, former Estonian ambassador to Russia.[4] Its identitarian youth wing is Blue Awakening. Ideologically, the party is a descendant of the Estonian ethno-nationalist camp, which dates back to the Singing Revolution. Many political commentators place the EKRE on the right to far right but party representatives reject this and suggest other ways of looking at the left–right axis.[3]

The party was founded in March 2012 when the agrarian centrist party People's Union of Estonia and the nationalist pressure group Estonian Patriotic Movement merged. In the parliamentary election of 2015, it secured 8.1% of the votes and entered the Riigikogu with 7 seats. At the same time it had around 7600 members, being the fourth largest Estonian party by membership size.[5]

The party sees the survival of Estonian ethnicity as its main struggle, and many of its policies are directed at supporting young Estonian families, reducing emigration of Estonians and fighting immigration from outside of the European Union. It is also overtly eurosceptic and wishes to implement Swiss style direct democracy.

Background

Modern Estonian nationalism dates back to the Singing Revolution that led to the end of Soviet occupation in Estonia. EKRE has drawn former members of the Estonian National Independence Party[6] as well as the Central Union of Estonian Nationalists that was active in the 1990s.

While nationalism played a small part in Estonian politics since the mid-1990s, it started to become more relevant in 2006 with the tensions around the Bronze Soldier of Tallinn. The Estonian Patriotic Movement was founded the same year. The movement aimed to unite a variety of Estonian nationalist groups at the time.

From 2008, the movement was led by Martin Helme, son of Mart Helme. Mart Helme had formerly been a member of the People's Union of Estonia but was forced to leave the party in 2004 because of his opposition to the relocation of Monument of Lihula and the suppression of protests.[7]

History

<templatestyles src="Module:Hatnote/styles.css"></templatestyles>

In 2010, the People's Union of Estonia started to look for a possible merging partner. Talks with the Social Democratic Party were concluded and a special congress was convened to approve the merger agreement. However, at the party congress, only 172 delegates out of 412 supported the deal.[8] Following the failed merger attempt, many leading members (MPs) left the party and joined the social democrats.[9] In the 2011 parliamentary election, the People's Union did not pass the 5% threshold, and became an extra-parliamentary party.

After the election, Margo Miljand, the leader of the People's Union met with Mart Helme who had run as an independent candidate. To save the party, Helme advised him to change the party name and alter the program. With links to the nationalist Estonian Patriotic Movement, Helme advised a deal between the two. The movement promised it would help redo the party program and elect new leaders.[3]

In March 2012, the Estonian Patriotic Movement merged into the People's Union and the latter changed its name to the Conservative People's Party of Estonia.[10] At the assembly in Põltsamaa, where the party was founded, EKRE made its first political statement: "No political party in the Riigikogu represents the Estonian people, our national interest or traditional values. The government acts on right- and left liberal, also socialist ideas that our countrymen are simply statistical units or taxpayers, consumers at best. It is not far right or far left, just ultra-liberalism. The Conservative People's Party gives a solution to the voters who are sick of forced choice between Ansip and Savisaar, East and West, left and right."[11] For the first three months, EKRE’s support according to the polls was zero, than it begun to gradually rise.[3]

EKRE takes part of yearly gatherings of the veterans of the Estonian Legion at the Sinimäed Hills. In 2013, the attendance of Mart Helme was praised in Estonian media while the abstention of other parties' leaders was frown upon and seen as a result of Russian anti-fascist propaganda.[12]

During the local elections in October 2013, the party gained representation in several smaller municipalities, such as the parishes of Tudulinna[13] and Häädemeeste.[14] A member of the party also became mayor of the town of Saue,[15] however he was set up independently of EKRE in a local party’s list.

The first party since the 1990s to politically organize Estonian diaspora, EKRE founded its Finland branch in October 2014.[16]

In the run-up to the 2015 parliamentary election, EKRE managed to draw supporters from the mainstream right, including defectors mainly from the IRL, but also from the liberal Reform Party and the Free Party's initiative group.[17] In the election, EKRE won 8.1% of the vote and 7 seats in the Riigikogu.[18] Soon after, the winning Reform Party excluded EKRE from the coalition talks, citing as a reason a blog post by EKRE's MP Jaak Madison, written in January 2012. In the post, Madison commended the economic policies of the Nazi Party and wrote: "There is unfortunately no perfect form of government (not even democracy) but I see fascism as being an ideology that consists of many positive nuances necessary for preserving the nation-state."[19] Madison is now the vice chairman of the European Union Affairs Committee of the parliament.[20]

Blue Awakening

File:Sinise Äratuse lipp.png
Blue Awakening uses the ancient Estonian pagan symbol of Northern Star on its flag[21]

The party's affiliated nationalist youth movement is named Blue Awakening (Estonian: Sinine Äratus). With links to the pan-European Identitarian movement and the alt-right in North America, Blue Awakening states a new national awakening of the Estonians as its principal aim.[22] This would come as a continuation to the 19th century Estonian national awakening and the Singing Revolution, leading the way to the establishment of an eternal Estonian ethno-state.[23]

Blue Awakening was founded on 30 November 2012.[23] The young activists have been behind many of the party's protest marches and annually organize a torchlight march through Tallinn on February 24, Independence Day of Estonia. The torchlight march is meant to honor those who have fallen for the nation of Estonia and to signify that Estonian youth have not abandoned the nationalist principles.[24]

In addition to politics, the youth of Blue Awakening focus on art, music and right-wing philosophy such as the Traditionalist School of Julius Evola and René Guénon.[25] The movement is disciplined and its activists have formed several squads.[26] Their activities include rituals shaped after Finno-Ugric shamanism.[23]

Torchlight marches of the Blue Awakening on the Independence Day of Estonia
2014
 
2015
2015
 
2016
 

Ideology and political positions

File:Mart Helme, 2008.jpg
Mart Helme with a pre-World War II map of Europe

The party's platform generally reflects Estonian national conservatism in the Estonian political system. EKRE describes itself as "a principled and bravely patriotic Estonian party with an unshakable mission to protect Estonian national values and interests".[1] It has also been labelled "far-right" by Kari Käsper, the Executive Director of Estonian Human Rights Centre,[27] and in foreign media by BBC News[28] and the Christian Science Monitor.[29] According to Fox News Channel, EKRE is a far-right party, "considered by some to have Fascist-Neo-Nazi sympathies similar to many other flourishing nationalist parties in the Baltics and Eastern Europe".[30] The Simon Wiesenthal Center has called EKRE youth organization's annual torchlight procession an "extreme right march".[31]

Martin Helme, board member and the party leader's son, has said that the extremism accusations are just that the new political rhetoric is unfamiliar as yet: "The mainstream has become so orthodox, so narrow, that whatever is not immaculately, diligently, fervently more-catholic-than-pope mainstream is immediately labelled extremism."[3]

The party calls for implementation of direct democracy, balanced state budget[32] and strict control over immigration to Estonia.[33]

Social policies

Education and health care

The party strongly opposes the widespread closure of schools in countryside. Its program requires the teachers to speak high-level Estonian and be loyal to the Estonian state. To raise the quality of education, EKRE desires to raise the wages of teachers.[34]

According to the program of the party, health care must create preconditions for the preservation of the Estonian nation. The party stands for free dental treatment,[35] wants to limit the availability of tobacco, alcohol and narcotics, and does not support abortion.[36]

Demography and immigration

According to EKRE, demography is one of the most crucial aspects in the survival of Estonia. According to Mart Helme, Estonia is in a demographic crisis, characterized by low birth rate and emigration of more than 100,000 Estonians in recent years.[37] To counter the falling birth rate, the party has proposed family welfare programs such as paying back a quarter of a married couple's mortgage loan with every child's birth and lowering a parent's income tax by 5% rate for every child being raised in the family.[35][38]

EKRE has repeatedly ruled out supporting any further mass immigration into Estonia, citing a large number of Russians already imported during the Soviet occupation. The party upholds that the Estonian migration policies must advance the aim of "expanding the amount and precentage of Estonians in Estonia" and if the liberal government allows immigration to alter the ethnic makeup of Estonia, it is scandalous and undemocratic.[39]

Commenting riots in socially segregated suburbs in Sweden, Martin Helme, board member and the party leader's son said in a TV talk show in May 2013: "Estonia shouldn't allow things to go as far as in England, France and Sweden. Our immigration policy should have one simple rule: if you're black, go back. As simple as that. We shouldn't allow this problem to emerge in the first place."[40] Afterwards, a Postimees poll showed 70% of near 12,000 respondents agreed with Martin Helme’s stands.[3]

Same-sex unions

The party strictly opposed the civil partnership law on registered partnership for same-sex couples that was adopted by Riigikogu in October 2014. Pointing out that the law grants adoption rights to homosexual couples, the party claimed it essentially establishes same-sex marriage. Instead, the party insists on the parliament to adopt laws that would help to raise the birth rate and strengthen the societal attitudes towards having children, including the need to strengthen the traditional family model.[41]

EKRE also claimed that pushing through the law while opinion polls showed that the majority of Estonian people opposed it, was undemocratic. The party promises in its platform to put the law on a referendum.[35]

Direct democracy

EKRE views Estonia's form of government as heavily biased towards representative democracy, without means for the people to have an influence on politics other than elections. To change that, the party wants to return to more traditional ways of direct democracy, such as provided by the earlier Estonian constitutions of 1920 and 1934.[42]

The party program includes right of the citizens to initiative if at least 25,000 registered voters sign a petition to put a bill on referendum. EKRE supports presidential elections by the public, recall elections and public elections of judges, prosecutors and local police prefects. The party wants to abolish D'Hondt method from the parliamentary elections.[42]

Economic policies

Environment

According to EKRE, the untouched natural beauty of Estonia must be preserved more effectively. Therefore, the party supports alternative and environment-friendly sources of energy. EKRE wants to intensify the fight against littering and says the offenders must be punished at least with a sum necessary to compensate for the harm created to nature.[43] The party's program includes a ban on all genetically modified foods and their import.[44]

Banking

The party calls for creation of a national public bank.[45] It has also supported cooperative banking in Tartu, including in its program the establishment of an alternative interest-free currency.[46]

Foreign policies

Green is territory that EKRE claims is illegally occupied by Russia

The Conservative People's Party of Estonia stands for Estonia's independence and sovereignty. They claim that the European Union is moving towards a federal state and Estonia should veto any legislation that centralises more power to the hands of EU.[47] On 30 August 2012, EKRE organised a protest at Toompea against the ratification of European Stability Mechanism treaty.[48]

EKRE strongly opposes a proposed border treaty between Estonia and Russia, which, according to the party, would cede 5.2% of Estonia's territory to the occupier once and for all without any compromise or compensation on its side. The party has called the possible signing of the treaty "treason" and the Estonian politicians who would sign it "traitors to the state".[49]

Defence policies

The EKRE concept of the national defence policy is based on the self-reliant national defence. The security of the republic would be safeguarded by the existence of initial defense, compulsory military service, total defense, international cooperation and the membership of NATO.[50] The platform of the party includes formation of two tank battalions and acquisition of medium-range anti-aircraft systems.[35]

International relations

EKRE has close links with similar right-wing nationalist parties in Latvia and Lithuania. On 23 August 2013, EKRE signed the Declaration of Bauska together with political parties National Alliance and Lithuanian Nationalist Union. The declaration calls for a new national awakening of the Baltic states and warns about threats posed by international globalism, multiculturalism and Russian imperial ambitions.[51][52]

In 2014, the party's congress in Tallinn was visited by a delegation from the UK Independence Party. The delegation was led by Roger Helmer who gave a speech in support of Euroscepticism in Estonia.[53]

Organizations with whom EKRE cooperates take regularly part of the annual torchlight march in Tallinn. They include all signatories of the Declaration of Bauska, the Scandinavian nationalist youth movement Nordisk Ungdom[54] and the nationalist Finns Party.[55] The party has also contacts among Ukrainian nationalists. During Euromaidan, Mart Helme sent an address to the protestors in Kiev, urging the Ukrainian patriots not to succumb to Russian demands.[56]

Members of the Blue Awakening have visited the nationalist Akademikerball of the Freedom Party of Austria. They include Jaak Madison who is additionally a member of the Estonia–Austria parliamentary group.[57]

Representatives from both Latvia's National Alliance and EKRE have spoken in the annual American Renaissance conference organized by Jared Taylor.[58]

Footnotes

  1. 1.0 1.1 EKRE: Erakond
  2. [1], Äriregistri teabesüsteem
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 EKRE – from club status to parliament rank
  4. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  5. Äriregistri teabesüsteem
  6. EKRE kandidaat Kalju Mätik, 171
  7. Delfi: Rahvaliit viskas Mart Helme välja
  8. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  9. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  10. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  11. Delfi: Uue nime saanud Rahvaliit: parlamendierakonnad tegelevad manduva ja kõlbeliselt hukutava euroliidu väärtuste propageerimisega
  12. Õhtuleht: Sinimäed kui poliitikute konnasilm
  13. Põhjarannik: Tudulinnas tegi ilma EKRE
  14. Vallavanemaks valiti Ants Järvesaar
  15. ERR: Saue linnapeana jätkab Henn Põlluaas
  16. Konservatiivne Rahvaerakond asutas Soome osakonna
  17. Delfi: EKRE nimekirjas kandideerivad Reformierakonna rahastamisskandaali tegelane ja sõpradega tülli läinud kodanikuaktivist
  18. Vabariigi Valimiskomisjon
  19. ERR: EKRE could join Center as second 'pariah' after party defends new MP's controversial 2012 blog post
  20. http://riigikogu.ee/index.php?id=34642
  21. Sinine Äratus: Põhjatäht
  22. Telegram: Sinine Äratus tahab Eestit uueks rahvuslikuks ärkamiseks ette valmistada
  23. 23.0 23.1 23.2 Uued Uudised: Sinine Äratus tähistas liikumise sünnipäeva, December 1, 2015
  24. EKRE: Muljeid tõrvikurongkäigust
  25. Eesti Ekspress. "Sinised Äratajad".
  26. Postimees: EKRE noorteorganisatsioon moodustas kolm eriülesannetega salka
  27. Kari's journal: The danger posed by the far right in the Estonian Parliament
  28. BBC News - Black Briton aims to be Estonian MEP
  29. A first for Estonia: an elected black politician
  30. Fox News: Jews in Baltics fear creep of anti-Semitism
  31. Wiesenthal Center Criticizes Extreme Right March to Mark Estonian Independence Day
  32. EKRE programm: majandus ja põllumajandus
  33. EKRE programm: kodanik ja kodanikuühiskond
  34. EKRE programm: haridus ja kultuur
  35. 35.0 35.1 35.2 35.3 Riigikogu valimiste platvorm 2015. On aeg!
  36. EKRE programm: tervishoid
  37. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  38. Ruuben Kaalep: Konservatiivide lahendus iibeprobleemile
  39. Volikogu avaldus: Valitsuse plaanitud massiimmigratsioon Eestisse ohustab meie rahvuslikku püsimist
  40. Conservative Politician: If You're Black, Go Back
  41. EKRE: kooseluseadus on vastuolus eesti rahva huvidega
  42. 42.0 42.1 Aeg on küps otsedemokraatiaks
  43. EKRE programm: loodushoid ja energeetika
  44. EKRE programm: majandus ja põllumajandus
  45. E24: Konservatiivne Rahvaerakond nõuab riiklikku kommertspanka
  46. Platvorm Tartu valitsemiseks 2013–2017
  47. http://www.ekre.ee/eesti-peab-panema-veto-euroopa-uhendriikidele/
  48. Delfi: ESM-i vastane meeleavaldus
  49. Postimees: Estonia's Conservative People's Party criticizes border treaty with Russia
  50. CPP program: National Defence policy
  51. Nacionālā apvienība: Baltijas nacionālisti paraksta sadarbības līgumu, vēršoties pret globālajiem apdraudējumiem
  52. Baltimaade konservatiivid: aeg on küps uueks rahvuslikuks ärkamiseks
  53. Konservatiivne Rahvaerakond peab pühapäeval Tallinnas kongressi
  54. FOTO: EKRE tõrvikumarsil osales ka avalikult natsismiga seostatud Rootsi noorteorganisatsioon
  55. DELFI FOTOD ja VIDEO: EKRE noorteorganisatsiooni korraldatud tõrvikurongkäigul olid kohal ka nn Odini sõdalased
  56. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  57. Riigikogu: Jaak Madison
  58. Estland: Rechtspopulist Kaalep träumt von einem „weißen westlichen Nationalstaat“

External links