2024 European Parliament election in Estonia

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2024 European Parliament election in Estonia

 2019
6–9 June 2024

All 7 Estonian seats to the European Parliament
Turnout37.66% (Increase 0.07pp)
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Riho Terras Marina Kaljurand Urmas Paet
Party Isamaa SDE Reform
Alliance EPP S&D RE
Last election 1 seat, 10.3% 2 seats, 23.3% 2 seats, 26.2%
Seats won 2 2 1
Seat change Increase1 Steady Decrease1
Popular vote 79,170 71,171 66,017
Percentage 21.5% 19.3% 17.9%
Swing Increase11.2pp Decrease4.0pp Decrease8.3pp

  Fourth party Fifth party
 
Leader Martin Helme Mihhail Kõlvart
Party EKRE Centre
Alliance ID RE
Last election 1 seat, 12.7% 1 seat, 14.4%
Seats won 1 1
Seat change Steady Steady
Popular vote 54,712 45,767
Percentage 14.9% 12.4%
Swing Increase2.2pp Decrease2.0pp

Results by county and independent city

An election for the Members of the European Parliament from Estonia as part of the 2024 European Parliament election took place on 9 June. Early voting took place from 3 June to 8 June.[1][2][3]

This was the first election since the 1993 Estonian municipal elections that neither the Reform Party, Centre Party nor the Conservative People's Party of Estonia have placed among the top 2 in terms of vote share. Significant attention was also paid to the vote share of Together, whose only candidate Aivo Peterson is and was in Tallinn Prison throughout the campaign due to an ongoing trial after being charged with treason.[4][5][6][7] His eventual vote share was considered by some to help measure pro-Kremlin attitudes in Estonia.[8]

Reform Party

In March 2023 Estonia held its latest national election, and in that occasion the Reform Party managed to maintain its position as biggest party in parliament, while its leader and incumbent Prime Minister Kaja Kallas was reconfirmed in the office with the support of the Social Democratic Party and Estonia 200.

In recent months the party's performance in opinion polls has suffered significantly from the party's decision to back several tax increases unpopular with the economically liberal voter base as well as due to a scandal involving party leader Kaja Kallas. In August 2023, she came under the international spotlight after it was revealed that her husband held a significant share in a transportation company, Stark Logistics, which continued business with Russia despite Kallas's previous calls for Estonian companies to cease operations in Russia in the aftermath of the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[9] Kallas tried to minimise the affair and ignored the calls for her resignation from her political opponents, calling the controversy a "witch-hunt".[10]

At the same time she has appeared in the news as a prominent figure of the Renew Europe group and therefore as one of the frontrunners to be ALDE's Spitzenkandidat for the European Commission's presidency. She has also been linked to the post of High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, whose current holder Josep Borrell will retire at the end of this mandate, or to the post of Estonia's European Commissioner, currently held by Kadri Simson (Centre Party).[11][12] On 7 March 2024, Kallas announced that she rejected the offer from ALDE to be the alliance's Spitzenkandidat.[13]

Incumbent MEP Andrus Ansip is not running for re-election.[14]

Social Democratic Party

Since the 2023 Riigikogu election, the Social Democrats have remained the only party in the government coalition to avoid losing support in polling. This has been attributed to the party members' public statements, especially those of the leader of the party Lauri Läänemets, setting the Social Democrats apart from the two economically liberal parties in the coalition. Moreover, the party gained MPs and members from the defections out of the Centre Party, including seeing its number of MPs increase from 9 to 13.[15][16]

Centre Party

In September 2023 Mihhail Kõlvart, then-mayor of Tallinn, won Centre Party's leadership election. His victory marked a significant change in the party's direction, choosing to focus more on its Russophone electoral base and shifting to socially conservative and economically syncretic positions, with the party becoming seen as one specifically of the niche Russian minority concentrated in the capital Tallinn and Ida-Viru County.[17][18][19] As a result, in the following months the previous party leader Jüri Ratas and several other party members defected to other political forces, leaving Centre Party with one third of its initial parliamentary representation (down to only 6 MPs) and with an increasingly weaker position in the most recent opinion polls.[20][21][22]

Isamaa

Since August 2023, Isamaa has seen its support rocket to unprecedented historic highs.[23][24] These gains in polling are mainly attributed to the party gaining 3 MPs and several other members defecting from the Centre Party, EKRE being seen as too extreme of an option as an alternative to the government coalition and the success of the newly elected party leader, Urmas Reinsalu, in attracting disgruntled Reform Party voters unhappy with its plans to raise taxes.[25][26][27]

Electoral system

Compared to last election, Estonia is entitled to one more MEP has already been assigned in 2020 in the occasion of the redistribution post Brexit. The 7 members are elected through open list proportional representation in a single nationwide constituency with seats allocated through D'Hondt method and no electoral threshold.[28]

Both Estonian citizens and other non-Estonian EU citizens residing in the country are entitled to vote in the European elections in Estonian. No registration is needed for Estonian citizens, while other EU citizens residing in Estonia are required to register with the National Electoral Committee only if it's their first time voting in the country. Estonian citizens residing abroad can choose between three options to vote: in person in an embassy or consulate, online or by mail, with only the latter procedure requiring registration. In addition, those eligible to vote must turn 18 years old by election day at the latest.[29]

Outgoing delegation

The table shows the detailed composition of the Estonian seats at the European Parliament as of 1 February 2024.

EP Group Seats Party Seats MEPs
Renew Europe
3 / 7
Estonian Reform Party 2
Estonian Centre Party 1
Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats
2 / 7
Social Democratic Party 2
Identity and Democracy
1 / 7
Conservative People's Party of Estonia 1
European People's Party
1 / 7
Isamaa 1
Total 7
Source: European Parliament

Contesting parties

Candidates

The National Electoral Committee registered 66 candidates from 9 parties and 5 independents.[30]

  • Urmas Paet, Member of the European Parliament (2014–present)
  • Yoko Alender, Member of the Riigikogu (2015–present)
  • Luukas Kristjan Ilves, Counsellor for Digital Affairs at the Estonia's Permanent Representation to the EU (2014–2018)
  • Maria Jufereva-Skuratovski, Member of the Riigikogu (2019–present)Marko Mihkelson, Member of the Riigikogu (2003–present)
  • Hanah Lahe, Member of the Riigikogu (2023–present)
  • Karmen Joller, Member of the Riigikogu (2023–present)
  • Maarja Metstak, Kuusalu Parish councillor (2021–present)
  • Hanno Pevkur, Minister of Defence (2022–present)
  • Evelyn Sepp, Member of the Riigikogu (2001–2011)
  • Rasmus Lahtvee
  • Alina Lerner-Vilu
  • Olev-Andres Tinn
  • Riin Ehin
  • Kaia Konsap
  • Liina Freivald
  • Tuula Raidna
  • Marko Kaasik
  • Lavly Perling, state prosecutor general (2014–2019)
  • Rainer Saks, national security expert
  • Ilmar Raag, columnist
  • Annela Anger-Kraavi, climate expert
  • Marti Aavik, journalist
  • Eero Raun, entrepreneur
  • Kadri Kullman, entrepreneur
  • Andres Kaarmann, vice mayor of Saue Parish (2017–present)
  • Kristjan Vanaselja, entrepreneur
Others
  • Vsevolod Jürgenson, taxi driver and activist
  • Kalle Grünthal, Member of the Riigikogu (2019–present)
  • Tanel Talve, Member of the Riigikogu (2015–2019)
  • Andres Inn
  • Mike Calamus

Party manifestos and slogans

Party EP Group Slogan and manifesto (external link)
Reform Party RE A safe Estonia in Europe[31] (Estonian: Kindel Eesti Euroopas)
Social Democratic Party S&D Freedom, justice, security.[32] (Estonian: Vabadus, õiglus, julgeolek.)[a]
Centre Party RE Stand tall, Estonia![34] (Estonian: Selg sirgu, Eesti!)
Conservative People's Party ID For Estonia in Europe[35] (Estonian: Eesti eest Euroopas)
Isamaa EPP To the right path![36] (Estonian: Õigele teele!)
Estonia 200 No Yes-people to Europe[37] (Estonian: Jah-inimesed Euroopasse)
Greens No
Parempoolsed No Let's defend freedom![38] (Estonian: Kaitseme vabadust!)
Together No

Campaign

Controversies

Greens' candidate list

The Greens originally announced a full list of 9 candidates but only paid sufficient fee to register two, leading the National Electoral Committee to register only two candidates. The party disputed the decision and sued, and as a legal remedy, the Supreme Court required the National Electoral Committee to register all 9 candidates on 14 May 2024.[39] Several other parties expressed surprise and disagreement over the decision due to the Greens effectively being able to register all of its candidates without having paid the fee for 7 of them.[40]

Debates

2024 European Parliament election debates in Estonia
Date Organisers     P  Present    N  Non-invitee 
Reform SDE Centre EKRE Isamaa E200 EER Parempoolsed Refs
25 April Postimees Hanah Lahe Tanel Kiik Lauri Laats Helle-Moonika Helme N Irja Lutsar N Eero Raun [41]
11 April Eesti Televisioon P

Andrus Ansip
Urmas Paet

P

Marina Kaljurand
Sven Mikser

P

Jana Toom

P

Jaak Madison

P

Riho Terras

N N N [42]
22 Feb EGM
ENF
P

Hanah Lahe

P

Jevgeni Ossinovski

P

Erki Savisaar

P

Rain Epler

P

Jüri Ratas

P

Züleyxa Izmailova

N N [43]

Opinion polling

The tables below list opinion polling results in reverse chronological order, showing the most recent first and using the dates when the survey fieldwork was done, as opposed to the date of publication. Where the fieldwork dates are unknown, the date of publication is given instead. The seats the result would produce is shown below the result for each party.

Polling execution Parties Lead
Polling

firm

Fieldwork

date

Sample

size

Reform Renew
SDE

S&D


Centre

Renew


EKRE ID

Isamaa EPP

E200

EER G/EFA

Parem

Koos

Others Party EP group
Norstat 8–20 May 2024 1,471 19.1
1
19.3
2
11.5
1
14.2
1
21.3
2
3.8
0
0.9
0
4.3
0
2.9
0
2.7
0
2.0 4.6
Kantar Emor 6–15 May 2024 1,471 17.2
2
23.6
2
11.0
1
13.6
1
14.0
1
4.1
0
0.9
0
7.2
0
3.1
0
5.4
0
6.4 9.3
Norstat 29 Apr–6 May 2024 1,484 19.3
2
21.4
2
9.4
1
17.9
1
17.1
1
3.9
0
0.9
0
4.5
0
3.0
0
2.7
0
2.1 7.3
Kantar Emor 8-17 Apr 2024 1,484 18.8
2
20
2
13.8
1
13.8
1
16.8
1
4.7
0
1.5
0
6
0
4.5
0
1.2 12.6
Norstat 11-15 Apr 2024 3,500 20.1
2
22.0
2
11.0
1
17.2
1
17.6
1
5.0
0
1.2
0
4.7
0
1.2
0
1.9 9.1
Kantar Emor 14-20 Mar 2024 1,135 18.9
2
21.4
2
13.9
1
15.4
1
16.7
1
5.6
0
[b] 5.9
0
2.1
0
2.5 11.4
2023 parliamentary election 31.2
3
9.3
1
15.3
1
16.1
1
8.2
0
13.3
1
1.0
0
2.3
0
3.3
0
15.1 30.4
2019 EP election 26.2
2
23.3
2
14.4
1
12.7
1
10.3
1
3.2
0
1.8
0
8.0
0
2.9 17.3

European Parliament polling in Estonia is candidate-oriented as opposed to party-oriented due to the short length of the electoral lists.[44][45]

Results

Notes

References

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