Russian citizens living in Estonia should be barred from taking part in local elections regardless of their views on the Ukraine conflict, the Baltic state’s Prime Minister Kristen Michal has insisted. Russian speakers make up 20% of Estonia’s population of just under 1.4 million, according to the Estonian government,
Under the NATO country’s laws, only Estonian citizens can elect members of parliament, known as the Riigikogu. However, the right of all permanent residents to vote in local elections was granted in the 1992 constitution, which also controversially denied hundreds of thousands of ethnic Russians living in the former Soviet republic the right to citizenship.
Michal told the EER media outlet on Friday that “Russia is a security threat, and Russian citizens should not have a say in Estonian affairs, just like Belarusian citizens.”
“Their right to vote must be suspended or taken away,” the PM and chairman of the Reform Party, which has the most legislators in the Riigikogu, insisted.
The Reform Party, which rules in a coalition with the Social Democratic Party (SDE) and Estonia 200, is ready to amend legislation or go as far as changing the Constitution to make sure Russian citizens are banned from local elections, he stressed.