2022 Estonian government crisis | |
Location: | Estonia |
Type: | Parliamentary crisis |
Cause: |
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Participants: | Reform Party, Centre Party |
Outcome: |
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Blank Label: | Legislature status |
Blank Data: | Majority cabinet 59 / 101(58%) (until 3 June 2022) Minority cabinet 34 / 101(34%) (from 3 June 2022 to 18 June 2022) Majority cabinet 56 / 101(55%) (from 18 June 2022) |
The 2022 Estonian government crisis was a political event in Estonia that occurred between May and July 2022. It includes the events that follow the introduction of a child benefits bill by the governing Centre Party with the support of the opposition Isamaa, Social Democrats and EKRE but without the support of the senior partner in the coalition, the Reform Party.
The crisis was exacerbated after the Centre Party MPs voted down the education reform bill that had been put forward by the incumbent government of the Reform and Centre parties. It resulted in Prime Minister Kaja Kallas having Centre Party ministers removed from office and running a government of only Reform Party ministers until the inauguration of Kaja Kallas' second cabinet a month later.
See also: 2019 Estonian parliamentary election and Kaja Kallas's first cabinet. The 2019 parliamentary election saw the loss of the absolute majority held by Jüri Ratas's first cabinet in the Riigikogu, the unicameral parliament of Estonia. Ratas's Centre Party, Isamaa, and the Social Democrats all suffered a setback in favour of the Reform Party, led by Kallas, and EKRE.[1] Kersti Kaljulaid, then-president of Estonia, gave a mandate to Kallas to form a government after the election.[2] The Reform Party negotiated with the Centre Party, Isamaa, and SDE but ultimately failed to form a government.[3] [4] [5] After the vote in April 2019, Ratas received the mandate and successfully formed a government with Isamaa and EKRE.[6] Jüri Ratas's second cabinet was sworn in on 29 April 2019.[7] [8]
In January 2021, the Centre Party-led government collapsed after a corruption investigation in which the Centre Party was accused of requesting financial support of up to €1 million within a year in return of the €39 million loan to Hillar Teder's real estate development in Tallinn.[9] In response, Ratas resigned as prime minister of Estonia, while Kallas was invited to form a government.[10] She struck a deal with the Centre Party, with Kallas serving as prime minister.[11]
In January 2022 Jaanus Karilaid, the leader of the Centre Party's parliamentary faction, threatened a government crisis should the Reform Party fail to agree on subsidies to alleviate the then-ongoing energy crisis.[12] An agreement was eventually reached in the same month.[13]
On 12 May 2022, Karilaid put forward a bill to increase funding for child benefits with the support of MPs from all 3 opposition parties - EKRE, the Social Democrats and Isamaa - but without the support of the Centre Party's coalition partner, the Reform Party.[14] Prime Minister Kaja Kallas of the Reform Party reacted on the same day by accusing the Centre Party of wanting to form a government with EKRE in response to a question about the coalition's health.[15] Public Administration minister Jaak Aab of the Centre Party responded that he'd warned the parliamentary faction that putting forward the bill could cause the government to collapse and mentioned that this should've been agreed on beforehand. Aab, Karilaid and Centre Party leader Jüri Ratas all insisted that the goal was not to collapse the government.[16] [17] In response, Kaja Kallas stated that the Reform Party supports boosting child benefits spending but wants time to discuss the specific bill and ways to cover the budget expenses.[18] Karilaid stated that he wanted the bill to be passed before 24 June, St. John's Day around when the Riigikogu, the national parliament of Estonia, goes on summer break.
On 24 May, Kaja Kallas stated that it had previously been discussed with the Centre Party that the increase in child benefits would be done as part of the budget process for 2023 and urged the Centre Party to try to find a solution inside the government, stating that otherwise the coalition cannot continue. She also raised the issue of Centre Party leader Ratas being difficult to contact due to being in parliament and not a government minister.[19]
On the same day, the daily Eesti Päevaleht reported that several members of the Centre Party had privately complained about Karilaid moving forward with the child benefits bill without communicating with people outside of the party board and parliamentary faction, leaving some ministers and other key people out of the loop on the matter. While all Centre Party MPs had signed onto the bill, some mentioned in private that it had simply been done in advance. Karilaid conceded that communication could have been done better but insisted that the parliamentary faction was united. He urged Kaja Kallas to convene all party leaders to discuss improving the bill before it came to a vote in less than a week on 30 May.[20] [21]
On 26 May, Kaja Kallas compared the actions of the Centre Party to Russia demanding de-escalation from the West over the Russian invasion of Ukraine, stating that it's not the Reform Party's responsibility to ease the situation or meet halfway with their coalition partner on the issue of child benefits. She hinted that the party could attempt to stop the passage of the bill by parliamentary obstruction.[22] Reform Party's parliamentary faction leader Mart Võrklaev confirmed that the party would consider the option should the Centre Party not withdraw the bill from consideration until autumn, when the budget for 2023 would be prepared. Karilaid denied the accusation that the Centre Party was bypassing its coalition partner by moving forward with the bill, stating that "[We] will not pass them by, we want to go together. Don't fall behind".[23] The leader of the Social Democrats, Lauri Läänemets, stated in response to the plans of obstruction that the coalition had de facto stopped existing.[24]
On 30 May, the Reform Party put forward a motion to withdraw the proposed child benefits bill which failed 32 to 56.
30 May 2022Vote to withdraw the Family Benefits Act Amendment Act (619 SE)[25] | |||
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Vote | Parties | Votes | |
Yes | Reform Party (32) | ||
No | Centre Party (22), EKRE (19), Isamaa (9) Social Democrats (5), Independent (1) | ||
Absent/did not vote | Reform Party (2), Centre Party (3), Social Democrats (5), Isamaa (3) |
On 1 June, the leader of the Social Democrats, Lauri Läänemets, announced that the party would be withdrawing its signatures from the child benefits bill, stating that "We have received confirmation in recent days that under the guise of the child benefits bill, the Centre Party, together with Isamaa and EKRE, is planning to overthrow the current government". Karilaid responded by accusing the Social Democrats of trying to form a coalition with the Reform Party. In response to the claim, Läänemets stated that such a proposal had not been made.[28] Previously, Seeder had also said that no proposals for a coalition had been made to him or his party.
Later that day, the parliament voted on a government-proposed bill which was to make at least 50% of primary education be conducted in Estonian among other things. The motion to withdraw passed 42–34 with the governing Centre Party and opposition EKRE voting to withdraw the bill.
1 June 2022Vote to withdraw the Early Education and Child Care Act (579 SE)[29] | |||
---|---|---|---|
Vote | Parties | Votes | |
Yes | Centre Party (22), EKRE (19), Independent (1) | ||
No | Reform Party (28), Isamaa (6) | ||
Absent/did not vote | Reform Party (6), Centre Party (3), Isamaa (6), Social Democrats (10) |
During the same day, Ratas claimed that Kaja Kallas had declared the coalition dead and in response to accusations of the Centre Party wanting to form a government with EKRE and Isamaa, accused the Reform Party of wanting to form a coalition with the Social Democrats and Isamaa.[32] EKRE's vice chair Henn Põlluaas said that the party prefers a coalition with the Centre Party and Isamaa but did not rule out forming a government with the Reform Party.[33] On 2 June, Ratas called on forming a new coalition but did not rule out continuing a coalition with the Reform Party.[34]
On 3 June, Kallas proposed to president Alar Karis to remove all Centre Party ministers from office. Foreign minister Eva-Maria Liimets was on a visit in Canada during her removal.[35] She said that the decisive factor in the decision was the vote to withdraw the education reform bill.[36]
As a result, Estonia had its first one-party government after the restoration of independence as the government was only made up of the Reform Party and its ministers.
Opposition parties were assumed to hold back on a vote of no confidence in Kaja Kallas due to her power as prime minister to ask the president to call snap elections after a successful vote of no confidence.[37] The Reform Party was leading comfortably in most polls at the time and a snap election could've expanded the party's position in parliament whilst weakening the opposition parties' seat count.[38]
Polling firm | Fieldwork Date | Samplesize | Ref | Centre | EKRE | Isamaa | SDE | E200 | EER | Others | Lead | Gov. | Opp. | ||||
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Kaja Kallas' second cabinet is formed by Reform, Isamaa and SDE | |||||||||||||||||
Norstat | 12–18 Jul | 1,000 | 33.9 | 18.0 | 16.8 | 10.7 | 8.8 | 8.3 | 1.7 | 1.8 | 15.9 | 33.9 | |||||
Norstat | 5–11 Jul | 1,000 | 32.4 | 16.9 | 18.5 | 9.8 | 8.1 | 11.5 | 1.8 | 1.0 | 13.9 | 32.4 | |||||
Norstat | 27 Jun4 Jul | 1,000 | 32.5 | 17.9 | 21.1 | 8.0 | 7.6 | 10.5 | 1.6 | 0.8 | 11.4 | 32.5 | |||||
Norstat | 14–20 Jun | 1,000 | 34.1 | 16.0 | 22.6 | 7.6 | 5.8 | 9.9 | 2.1 | 1.9 | 11.5 | 34.1 | |||||
Turu-uuringute AS | 17 Jun | 600–700 | 31 | 17 | 18 | 10 | 8 | 12 | 1 | 3 | 13 | 31 | |||||
Kantar Emor | 9–14 Jun | 1,537 | 32 | 15 | 18 | 9 | 8 | 15 | 3 | 0 | 14 | 32 | |||||
Norstat | 7–13 Jun | 1,000 | 35.0 | 16.6 | 21.3 | 8.4 | 6.5 | 9.1 | 1.8 | 0.8 | 13.7 | 35.0 | |||||
Norstat | 1–6 Jun | 1,000 | 33.5 | 20.5 | 20.8 | 6.8 | 5.8 | 10.4 | 2.0 | 0.2 | 12.7 | 33.5 | |||||
The ministers of the Centre Party were dismissed | |||||||||||||||||
Norstat | 24–30 May | 1,000 | 34.7 | 16.7 | 19.4 | 6.4 | 7.0 | 13.7 | 0.7 | 1.4 | 15.3 | 47.6 | |||||
Norstat | 16–23 May | 1,000 | 35.4 | 17.2 | 18.5 | 6.8 | 6.1 | 12.3 | 2.1 | 1.6 | 16.9 | 47.4 | |||||
Kantar Emor | 12–20 May | 1,461 | 33 | 16 | 17 | 7 | 7 | 17 | 3 | 0 | 16 | 49 | |||||
Turu-uuringute AS | 19 May | 600–700 | 32 | 13 | 19 | 6 | 8 | 16 | 2 | 4 | 13 | 45 |
The Reform Party proposed starting negotiations with the Social Democrats and Isamaa.[39] On 4 June, the Social Democrats accepted the invitation.[40] The Centre Party invited Isamaa and EKRE to coalition negotiations.[41] EKRE leader Martin Helme accepted the request but demanded to have the position of the prime minister.[42] After long deliberations, Isamaa opted to start coalition negotiations with the Social Democrats and the Reform Party on 11 June.[43] Isamaa abstained on the vote of no confidence in education minister Liina Kersna during the negotiations.[44] Kallas accepted Kersna's resignation on 1 July but did not deliver the resignation to the president due to lacking the votes in the parliament to inaugurate a replacement, instead opting to wait for the coalition negotiations to reach their conclusion.[45]
Kaja Kallas's second cabinet of the Triple Alliance parties of the Isamaa, the Reform Party and the Social Democrats took office on 18 July 2022.[46] [47]
Kaja Kallas' Reform Party went on to win a landslide victory in the 2023 Estonian parliamentary election while the Centre Party lost 10 of its seats and led to the eventual resignation of party leader Jüri Ratas. Karilaid and Ratas joined Isamaa in late 2023 and early 2024 respectively.[48] [49] Jaak Aab joined the Social Democrats in January 2024.[50]
During the 2023 Centre Party leadership election, Mihhail Kõlvart, the eventual successor to Ratas as the leader of the Centre Party, slammed the incoherence of the Centre Party having been in government and opposition at the same time during the crisis.[51] MEP Jaak Madison, after having left the party in 2024, slammed the EKRE leadership for having demanded too much during the lead-up to potential negotiations, and thus losing the opportunity to kick the Reform Party out of power in 2022.[52]