Estonian Working People's Union Explained

The Estonian Working People's Union (Estonian: Eesti Töötava Rahva Liit) was a front organization of the Communist Party of Estonia (de facto controlled by the Stalinist Soviet regime and the Communist Party of the Soviet Union) formed to contest in the rigged 1940 Estonian parliamentary election, as the sole officially allowed bloc. It consisted of 22 organizations, including the formally independent Estonian Communist Party, Estonian branch of Komsomol, the Central Union of Estonian Trade Unions, and cultural society "Idea". Its platform claimed to unite "democratic strata of the society" and demanded friendship and alliance between Estonia and the USSR, democratic liberties, raising salaries, combatting unemployment, social security, land for the landless, assistance for small farms, lowering the workers' burden of debt, re-organization of personal taxation, free education, ethnic equality, democratization of the military and wide development of the national culture. According to official results, 92.8% of voters voted for the bloc, with a voter turnout of 84%.

Similar organizations were set up in the other two occupied Baltic States for the same purpose: Union of the Working People of Lithuania and Latvian Working People's Bloc.

July Council

The new "People's Parliament" of Estonia . Despite the fact that the platform of the bloc did not explicitly call for the unification of Estonia with the Soviet Union, only for their alliance, the "parliament", informally called "Juulivolikogu" ("July Council"), it its first session, on July 21, voted unanimously to convert the state to Estonian SSR, renamed itself to "the Provisional Supreme Soviet of the Estonian Soviet Socialist Republic", and on July 22 declared accession to the Soviet Union and on June 23 sent a petition to the Soviet Supreme Soviet asking to join (which was granted on August 6, 1940).[1] [2] [3]

See also

References

Notes and References

  1. , Riigireeturid Toompeal — saatuslikud 1940. aasta juulipäevad ("State traitors in Toompea — the fateful days of July 1940"), ,July 22, 2005
  2. Jaan Toomla, Valitud ja Valitsenud: Eesti parlamentaarsete ja muude esinduskogude ning valitsuste isikkoosseis aastail 1917–1999 (National Library of Estonia, 1999), p. 82.
  3. http://countrystudies.us/estonia/3.htm "Estonia: The Soviet Era, 1940–85"