The coalition’s partnership of the Reform Party and the Pro Patria and Res Publica Union won 56 of the 101 parliamentary seats, beating their previous total by six. The party of choice for ethnic Russians and pro-Russia voters, the opposition Centre Party, won 26 seats, three less than the previous total.
The Russian Party in Estonia gained 0.9% of the vote, placing it far below the required minimum to gain even a single seat. The miserable standing reaffirms the notion that many politicians in Russia urged Russian voters in Estonia not to waste their vote on Russian parties, but rather to support Edgar Savisaar`s Centre Party so as to have more effective leverage in the political arena.
The pre-Christmas revelations of the Estonian Security Police that Savisaar had asked a FSB connected close confidant of Vladimir Putin for 1.5 million euros for his party and funding for a Russian orthodox church in his electoral district of Lasnamäe created a political scandal that drew wide international attention. Savisaar was labeled as an agent of influence for Moscow. While his Centre Party`s drop in voter popularity can partly be attributed to the consequential bad press, Savisaar`s personal support, especially among the Russian electorate, rocketed upward. He received a landslide personal victory of 23,012 votes, the highest in history, beating prime minister Andrus Ansip`s previous record of 22,556 in the 2007 elections. This undoubtedly also points to the collective impulse of the Russian voter to rally behind a pro-Moscow politician whose political clout is perceived to be threatened.
In spite of Savisaar`s personal victory, his previously cohesive party is suffering from internal disunity. Consequently any further political inroads that Moscow expects to make through the Centre Party must await a leadership renewal or change. (It’s predicted that Savisaar will turn his back on the support he received to become a member of parliament and keep his position as mayor of Tallinn where he is ensconced also by the power of the Russian vote – even more solidly because non-citizens have the vote in municipal elections. Ethical considerations play no part in this decision.)
Only four parties gained places in the parliament: the Reform Party with 28.6% of the vote; the Centre Party with 23.3%; Pro Patria and Res Publica with 20.5%; Social Democrats with 17.1%. Social Democrats, who were declared to be the real winners, took 19 seats, nearly 50% more than by the previous 2007 election. With only four parties represented in the parliament, Estonia represents a political stability only long established parliamentary democracies like the UK, the US, Canada etc. can claim. Critics however, claim that the absence of uncommon, unpopular, even radical, political input will detract from the dynamism often needed for innovative legislation.