Iran Daily

Estonian election winner to begin coalition talks with rival

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The leader of Estonian’s main center-right party, who won an election on Sunday but fell shy of a majority, said on Wednesday she would open what are likely to be tough coalition talks with the outgoing ruling center-left party.

Victory by her Reform party puts Kaja Kallas, 41, on course to become Estonia’s first female prime minister, Reuters reported.

But a surge by the far right increases the likelihood that Kallas will have to work with the Centre party of outgoing Prime Minister Juri Ratas, which placed second. The two parties have been the main rivals in Estonian politics for years and have not governed together since 2003.

The far-right EKRE party also made major gains in the election, but all other parties have ruled out bringing it into government.

“Yes, our views are somewhat different, but Estonia has always had a coalition government, and we believe we can reach an agreement to reflect both supporters’ views,” Kallas said of her outreach to the Centre party.

A coalition of the two would command a comfortabl­e majority with 60 seats out of 101 in the Estonian parliament.

Centre party’s leader, outgoing Prime Minister Ratas, said immediatel­y after election results showed his party had lost to Reform party that he would seek to be part of a coalition government. Other leaders in the party have expressed doubts.

While both are fiscally conservati­ve, Reform Party has championed business-friendly reforms and the flat tax that was long the hallmark of the Estonian economy. Centre party has sought to make the tax system more progressiv­e along the lines of richer neighbors such as Finland.

 ??  ?? INTS KALNINS/REUTERS Reform party chairwoman, Kaja Kallas, speaks during a news conference in Tallinn, Estonia, on March 5, 2019.
INTS KALNINS/REUTERS Reform party chairwoman, Kaja Kallas, speaks during a news conference in Tallinn, Estonia, on March 5, 2019.

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