Constitution Party (Estonia)

The Constitution Party (Konstitutsioonierakond), known until 11 February 2006 as the Estonian United People's Party (Eestimaa Ühendatud Rahvapartei), was a political party in Estonia, mainly supported by the Russian minority. The party held 6 seats in the Riigikogu from 1999 to 2003. At the legislative elections of 2 March 2003, it won 2.2% of the popular vote and got no seats. In 2007's election, it fell further to 5,470 votes (1.0%) and again got no seat; Estonian Internal Security Service alleged there was an active promotion campaign by Russian special services.[1]

Constitution Party

Konstitutsioonierakond
LeaderSergei Jürgens
Founded1994 (1994)
DissolvedJune 28, 2008 (2008-06-28)
Succeeded byEstonian United Left Party
HeadquartersEstonia a pst 3/5, 10143 Tallinn
IdeologyRussian minority interests
Political positionCentre-left
ColoursBlue, Orange

On 28 June 2008, it merged with the Estonian Left Party to form the Estonian United Left Party.

Controversy

According to the Estonian Internal Security Service the Constitution Party was a puppet-party supported and controlled by Russia, created by the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) as part of their campaign of "political intelligence manipulations".[2] Also several members of the party have connections with groups such as Nochnoy Dozor.[3]

gollark: Some of them are, but regardless, a lot of the time they are used on *news websites* and *personal sites* and such, which could literally just be a folder of static HTML and images with maybe some progressive enhancement JS.
gollark: Because they're used in places where HTML is *actually fine*.
gollark: "why yes, of course I'm going to use 100KB of JavaScript to reimplement native browser features but worse"
gollark: "hmm yes I will include this 1MB stock image for my 10KB of text making up this article"
gollark: To be fair, the modern web is awful.

References

  1. Eesti Päevaleht 20 June 2008: Kaitsepolitsei aastaraamat: Vene luure tegi mullu Eestis usinalt tööd Archived 2008-06-30 at the Wayback Machine by Kärt Anvelt
  2. "Counterintelligence". Annual Review 2007 (PDF). Tallinn: Estonian Security Police. 2008. p. 8. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-04-15.
  3. KAPO aastaraamat 2007
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