Latvia

Latvia goes to polls amid growing rift between Latvian majority and Russian minority

Reuters

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Latvia goes to polls amid growing rift between Latvian majority and Russian minority

ELECTIONS. Election campaign poster depicting parliament member candidates from different political parties are seen in Jelgava, Latvia September 28, 2022.

Ints Kalnins/Reuters

The election campaign has been dominated by questions of national identity and security concerns

VILNIUS, Lithuania – Latvians will vote in parliamentary elections on Saturday, October 1, with polls predicting that Prime Minister Krisjanis Karins’s center-right New Unity party will win the most votes, enabling him to continue his coalition with the conservative National Alliance.

A victory for Karins could widen a growing rift between the Latvian majority and Latvia’s Russian-speaking minority over their place in society.

The first Latvian head of government to survive a full four-year term, Karins is benefitting from driving the country’s hawkish stance against Russia, its amid widespread national anger over Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.

The election campaign has been dominated by questions of national identity and security concerns, while urgent issues including soaring energy costs and high inflation were largely pushed aside.

Karins told Reuters on Tuesday he believes the war in Ukraine has consolidated his NATO and European Union nation of 1.9 million, and said that if re-elected, he would integrate the Russian minority – a quarter of population – by having the country educate its children in the Latvian language.

“We’re putting all of our focus on the youth, to make sure that regardless of what language is spoken at home, that the child grows up with all of the advantages of knowing our language, knowing our culture,” he said.

Before Moscow invaded Ukraine on February 24 in what it terms a “special military operation,” tens of thousands of Russian speakers in Latvia used to gather every May 9 around a monument in Riga to commemorate the Soviet victory in World War II.

Their gatherings were banned after the invasion and the 84-meter structure in the center of the capital was crushed with a bulldozer on orders from the government – which is dominated by ethnic Latvians and would prefer to bury the memories of being part of the former Soviet Union up to 1991.

Popular TV broadcasts from Russia have been banned and the state language board has proposed renaming a central Riga street commemorating Russian poet Alexander Pushkin. Karins’ government has put forward plans to switch all education to Latvian and to swiftly phase out instruction in Russian.

The social democrat Harmony party, traditionally backed by Latvia’s Russian-speaking minority, received 19.8% of votes in the 2018 elections and became the largest opposition party in parliament. However, the latest survey indicates 7.3% support for Harmony. – Rappler.com

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