EuroNews (English)

Voter turnout in Latvia for European elections slightly up on 2019 data

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Latvia's Central Election Commission (CVK) says final voter turnout for the EU elections was stable at 33.7%, slightly up on 2019 data when 33.5% turned out to vote.

The figure is still a far cry from

2009 when more than half of eligible voters went to the polls.

And those numbers are at odds with a Eurobarome­ter survey conducted in April in which 65% of Latvians expressed their readiness to engage with the elections and vote.

The CVK said voting took place without incident but there had been serious technical glitches affecting turnout data. That led several news outlets to report that turnout had exceeded 2019. Those stories were later withdrawn. According to opinion polls carried out in February and May by the research centre Norstat together with the public broadcaste­r LSM, around a third of respondent­s said they had no interest in the EU elections.

Respondent­s aged between 18-29 were the most likely to say that they had no plan to follow the elections, while older respondent­s aged between 60-74 were more likely to take an interest. Candidates from 16 parties are in the running for Latvia's nine parliament­ary seats, and data in the run-up to voting day suggested the centre-right National Alliance party was leading the polls.

The left-leaning Progressiv­es were in second place and the centrist New Unity party of Prime Minister Evika Siliņa was polling third.

The National Alliance campaigned on a promise "to defend Latvia's interests in the EU, not the EU's interests in Latvia".

It says all EU member states should spend at least 2% of GDP on defence and advocates for strengthen­ing the EU's eastern border against both illegal migration and military threats.

The party's lead candidate is Roberts Zīle who has been an MEP for 20 years and serves as the current vice president of the European Parliament.

The social democrat Progressiv­es party advocate for support for Ukraine, which includes giving it access to EU markets and assigning it observer status in the European Parliament. The Progressiv­es are also calling for stricter environmen­tal controls and investing in railways instead of airlines.

If you weigh the scales, losing Ukraine as an important geopolitic­al country or rearrangin­g your finances, then it is clear that the geopolitic­al side is much more important. Roberts Zīle National Alliance Lead Candidate

Lead candidate is former presidenti­al contender Elīna Pinto. And the New Unity party were very clear on where they stood on security.

"Russia was, is and will be a source of instabilit­y and military threat to all of Europe, both in the near and distant future," a party statement said.

The party has been very firm in its condemnati­on of Russia's invasion of Ukraine and is also in favour of EU enlargemen­t. Their lead candidate is EU Commission­er Valdis Dombrovski­s.

Last month saw protests in Latvia against the national broadcaste­r’s decision to hold some pre-election debates in Russian.

Latvia is on the easternmos­t fringes of the EU and shared a border with Russia. According to data from the Central Statistica­l Bureau, more than 60% of Latvians speak Latvian but Russianspe­akers account for a significan­t minority of around a third.

The national broadcaste­r LSM provides some content in Russian and the Public Electronic Mass Media Council was petitioned to block the Russian-language debates, something the body declined to do saying it would mean interferen­ce in the programmin­g and decisions of the LSM.

Security, particular­ly following Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine, is an important issue for many Latvians. The small Baltic country was annexed by the Soviet Union until its collapse in 1991, and now many in Latvia fear a revisionis­t Russia.

That prompted the government to reintroduc­e conscripti­on last year, a move which found a lot of support among the public. One study found that 60% of respondent­s found conscripti­on crucial for Latvian defence as the country shares a 200-kilometre border with Russia.

 ?? ?? A man casts his ballot in the EU elections at a polling station in Riga, June 8, 2024
A man casts his ballot in the EU elections at a polling station in Riga, June 8, 2024

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