Bangkok Post

Finland’s presidenti­al poll heads to runoff

Stubb and Haavisto emerge as favourites

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HELSINKI: Favourites Alexander Stubb and Pekka Haavisto on Sunday qualified for the second round of Finland’s presidenti­al election, which took place against a backdrop of soured relations with neighbouri­ng Russia.

With all votes counted, conservati­ve former prime minister Stubb won 27.2% of votes, while ex-foreign minister Haavisto of the Green Party, running as an independen­t, secured 25.8%, said election officials.

Voter turnout was 71.5%. They will meet in the runoff election on Feb 11.

“No matter who I’d face in the second round, I know we’ll have a constructi­ve, civilised and good discussion about difficult foreign policy questions,” Mr Stubb had told public broadcaste­r Yle earlier.

While the president’s powers are limited, the head of state — who also acts as supreme commander of Finland’s armed forces — helps direct foreign policy in collaborat­ion with the government. That means that the changing geopolitic­al landscape in Europe will be the main concern for the winner.

“Experience in foreign policy could be what people were looking for, looking at the two who will go to the next round,” Hanna Ojanen, research director of politics at Tampere University, told AFP as the results became clear.

Heading into the vote, experts had thought far-right Finns Party candidate Jussi Halla-aho might make it to the second round. In the end, he came third with 19% of the vote.

Voter Hannu Kuusitie told AFP the country needed a president with “leadership” and “humanity”.

“Of course, he must also be tough when necessary,” he added.

Relations between Moscow and Helsinki deteriorat­ed following Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine, prompting Finland to drop decades of military non-alignment and join Nato in April 2023.

Russia, with which Finland shares a 1,340-kilometre border, swiftly warned of “countermea­sures”. By August 2023, Finland observed an influx of migrants entering through its eastern border without visas.

Helsinki claimed Moscow was pushing the migrants in a hybrid attack to destabilis­e it, and Finland closed the eastern border in November.

“We are in a situation now where Russia and especially Vladimir Putin is using humans as a weapon,” Mr Stubb said on Thursday evening during a final televised debate.

“It’s a migrant issue, it’s a ruthless, cynical measure. And in that case we have to put Finland’s security first.”

Mr Haavisto stressed that Finland had to “send Russia a very clear message that this can’t go on”.

In the post-Cold War period, Helsinki maintained good relations with Moscow.

Incumbent President Sauli Niinisto — who is stepping down after serving two six-year terms — once prided himself on his close ties with Russian President Vladimir Putin before becoming one of his most trenchant critics.

Against this backdrop, the presidenti­al candidates are championin­g both Finland’s independen­ce and its new role as a member of Nato, said Hanna Wass, vice dean at the Faculty of Social Science at the University of Helsinki.

“They all seem to have a strong idea emphasisin­g self-sufficienc­y,” she told AFP. Both candidates believed Finland should “also be an active contributo­r in building a shared European defence and Nordic cooperatio­n”, she added.

With such similar stances, the election will focus more on the candidates’ personalit­ies, according to Tuomas Forsberg, professor of foreign policy at the University of Tampere.

“This will be more about electing an individual, where you look at the person’s credibilit­y and reliabilit­y and perceived qualities as a leader of foreign policy,” he said.

 ?? AFP ?? Former foreign minister Pekka Haavisto and former prime minister Alexander Stubb take part in an the presidenti­al election night debate at the City Hall in Helsinki, Finland, on Sunday.
AFP Former foreign minister Pekka Haavisto and former prime minister Alexander Stubb take part in an the presidenti­al election night debate at the City Hall in Helsinki, Finland, on Sunday.
 ?? ?? Niinisto: Changed tune on Putin
Niinisto: Changed tune on Putin

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