• Number of the week: 2.4%

    A party needs to surpass five percent of the popular vote to be elected to the Estonian parliament, but a threshold of two percent is enough to qualify for state funding. This is the proportion the pro-Russian Left Party achieved in elections this year, after a campaign by their candidate Aivo Peterson.

    The political figure became known for his trips to the Russian-occupied Donbass region and his blatantly pro-Kremlin rhetoric. It didn’t take long for Estonian authorities to discover that he has received instructions from Russia. 

    Peterson is now in jail awaiting trial, accused of treason. Despite this, the Left Party will continue to receive money from Estonian taxpayers.

    This article is part of the "Europe's empty war on sovereignty" edition
    1
    "France has been naive in its dealings with Moscow"
    2
    Number of the week: 2.4%
    3
    China hugs Serbia close
    4
    Hungary plays the sovereignty game
    5
    Poles choose Brussels over Moscow