By Plenary Sessions: Martin Helme

Total Sessions: 7

Fully Profiled: 7

2025-05-21
Fifteenth Riigikogu, Fifth Session, Plenary Session.
There is not enough data.
2025-05-21
15th Riigikogu, 5th sitting, information briefing.
Insufficient data.
2025-05-19
15th Riigikogu, Fifth Session, Plenary Session.
The social focus is on the negative consequences of immigration, including rising crime rates, housing shortages, and longer waiting lists for medical care. Emphasis is placed on the deterioration of the cultural environment and the threat to Estonian-language education, where Estonian children have become a minority in their own schools. The only acceptable form of migration is the return migration of Estonians.
2025-05-14
15th Riigikogu, 5th sitting, plenary session
In the social sector, the speaker strongly defends the freedoms of civil society, religious associations, and NGOs against constitutional infringement. He/She sharply opposes trans ideology and gender quotas, claiming that this systematically harms women's rights and promotes a "parade of freaks" in councils.
2025-05-12
15th Riigikogu, 5th session, plenary sitting.
In social issues, the speaker is extremely conservative, strongly opposing LGBTQ+ topics, referring to them as "homo law" and "trans ideology." Emphasis is placed on the need to preserve "normality" and adhere to strict rules regarding gender transition procedures. Gender dysphoria is ironically referred to as a "modern brain disease."
2025-05-07
15th Riigikogu, 5th session, plenary sitting
Social issues are not the focus of the speeches; they are mentioned only as examples of "noise" created by the government (e.g., parental benefits for grandparents, euthanasia), which is intended to distract attention from crucial economic and security problems. Strong opposition is aimed at taxing pensions starting from the very first euro, which is considered an attack on pensioners.
2025-05-07
15th Riigikogu, 5th sitting, information briefing
The central social theme is immigration and its impact on the survival of the nation-state, stressing that the influx of foreigners and the emigration of Estonians are both linked to low wages. A strong position is to send the over 10,000 Ukrainian deserters currently residing in Estonia back to fight, rather than sending Estonian men.