By Months: Eerik-Niiles Kross

Total Months: 5

Fully Profiled: 5

11.2024

58 Speeches

The most crucial issue is the restriction of voting rights in local government elections by implementing a citizenship requirement (a citizenship census) to exclude citizens of aggressor states (primarily Russia). The political stance is strongly in favor, justifying it with the necessity of restoring "legal peace" within society and protecting Estonian democracy and security given the altered global circumstances. This constitutes a value- and security-based framework that nullifies the constitutional consensus established in 1992.
09.2024

2 Speeches

The political position centers on the lack of control over the system or device, highlighting its autonomous and undesirable operation. This is essentially a performance-based critique concerning an operational failure. The speaker takes a firm stance that control must be re-established.
06.2024

16 Speeches

A strongly value-based foreign policy stance, demanding the non-recognition of the Putin regime in Russia and strict sanctions against the Georgian government for its departure from democracy. It stresses that Georgia has chosen neutrality that leans toward Russia, making the freezing of aid and the suspension of visa-free travel necessary. The political position is strong and urgent, underscoring that diplomacy has failed and escalation is required.
05.2024

1 Speeches

The political position focuses on strong opposition to the institutional activities of the Moscow Patriarchate Orthodox Church (MPOC), which promotes aggression and questions state borders. The speaker calls on the Riigikogu to provide a political assessment of the MPOC, emphasizing that the *Russki Mir* ideology is more radical and exists in symbiosis with the Kremlin's strategic documents. The political framework is value-based and security-oriented, treating the ideology as a direct threat.
02.2024

3 Speeches

The political position is very strong and deeply rooted in values, focusing on the condemnation of Russia’s war crimes, particularly the forced deportation and cultural assimilation of Ukrainian children. The speaker emphatically stresses that these actions constitute genocide and a violation of international law, drawing historical parallels with the March Deportations in Estonia. The political focus is directed toward exposing human rights violations and upholding international law.