By Months: Mart Maastik

Total Months: 19

Fully Profiled: 19

10.2025

13 Speeches

Economic views are focused on opposing new taxes (such as the car tax), especially when they introduce additional costs (like a registration fee) and lead to the deterioration of the vehicle fleet's condition. The speaker criticizes the government's assertion that the tax has generated revenue. Furthermore, they support maintaining social benefits, specifically opposing the plan to reduce child allowances.
09.2025

17 Speeches

Economic perspectives stress fiscal discipline and austerity, strongly opposing new taxes (like the Car Tax) and the chaos in state finances. The speaker criticizes the obstruction of "reckless money injection" and demands that entrepreneurs and experts be consulted before foolish investments are made. Stability and certainty in the business environment are prioritized.
06.2025

28 Speeches

Their economic views are strongly fiscally conservative: they demand a drastic reduction in state administrative costs and oppose tax increases, which they argue would lead to an economic crash. They favor a free market economy and oppose subsidization (especially in the energy sector), emphasizing that it destroys competitiveness. He/She criticizes the growth of labor costs in the supplementary budget and supports Isamaa's proposal to cut state expenditures by 300 million euros.
05.2025

35 Speeches

Economic views are strongly market-oriented and anti-regulatory. They oppose the introduction of new taxes (e.g., the island service fee) and bureaucracy (sustainability reports), arguing that these kill competitiveness and increase consumer costs. They prioritize low and competitive electricity prices and criticize a subsidy-based energy future, which makes Estonian electricity the most expensive in Europe.
04.2025

42 Speeches

It supports the principles of the market economy and opposes state intervention in private enterprise, particularly via gender quotas, stressing the primary objective of profit generation. It warns that high energy costs and the inflated price of CO2 quotas will destroy the Estonian economy and its competitiveness. It supports a bank levy aimed at taxing windfall profits and opposes the automatic 10% annual increase in land tax.
03.2025

16 Speeches

Economic views are strongly pro-market, opposing any subsidy schemes that distort competition within the renewable energy sector. There is an emphasis on fiscal responsibility, and the wasting of state funds is criticized, while simultaneously supporting the interests of entrepreneurs by reducing bureaucracy (e.g., eliminating the mandatory requirement for sustainability reports). The preference is for cheap, dispatchable energy (oil shale, biomass) priced at market rates.
02.2025

25 Speeches

The speaker is a strong proponent of the market economy and competition, taking a firm stand against state subsidies (2.6 billion euros allocated for offshore wind farms), which, they argue, distort the market and create unfair competition. They also criticize the tax increases (VAT, fuel excise duty, and the car tax) and the cuts to family benefits, asserting that these measures worsen the competitiveness of businesses and undermine the financial well-being of families.
01.2025

18 Speeches

It opposes new taxes (such as the car tax and security tax), viewing them as fleecing the public and ineffective, particularly the car tax, which fails to adequately differentiate between CO2 emissions. It demands the sensible use of state funds and the abandonment of economically unjustified projects (such as the offshore wind farm and continued subsidization of Nordica). It also criticizes the renewable energy subsidy system for creating unhealthy competition.
12.2024

35 Speeches

Economic policy focuses on restoring competitiveness, strongly opposing tax hikes and excessive regulation, which, for instance, caused the Ericsson investment to fall through. It supports using borrowed funds for infrastructure investments (the Hoover Dam), provided Euribor could be regulated at the national level. It strongly advocates reducing the burden on businesses by easing bureaucratic and auditing requirements. It criticizes the excessively high salaries and performance bonuses paid to state-owned enterprise executives, demanding accountability.
11.2024

43 Speeches

It strongly opposes raising taxes and excise duties (such as the alcohol excise tax and the massive tax hikes), especially during an economic recession, viewing this as short-sighted policy. It advocates for stimulating the economy and supporting entrepreneurship, criticizing regulations that impede business activity. It warns that costly green energy projects (offshore wind farms) and astronomical fixed tariffs will destroy Estonia's competitiveness.
10.2024

23 Speeches

His economic views are strongly opposed to tax increases (such as excise duties and the car tax), arguing that these measures reduce competitiveness and exacerbate the economic downturn. He criticizes government expenditure and large subsidies (specifically offshore wind farms), which he believes drive up input costs and undermine business capability. Furthermore, he sees no cost savings in the splitting of ministries.
09.2024

8 Speeches

His/Her economic views are centered on protecting competitiveness and opposing tax hikes, arguing that the elimination of the tax hump (maksuküür) would actually worsen the economic situation. He/She strongly criticizes subsidies and investments (billions of euros) which result in massive fixed charges on electricity bills, claiming the profits flow directly into the pockets of foreign companies. He/She emphasizes that investments must be managed wisely.
07.2024

5 Speeches

The speaker is vehemently opposed to tax hikes, seeing them as destructive to economic competitiveness and a repetition of the mistakes made in 2008. They suggest funding the necessary defense expenditures via a national defense loan, rather than through tax increases, citing Estonia's low debt burden. They stress the need to cut back on the costs of running the state and reduce services before raising taxes.
06.2024

28 Speeches

Strong opposition to tax increases (car tax, land tax), which are considered detrimental to the economy and damaging to competitiveness. Supports curbing state expenditures (government maintenance costs) and unreasonable election promises to avoid a budget deficit. Criticizes large, ill-conceived state investments (Rail Baltic, offshore wind farms, nuclear energy) that create significant long-term costs for taxpayers.
05.2024

24 Speeches

Economic views are strongly pro-business and anti-tax hikes, opposing the car tax and the mandated increase of land tax by local municipalities. The speaker criticizes the extraordinary profits of the banking sector and the government's inaction regarding compensation for damages caused by the failure of the Land Board’s system. They demand fair compensation for landowners facing restrictions and prefer cheaper, more pragmatic energy production methods (onshore wind farms) over expensive, subsidized offshore wind farms.
04.2024

30 Speeches

The speaker is strongly opposed to tax increases, arguing that they fail to stimulate the economy and instead force people to take out quick loans. He advocates ensuring the competitiveness of businesses in the energy market (maintaining the universal service with a price cap) and criticizes state intervention in the private enterprise sector (the credit register) and costly EU projects (the talent reserve).
03.2024

14 Speeches

The speaker opposes allowing banks to retain the extraordinary profit (driven by Euribor) and proposes, as a solution, directing this windfall to the Bank of Estonia to cover state expenditures (e.g., 10 million for teachers). They are against the government’s planned new taxes (car tax, sugar tax) and cuts to family benefits, arguing these measures negatively affect ordinary citizens.
02.2024

28 Speeches

The party/group supports a low tax burden and the promotion of entrepreneurship, while opposing tax hikes that increase the overall burden and foster the shadow economy. It views cost reduction and economic growth—rather than tax increases—as the key to improving state finances. Furthermore, it supports taking out a dedicated loan for national defense, citing the corrosive effect of inflation, and stresses the decrease in purchasing power caused by taxation.
01.2024

12 Speeches

The speaker is decidedly pro-business, criticizing the government's "tax-the-rich" policy and calling for better competitive conditions for Estonian businesses (specifically hauliers) by standardizing daily allowances (per diems). He advocates channeling the revenue generated from CO2 quotas toward upgrading electricity networks to facilitate the green transition and the wider adoption of renewable energy.