Latest Estonia News
news | ERR
Union head: Teachers demand minimum salary set at €2,300
The Estonian Education Personnel Union (EHL) will demand during teachers' salary negotiations that the government fulfill its pre-election promises by raising teachers' minimum salary to 120 percent of the national average.
news | ERR
Estonian parliament now has more unaffiliated MPs than at any point this century
Varro Vooglaid's recent exit from the EKRE group means that the Riigikogu now has more unaffiliated or independent MPs than at any time before in the 21st century.
Politics | ERR
Estonian parliament now has more unaffiliated MPs than at any point this century
Varro Vooglaid's recent exit from the EKRE group means that the Riigikogu now has more unaffiliated or independent MPs than at any time before in the 21st century.
Politics | ERR
EKRE MP on alleged row with Varro Vooglaid: It is pure fiction
EKRE MP Rene Kokk refuted claims according to which whether he will run for the party again in 2027 is somehow connected to the fate of Varro Vooglaid.
Society | ERR
Union head: Teachers demand minimum salary set at €2,300
The Estonian Education Personnel Union (EHL) will demand during teachers' salary negotiations that the government fulfill its pre-election promises by raising teachers' minimum salary to 120 percent of the national average.
Society | ERR
Microchipping dogs and cats made mandatory in Estonia
The government has approved new pet identification rules requiring dogs and cats to be microchipped and recorded in a nationwide registry.
Postimees
Kreeka andis eestlasele tagasi soovi näha homset päeva
Aldo Maksimov usub, et kaheksa aasta tagune otsus Kreekasse kolida päästis ta elu. Nüüdseks on Samose saarele tekkinud juba väike Eesti kommuun ning see pole ainus taoline kogukond ei Kreekas ega maailmas.
Postimees
OTSEÜLEKANNE ⟩ Jäähoki MM: Kas tiitlikaitsja USA suudab viimasel kolmandikul Šveitsi vastu kaotusseisust välja tulla?
89. meeste jäähoki maailmameistrivõistluste avapäeva lõpetab A-alagrupi kohtumine tänavuse olümpiavõitja ja mullust MM-tiitlit kaitsva USA ning turniiri võõrustava Šveitsi vahel. Duo 5 ja Postimees alustavad otseülekandega kell 21.05.
BBC News
Prisoner swap goes ahead as Kyiv mourns 24 killed in Russian strike on flats
Among the victims in Kyiv was 12-year-old Lyubava Yakovleva, whose father was killed during the war.
BBC News
Boy, 15, shot dead in France as prosecutors blame drug war
Prosecutors in Nantes say the shooting was drug-related, but the victim's aunt says he was not involved.
BBC News
UK borrowing costs rise and pound falls as leadership drama continues
Analysts say the moves have been fuelled by concerns a Burnham-led government would increase government borrowing.
BBC News
British Gas pays £20m over prepayment meter force-fitting scandal
The regulator say the energy supplier breached licence conditions aimed at protecting customers in vulnerable situations.
POLITICO
Labour tries to unite — so Farage can’t wreck their leadership fight
LONDON — Labour’s warring factions can at least agree on one thing: Nigel Farage risks throwing their plans to topple Keir Starmer into disarray. Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham looks to have emerged from an bitter internecine battle this week as the best contender to dislodge the deeply unpopular Labour prime minister from office. But to challenge the PM he must first win a by-election in northwest England that promises to be a political circus like no other. Farage has vowed to “throw absolutely everything” at the battle to win Makerfield, which is expected next month. There’s good reason to think his surging Reform UK party could win. Farage’s poll-topping band effectively deployed a “Vote Reform. Get Starmer Out” slogan to triumph at recent local elections. “You can’t really use that line in a campaign where the Labour candidate is objectively doing that in a much neater way,” said one MP in the region, who was granted anonymity to discuss sensitive party matters. This will be a case of “Vote Burnham. Potentially Get Starmer Out,” whether the Labour campaign can explicitly say it or not. Even Labour’s rival camps are preparing to put their differences behind them to get Burnham into the Commons so a fair contest can be held. Wes Streeting, whose resignation as health secretary accelerated the leadership contest, spoke to Burnham after quitting on Thursday in what amounted to a ceasefire offering. The centrist candidate for the leadership even offered to campaign for him in Makerfield, one of Streeting’s allies told POLITICO. His team insisted no deal was cut and Streeting would certainly challenge Burnham for the Labour top job regardless. “Wes will be a candidate in the forthcoming contest,” the ally added. Lucy Powell, the Labour deputy leader who’s a close friend of Burnham’s and is preparing to take on a senior role in the by-election campaign, used a union speech on Friday to stress that Streeting as well as the third possible major contender Angela Rayner will be “key players” in the party’s future. In move that could be as much of a sign of his diminished authority as it is a peace offering, Downing Street indicated Starmer won’t seek to block Burnham’s candidacy. He tried that before, in the Gorton and Denton by-election, and the Greens and Reform kicked Labour into third place, ending decades of dominance in the Manchester suburb. Why Farage is a threat The Makerfield constituency of Wigan suburbs and former mining towns was once safe Labour territory. But last week Labour lost all 22 seats it was defending on Wigan Council to Reform. Reform is some nine points ahead of Labour in the national polls — and the psephologists all reckon Farage’s candidate would win it with anyone but Burnham as the contender. The local election results in Wigan would suggest, at least, that the Greens sapping votes from Labour’s left shouldn’t be a major factor in this race. But one Green party official insisted they had focused their efforts elsewhere in the locals and that they will direct a “big activist base in the area” to fight the by-election that Burnham is trying to win. The Labour campaign is already trying to paint the whole thing as a “straight fight between Labour and Reform” — a pitch voters weren’t buying when they opted to go Green in Gorton and Denton. But Makerfield is a far less ethnically diverse constituency. It’s about as old-school a working class Labour heartland as you can get. Burnham is a different breed of candidate too. The former cabinet minister who quit Westminster for the mayoralty in 2017 earned his “King of the North” nickname by successfully sparring with Boris Johnson during the Covid pandemic. “Some estimates of his personal vote suggest he could have added up to 20 points or so to Labour’s vote share in Gorton and Denton, and 5 points on top of Labour vote intention nationwide,” as YouGov analyst Patrick English put it. “He’d need every bit of that personal boost to hold off Reform in Makerfield.” Farage’s team are vowing to throw money, activists and major national attention at the contest — and they’re planning for the leader to spend a lot of time on the ground in the campaign. “I struggle to see locals thinking voting Labour gets Starmer out,” said one of Farage’s advisers. There is early evidence though that the message will get across. The Social Market Foundation has been examining online notice boards as part of research into misinformation — and its analysts have already been picking up on conversations in Makerfield groups about how they’re potentially electing the next prime minister. There will be other distractions too. This is a by-election forced by the resignation of Josh Simons, who was only elected in Makerfield in 2024. He has made no secret of the fact he acted to clear the way for a Burnham leadership pitch. But those who know Simons have all been asking what kind of deal he has cut. That question, as well as why Simons quit on his constituents, will be a feature of the campaign. Danny Fletcher, a Wigan councillor spared by his seat not being contested in the latest elections, praised Burnham’s name recognition and local connections, having grown up in the region. But he warned the contest “shouldn’t be about a constituency being a pawn in someone’s career, no matter who that is.” If Burnham wins, then it’s off to the Commons to be in place to challenge Starmer, perhaps as soon as this summer. But if he fails to beat Reform — then what? The man thought of as Labour’s most viable challenger will remain in the wilderness. Starmer will still be governing a parliamentary party that wants rid of him. The internal war that would inevitably ensue would be even more chaotic and bitter than it is now — and potentially dash Labour’s hope of ever being able to prevent Farage himself becoming prime minister. Noah Keate and Esther Webber contributed reporting.
POLITICO
Starmer drama has UK markets reliving their Truss nightmare
LONDON — Just as its Conservative predecessors did before it, Britain’s Labour government risks driving the U.K.’s economy into a ditch with an internal party fight over the steering wheel. The pound has had its worst run against the dollar in 18 months, the stock market has slumped and the government’s borrowing costs have hit multi-year highs this week as Labour’s top brass turned on one another in response to a disastrous showing at nationwide elections last week. Unless it can restore order quickly, that’s going to translate into higher interest rates for businesses, higher credit card bills and mortgages, as well as a fresh cost-of-living squeeze as the prices for essential imports such as food and energy grind higher. That’s exactly the outcome Prime Minister Keir Starmer promised to avert when he won a landslide last year. The timing of the latest episode of British political dysfunction is — to put it mildly — inopportune. With no end to the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran in sight, global prices for oil, gas and several other key inputs for the economy are rising worldwide. Until March, markets had hoped for the Bank of England to cut interest rates twice this year. Today, they expect it to raise them at least twice in order to keep a lid on inflation. The willingness of global investors to take a punt on the U.K. is fading as a result. Marc Ostwald, a strategist with the brokerage company ADM ISI, told clients on Friday that markets expect whoever emerges as leader from the current scuffle to end up running a bigger deficit, and are consequently attaching bigger risk premiums to all U.K. assets. This, he said, is driven “in no small part” by memories of Liz Truss’s ill-fated Tory premiership. The kindness of strangers The U.K. is by no means alone in its woes, but as a country that — in the words of Canada’s Mark Carney (formerly Britain’s central banker) — depends on the kindness of strangers to fund big budget and current account deficits, it finds itself in a particularly difficult place right now. One phrase that has haunted markets all week has been a comment made last year by Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham — seen as the most likely challenger and successor to Starmer — that the country must “get beyond this thing of being in hock to the bond markets.” At the time, the comment was taken as fishing for support among more left-wing Labour MPs frustrated by Chancellor Rachel Reeves’s refusal to borrow more heavily, and as a signal of intent to throw off her shackles if ever Burnham got the chance. He tried to row back those comments at the start of the year, saying he was only complaining about previous governments, which had brought the U.K. to its current state. But some of his allies are sticking to the original, more radical interpretation. Paula Barker, the MP for Liverpool Wavertree, told Times Radio earlier this week that markets would “just have to fall into line.” Ultimately, it’s the government that needs to find nearly £2 billion a week to plug the gap between what it spends and what it takes in taxes. Global investors, who currently hold around one-third of all U.K. government debt, are under no obligation to keep lending to it. Moreover, said Fathom Consulting managing director Erik Britton, even Burnham’s row-back is problematic. “The U.K. is in hock to bond markets because it has borrowed from them,” Britton said on LinkedIn. “Asserting that we should not be ‘in hock’ is like asserting that you are intending to default. That’s just not a smart move for a potential PM.” Irrespective of the outcome of any leadership bid, investors appear dismayed by the latest iteration of a U.K. political pathology characterized by panicked and simplistic responses in the face of complex and hard-to-change economic realities: population aging, inequality, geopolitical fragmentation and environmental degradation. “Any new prime minister would be subject to the same constraints that the current government is facing,” Bill Papadakis, chief investment officer with private bank Lombard Odier, wrote in a note to clients. Papadakis noted that for all the drama of the last two years, Starmer’s government has succeeded in narrowing both the budget deficit and the current account deficit, and he argued that “a radical change in fiscal stance is neither immediate nor particularly likely.” Ostwald, too, thinks that markets may be making too much of the current upheaval, pointing to figures released earlier this week that showed the economy grew 0.6 percent in the first quarter — the fastest of any G7 economy. Even if that exaggerated the economy’s actual strength, he said, “there is a great deal more resilience in the economy than the media narrative conveys.” However, both acknowledged that even the best outcome will require months of drift until the leadership issue is settled at Labour’s annual conference in September, leaving the pound, gilts, and the FTSE all at the mercy of not just a party civil war, but trade and shooting wars too.
Al Jazeera – Breaking News, World News and Video from Al Jazeera
Pakistan’s Fatima Sana breaks world record for fastest 50 in women’s T20Is
Pakistan captain Sana scored 50 off 15 balls in a match-winning innings against Zimbabwe in Karachi.
Al Jazeera – Breaking News, World News and Video from Al Jazeera
Is the US dialling down its support for Taiwan?
Donald Trump does not commit to arms sale during China visit.
Europe | The Guardian
The week around the world in 20 pictures
Russian drone attacks on Kyiv, Israeli strikes in Lebanon, Trump in Beijing and a mural of Lamine Yamal – the past seven days as captured by the world’s leading photojournalists Continue reading...
Europe | The Guardian
UK joins European deal to send rejected asylum seekers to third-country hubs
All 46 Council of Europe members sign agreement ‘deplored’ by human rights organisationsThe UK and 45 other European countries have signed an agreement that explicitly endorses plans to send unwanted asylum seekers to third country hubs.A political declaration from the 46 members of the Council of Europe, the body that oversees the European convention on human rights (ECHR), said states had an “undeniable sovereign right” to control their borders. Continue reading...
Europe
Bond market freakout
The odds of a global inflation problem are rising. Bond markets are taking note
Europe
Crypto CFDs are here save the City, apparently
Panmure Liberum goes back to the future