|
|
Juhan PartsJuhan Parts (born 27 August 1966) is the Prime Minister of Estonia, and Chairman of the Res Publica party. Biography was born in the Estonian capital city Tallinn. Juhan Parts completed Gustav Adolf Grammar School in Tallinn (then Tallinn Secondary School No. 1). Afterwards, he studied law at the University of Tartu in Tartu, Estonia. After completing his university education, he instantly found a respectable position in the Ministry of Justice. He soon became known as a young, dynamic figure who wanted to push for reforms. Being an ally of Deputy Minister Mihkel Oviir, he was appointed Auditor General in spring 1998. He held this office until 2002. From this virtually unimpeachable office, unique in the Estonian Constitution, he frequently criticised the government and became somewhat of a popular figure in Estonian politics. Juhan Parts became chairman of a new party called Res Publica which he was instrumental in starting, an ideology-free, largely technocratic party which can be described as a economically liberal party of mostly under-30 administrators. Res Publica now is a member of the right-of-centre European People's Party organisation. In the Riigikogu (Estonian parliament) elections in 2003, he surprisingly gained a majority among the right-of-centre parties, and as a result, Parts was charged to form a new government coalition and become Prime Minister of Estonia. The new government took office on 10 April 2003. On 21 March 2005, Parts announced to the Riigikogu his intention to step down as Prime Minister effective 24 March, this after a vote of no confidence against Attorney General Ken-Marti Vaher had passed the Riigikogu. Vaher had established a quota system of how many civil servants had to be prosecuted every year (per county), which is seen as reminiscent of Stalinist purges by many Estonians, a measure that Parts had endorsed. External links Parts, Juhan Parts, Juhan
|
 |