Latvia seeks facelift for Facebook

Latvia’s face on Facebook is in the process of getting a facelift. And fans of Latvia still have a chance to vote on the new look, according to the Latvian Institute.

Up till now, the “official” page for Latvia has been facebook.com/LatvianInstitute. However, given that its stated mission is “promoting knowledge about Latvia,” the page is a bit dull and looks like so many other Facebook sites.

So the institute, which is essentially the public relations and brand marketing arm of the Latvian government, together with the State Chancellery organized a competion that drew interest from a number of designers. After a day of discussion about what the new Facebook page should contain, the designers submitted their concepts. Now five entries are the topic of a poll that so far has drawn more than 1,200 votes.

The five designs were submitted by Djigital; the #LVFacebook team of Aleksandrs Borovenskis, Arjan Tupan and Ruben Martinez; the advertising firm Leo Burnett Riga; Digibrand; and the team of Anastasia Zenčika, Jeļena Gaikeviča and Mihails Žuravļovs. Overviews and videos of their concepts are available on the Cabinet of Ministers’ website. Details on what Latvia is looking for in its Facebook page are available in a manifest (PDF, in Latvian).

One challenge for the Latvian Institute is getting Facebook to allow Latvia to use Latvia as its Facebook name. Confused? Right now, no page exists at the address facebook.com/latvia. The Latvian Institute is pushing Facebook to allow this, even offering to help set up guidelines for official “country pages” so that others might draw on Latvia’s experience, says Rihards Kalniņš, public relations specialist for the institute. He wrote about the issue in a recent post on the Latvian Institute’s blog.

(Out of curiosity, we checked a few country names on Facebook. France seems to have an inactive “official” page. Germany, Iceland, Estonia and Lithuania, like so many others, have nothing. Russia’s page belongs to some guy named Ahmed Ali, while Turkey’s is run by a woman named Pat in British Columbia who is passionate about the country. Yeah, guidelines might be a good idea.)

In the meantime, fans of Latvia have until Oct. 4 to vote for their favorite design. The poll is found on the Latvian Institute’s Facebook page, facebook.com/LatvianInstitute.

Facebook meeting

Zanda Šadre, press secretary for the Cabinet of Ministers, and Rihards Kalniņš, public relations specialist for the Latvian Institute, lead a recent discussion in Rīga about the new look of Latvia’s official Facebook page. (Photo courtesy of the State Chancellery)

Andris Straumanis is a special correspondent for and a co-founder of Latvians Online. From 2000–2012 he was editor of the website.

Zatlers wants Dombrovskis as PM in coalition with Unity, Harmony Centre

The Zatlers’ Reform Party (Zatlera Reformu partija, or ZRP) wants current Prime Minister Valdis Dombrovskis to form Latvia’s next government, which would be a three-party coalition that would include the center-left and pro-Russian Harmony Centre (Saskaņas centrs).

In a statement released early Oct. 1 in Rīga, the centrist and reform-minded party headed by former President Valdis Zatlers said that its closest ideological partner is Unity (Vienotība), of which Dombrovskis is a member. At the same time, according to the statement, ZRP says that in order to enact the reforms it stands for it needs a broad majority in the Saeima.

“The Latvian state is as strong as Latvia’s people are unified,” according to the statement from the party’s board of directors.

In the Sept. 17 special parliamentary election, Harmony Centre won 31 of the Saeima’s seats. ZRP took 22 and Unity got 20, according to provisional results reported by the Central Election Commission. Together the three parties will control 73 seats in the 11th Saeima.

Whether the coalition will come together as suggested may depend on if Harmony Centre is willing to accept ZRP’s conditions. In discussions with Harmony Centre, according to the ZRP statement, party officials have maintained that one condition is that the fact of Latvia’s occupation by the Soviet Union must be acknowledged. In the past, Harmony Centre officials have been reluctant to do so.

“Harmony Centre must free itself from the spectres of the Interfront and the Communist Party,” according to the ZRP statement, “just as other parties must free themselves of searching for the enemies within.”

Disputes between ethnic Latvians and ethnic Russians served the oligarchs who have robbed Latvia, the statement continued.

“Right now we have a unique opportunity to tear down the wall of ethnic distrust, to create a unified people who are the power in an independent Latvian state,” according to the statement.

The right-wing National Alliance (Nacionālā apvienība “Visu Latvijai!”-“Tēvzemei un Brīvībai/LNNK”) won 14 seats and has been in discussion with ZRP and Unity about joining the coalition. However, leaders of the National Alliance also have said they would not serve in a government that included Harmony Centre.

If ZRP and Unity were to form a coalition with the National Alliance, then their majority in the Saeima would be narrower—just 56 seats.

The Union of Greens and Farmers (Zaļo un Zemnieku savienība) held on to 13 seats in the special election. Tied to oligarch and Ventspils Mayor Aivars Lembergs, the party was among targets of ZRP. Zatlers has said his party would not serve in a coalition with the Greens and Farmers.

ZRP’s invitation to Dombrovskis to continue as the prime minister means the party has stepped back from its own prime ministerial candidate, Edmunds Sprūdžs. He likely would still get a ministerial post in the new government.

After meetings with represenatives of all parties in the new Saeima, President Andris Bērziņš on Sept. 29 told a press conference that if a coalition is not put together by the end of next week, he will take action. Under Latvia’s constitution, it is up to the president to invite a prime ministerial candidate to form a new government. Once the government is formed, the Saeima must confirm it.

The 11th Saeima, according to the constitution, must meet for the first time no later than a month after its election, in this case by Oct. 17.

Andris Straumanis is a special correspondent for and a co-founder of Latvians Online. From 2000–2012 he was editor of the website.

Legislation proposing dual citizenship may now have to wait for 11th Saeima

Iekšlietu ministrijas vēstule

A detailed, 14-page letter from the Ministry of Interior is among documents submitted by Sept. 1 suggesting improvements to proposed amendments to Latvia’s Citizenship Law. (Illustration by Latvians Online)

A proposal to renew dual citizenship in Latvia is among legislation that may fall by the wayside as the 10th Saeima wraps up its work in the wake of the Sept. 17 special parliamentary election.

Even though a special subcommittee was established to review the legislation, and even though several suggestions for improvement were received by the Sept. 1 deadline, the bill appears to stand little chance of making it to a final reading.

In that case, supporters of amending the Citizenship Law—including renewing the possibility for World War II exile Latvians and their descendants to claim dual citizenship—may have to wait for new proposals in the just-elected 11th Saeima.

MP Ilma Čepāne, a member of the Unity (Vienotība) party and chairperson of the Saeima’s Legal Affairs Committee, told Latvians Online in an email that former President Valdis Zatlers’ initiative to dismiss the 10th Saeima and the special election that followed make passage of amendments to the Citizenship Law unlikely.

“Unfortunately because of V. Zatlers’ Order No. 2 and the special Saeima elections, as well as the fact that the agenda for Saeima meetings is set by the president, I very much doubt the possibility that the bill could be accepted on its final, third, reading,” Čepāne said.

Until the 11th Saeima takes office, new President Andris Bērziņš is calling special meetings of the 10th Saeima. He has said that only items on which broad agreement has been reached will be put on the agenda.

The next special meeting of the 10th Saeima is Sept. 22. Amendments to the Citizenship Law are not on the agenda.

In April, the Saeima gave its support on first reading to bill No. 238/Lp10, one of three proposals that reached parliament in the spring. The Saeima also set up a subcommittee of the Legal Affairs Committee to review the legislation and set a Sept. 1 deadline for changes to be proposed.

The subcommittee received several proposed changes, including a detailed, 14-page single-spaced response from the Ministry of the Interior, which included a number of technical corrections.

According to the Saeima website, the last scheduled meeting of the subcommittee was June 1.

Andris Straumanis is a special correspondent for and a co-founder of Latvians Online. From 2000–2012 he was editor of the website.