Perling said that the situation in Tallinn is complicated. 60% of the votes went to left-wing parties. "The Center Party and the Social Democrats got 60% of the votes together. We must be the leading force for right-wing policies," he said.
Perling believed that right-wing politics cannot be done with the Center Party. However, there is hope with the Reform Party, Isamaa, and the Social Democrats. "There is a theoretical possibility. Whether it succeeds depends on the negotiations," he said.
The Social Democrats will not become right-wing, said the host. Perling responded: "We know what a coalition means. We have principles that we want to implement. We are not building socialism and want to change old things."
Perling said that the party has not yet set clear boundaries. It is not yet meaningful to discuss the content of the coalition agreement because the talks have not started.
On Wednesday, the right-wing met with Isamaa. Perling said they did not get any specific information. "We talked about their relationship with the Social Democrats. They said they have common points. This makes us think," he added.
Perling noted that the parties promised quick action. But now they cannot start coalition talks.
The host asked Perling about the Center Party. Perling said that the Center Party's sole rule is not good. But he recalled that the voters gave them the power.
Perling called labeling the Center Party hypocritical. "It is not right to divide parties into Estonian-friendly and Russian-friendly. All these parties have been in power with the Center Party," he said.