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Rihards KOLS

Rihards KOLS

ECR (European Conservatives and Reformists)
Nacionālā apvienība "Visu Latvijai!" - "Tēvzemei un Brīvībai/LNNK"
Born 16 December 1984 in Riga

Political Group Memberships

Current ECR European Conservatives and Reformists
Jul 2024 – Feb 2026 (347 votes)

Group Alignment

How often this MEP votes with their political group majority.

87.4%
Loyalty Rate
298
loyal votes
43
rebellious votes
Aligned Independent

Rebel Subjects

Topics where this MEP most often breaks with their political group.

Enlargement of the Union 3 rebellious votes
Common foreign and security policy (CFSP) 3 rebellious votes
Emergency, food, humanitarian aid, aid to refugees, Emergency Aid Reserve 1 rebellious vote

Procedures

6 votes
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Written Explanations

Written explanations of vote submitted after plenary sessions.

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2 explanations
09 Oct 2025 Against
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Motion of censure on the Commission

The censure motion against Commission President von der Leyen was politically uncoordinated, lacked strategic backing and was always set to fail. It did not reflect the broader view of many in the ECR Group, nor of the Latvian delegation. While I have been critical of the Commission's direction on several fronts, including its inconsistent handling of security and migration, supporting this motion would have meant derailing ongoing work that is directly tied to Latvia’s and the Baltic region’s interests. Key Commissioners responsible for defence, external affairs and reducing EU‑level bureaucracy are advancing files critical for our region. Dismissing the entire Commission mid‑mandate would have frozen progress for months and shifted focus from delivery to internal political games. That is not a risk we can afford, not with war on our border and major legislative files in motion – from Ukraine support to defence industry investment. Had the motion succeeded, there was also no guarantee that the Baltics would retain influence in the next College. The stakes are too high for gamble‑based politics. Change must come through pressure, not paralysis. This motion offered no credible alternative, only disruption. That is why I voted against it.

17 Jul 2024 For
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Resolution on the need for the EU’s continuous support for Ukraine

My vote in support for the resolution was a part of the whole – of the European Parliament’s vote to reaffirm its stance and reveal the true colours of us all. Supporting Ukraine is not an act of charity. From Europeans opening their homes to the supply of arms, this is about our values. Ignoring this jeopardises our future, our democracy, and the values we hold dear. Russia’s war in the heart of Europe affects us all. We must triumph both on the ground in Ukraine and in the hearts and minds across our alliance. Russia’s ability to sustain a prolonged war, its disinformation campaigns, the cost-of-living crisis in Europe and upheavals across the globe threaten the support Ukraine desperately needs. Russia cannot prevail. The free world needs a strategy to end this. The key is in whether we will ‘support as long as it takes’ or ‘whatever it takes’ until Ukraine’s victory. From our different perspectives on how this should end, we need to harness our collective strength. Our commitment is to victory, not attrition; liberation, not a stalemate. This requires action, small and large, and maybe even a Casablanca conference of our own to decide how Russia shall be decisively defeated.