Veimer joined the
Communist Party of Estonia (EKP) in 1922, and was given a lifetime sentence of
forced labour in the
trial of the 149 in 1924. In May 1938, he was released in a general amnesty. After the
Soviet occupation of Estonia in the summer of 1940, Veimer was elected a deputy to and chairman of the so-called
People's Parliament in Estonia, which later became the
Supreme Soviet of the Estonian SSR. In 1941 Veimer was elected to the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Estonia, now renamed the Communist Party of Estonia (bolsheviks) (EK(b)P). The same year, he graduated from the department of economics at the
University of Tartu. In 1944–1951, Veimer was Chairman of the Council of Ministers (until 1946 Chairman of the Council of People's Commissars) of the Estonian SSR. After being removed from this position, he was appointed director of the Institute of Economics and Law of the
Academy of Sciences of the Estonian SSR. After the death of
Joseph Stalin, Veimer returned to political work: in 1957–1965 he was Chairman of the
Sovnarkhoz (Council of National Economy) of the Estonian SSR, and in 1965–1968 he was Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the Estonian SSR. He later served as President of the Academy of Sciences of the Estonian SSR in 1968–1973. ==References==