The Jerusalem Post

Slovenia’s PM in close election race against environmen­talists

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LJUBLJANA (Reuters) – Slovenians went to polling stations on Sunday to vote in an election in which Prime Minister Janez Jansa hopes to shake off criticism of his record on democracy and media freedoms and win a fourth parliament­ary term.

But his center-right Slovenian Democratic Party faces a strong challenge from the environmen­talist Freedom Movement, that wants more investment in renewables and more transparen­cy in state institutio­ns.

“Today we are voting for change,” said Milena, 58, who cast a ballot in the capital Ljubljana. “We do not want these politician­s in power anymore. The last two years have been desperate in every way. We want new faces, we want normality and stability.”

A poll on Friday put the Freedom Movement on 27.7% and Jansa’s SDS on 24%.

Jansa, an admirer of former US President Donald Trump and an ally of nationalis­t Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, has clashed with Brussels over media freedoms and opponents accuse him of underminin­g democratic standards. Jansa denies the accusation­s. The 63-year-old populist has campaigned on promises to improve the economy and provide energy security in the small Alpine country of about two

million that is a member of the European Union and NATO.

Whoever wins will have to secure coalition partners to form a new government. The two main left-leaning parties have ruled out serving in a coalition led by the SDS.

Jansa, who served as prime minister from 2004 to 2008, from 2012 to 2013 and from 2020 until now, is a staunch advocate of EU enlargemen­t, including membership for Ukraine.

He was among the first EU leaders to visit Ukraine and show solidarity with Kyiv after Russia’s invasion on February 24, and has promised to reduce Slovenia’s reliance on Russian gas imports.

Jansa says he has managed the economy well and hopes to benefit from measures implemente­d to soften the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“These elections will decide how Slovenia will develop not only for the next four years, but for the next decade,” Jansa said after casting his vote in a rural area near the industrial town of Velenje.

The Freedom Movement is led by Robert Golob, a former executive of a state-owned energy company. It backs EU sanctions on Russia over the war in Ukraine but accuses Jansa of seeking to exploit the war for his own political benefit, a charge that Jansa dismisses.

 ?? (Borut Zivulovic/Reuters) ?? SLOVENIAN PRIME MINISTER Janez Jansa and his wife, Urska Bacovnik Jansa, vote in parliament­ary elections in Arnace, Slovenia, yesterday.
(Borut Zivulovic/Reuters) SLOVENIAN PRIME MINISTER Janez Jansa and his wife, Urska Bacovnik Jansa, vote in parliament­ary elections in Arnace, Slovenia, yesterday.

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