Glasgow Times

Opposition claims victory in Slovakia

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THE centre-right populist opposition has claimed victory in the parliament­ary election in Slovakia, ending the reign of the country’s long dominant but scandal-tainted leftist party.

According to nearly complete results released by the Statistics Office yesterday, the Ordinary People group captured 25% of the vote and 53 seats in the 150-seat parliament in a move that steered the country to the right.

“We will try to form the best government Slovakia’s ever had,” Ordinary People chairman Igor Matovic told a cheering crowd of 2000 supporters in a sports hall in his home town of Trnava, located north east of the capital.

The ruling leftist Smer-Social Democracy party led by former populist prime minister Robert Fico was in second with 18.3% or 38 seats.

Smer has been in power for most of the past 14 years, winning big in every election since 2006. It gained 28.3% in the last election in 2016 after campaignin­g on an antimigran­t ticket.

But the party was damaged by political turmoil following the 2018 murders of an investigat­ive journalist and his fiancee.

In what would be a further blow for Smer, its two current coalition partners, the ultra-nationalis­t Slovak National Party and a party of ethnic Hungarians looked like they would not win any seats.

Pro-western Matovic, 46, has made fighting corruption and attacking Fico the central tenet of his campaign. An anti-corruption drive has been in his party’s programme since he establishe­d it 10 years ago.

As the president traditiona­lly asks the election’s winner to try to form a government, he is the likeliest candidate for prime minister.

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