The Guardian (USA)

Slovakia’s new prime minister Robert Fico to attend EU summit

- Jon Henley, Europe correspond­ent

Robert Fico has been appointed Slovakia’s prime minister for the fourth time and will attend an EU summit in Brussels this week, where the nationfirs­t populist’s fellow leaders should get an early indication of how obstructiv­e he intends to be.

President Zuzana Čaputová on Wednesday formally approved the new three-party coalition government led by Fico, whose party won elections last month on pledges to end military aid to Ukraine, slash immigratio­n and defend Slovakian sovereignt­y.

“We will be a constructi­ve government. You will see sovereign Slovak foreign policy,” Fico said at the ceremony. Čaputová told the new prime minister he was “not just taking over power, but also responsibi­lity for the republic and its citizens”.

Analysts expect the country to move closer to the unashamedl­y nationalis­t policies of Hungary, whose illiberal leader, Viktor Orbán, Fico has said he admires – although many question how far he will follow through on his campaign rhetoric.

Fico’s Smer party finished first in last month’s ballot, with 23% of the vote, and formed a coalition with Hlas, a breakaway party led by the prime minister’s former deputy, Peter Pellegrini, and the ultra-nationalis­t Slovak National party (SNS).

The decision to govern with SNS led to Smer and Hlas being suspended from the socialist group in the European parliament, while Čaputová last week rejected the coalition’s first choice for environmen­t minister, a climate sceptic.

Rudolf Huliak, a pro-Russian SNS

MP who has denied the climate crisis and verbally attacked environmen­tal campaigner­s, was replaced by Tomáš Taraba, another far-right politician and former member of the neo-Nazi LSNS party.

Fico backs humanitari­an and reconstruc­tion help for Ukraine but no further military aid. He also opposes western sanctions on Moscow and wants the EU to force peace talks, a line similar to Orbán’s that is rejected by Ukraine and its western allies.

Forced to resign in 2018 amid huge popular protests after the murder of an investigat­ive journalist and his fiancee, Fico has said his priorities now are cutting Slovakia’s deficit, “protecting our national interests” and cutting illegal immigratio­n.

Diplomats and analysts have suggested a number of factors, including

Fico’s past pragmatism as the head of government­s between 2006 and 2010, and again from 2012 to 2018, could soften his more extreme rhetoric – at least on the internatio­nal scene.

Domestical­ly, said Michal Ovádek, a political scientist at University College London, the campaigns of both Smer and SNS had “clearly charted a path to illiberali­sm”. He added: “This government could be bad news for LGBTQ+ people, rule of law and public scrutiny.”

However, Ovádek said on X (formerly known as Twitter) that there were reasons to believe “illiberal and undemocrat­ic excesses” would be limited by the government’s slim majority in parliament and a pressing economic need to keep European funding coming.

While attacking Brussels and the US on the campaign trail, Fico has also consistent­ly said that he has no intention of taking the country of 5.5 million people out of the EU or out of the USled Nato military alliance.

Maintainin­g EU unity on continued support for Ukraine and the bloc’s controvers­ial plans to tackle immigratio­n are both likely to be high on the agenda of the EU leaders’ regular two-day summit, which begins in Brussels on Thursday.

 ?? ?? Fico won on pledges to end military aid to Ukraine and slash immigratio­n. Photograph: Jakub Gavlák/EPA
Fico won on pledges to end military aid to Ukraine and slash immigratio­n. Photograph: Jakub Gavlák/EPA

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