BusinessMirror

LGBTQ advocate to become Slovenia’s first woman president

- By Jan Bratanic

LAWYER and human rights advocate Natasa Pirc Musar won Slovenia’s presidenti­al election, defeating an ally of ousted nationalis­t leader Janez Jansa to become the European Union state’s first woman head of state.

Pirc Musar, who once served on the legal team of former US first lady Melania Trump, won 53.9% in Sunday’s runoff, according to almost complete results. Anze Logar, a conservati­ve former foreign minister who served in Jansa’s right-wing government, won 46.1 percent.

The victory extends the unbroken string of presidenti­al victories by left-leaning candidates that stretches back to the Balkan state’s formation in 1991. It will also help Prime Minister Robert Golob fulfill his vow to reverse sweeping changes made by Jansa’s government that were criticized for underminin­g democracy.

“I will work to protect human and constituti­onal rights, as well as democracy,” Pirc Musar said after declaring victory. “I will strive to be a president for everyone.”

While the presidenti­al post is largely ceremonial, the contest underscore­d the continuing battle in Europe between pro-eu political forces and parties that have challenged the bloc’s liberal, multicultu­ral values in an environmen­t of runaway inf lation and tensions over the war in Ukraine.

The next head of state in the country of 2.1 million has the potential to significan­tly influence the direction of the country by naming six new judges to the nine-member Constituti­onal Court. While candidates are subject to parliament­ary approval, any disagreeme­nt between the assembly and the president could block activity at the court.

The ballot represents a rebuke for Jansa, who was unseated in April elections. His opponents accused him of polarizing the former Yugoslav republic’s political environmen­t with vulgar attacks against opponents and the media and by underminin­g state institutio­ns including the courts, police, and public media.

“Jansa has lost another election,” said political analyst Alem Maksuti. Pirc Musar will be more vocal in giving Golob legitimacy in dismantlin­g changes made by Jansa, he said.

In her law practice, the 54-yearold Pirc Musar has worked as a staunch advocate for rights of the LGBTQ community. She also worked for Melania Trump, who was born in Slovenia and has citizenshi­p, on trademark issues and when she sued a tabloid in a libel case that was settled for an undisclose­d amount.

At the same time, she faced media scrutiny over her role in her husband’s business empire, which her opponents accused of using tax havens to build wealth. Both deny wrongdoing.

Logar, a long-time member of Jansa’s Slovenian Democratic Party, focused his campaign on distancing himself from the former prime minister’s political legacy, which included forging close ties with right-wing European leaders including Hungarian Premier Viktor Orban, and praise for Melania’s husband, Donald Trump.

While the president is commander-in-chief and proposes constituti­onal judges, central bank governors and high-ranking diplomats, the role has little executive power. Most decisions are ultimately made by the premier and his cabinet and approved by parliament.

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