The Guardian (USA)

Slovakia’s pro-Russia former PM Robert Fico invited to form coalition

- Jon Henley

Slovakia’s president has asked Robert Fico, a populist, pro-Russian threetime former prime minister who campaigned on a promise to end military aid to Ukraine, to try to form a coalition government after his party came top in weekend elections.

President Zuzana Čaputová stressed on Monday that the new government would have to be one “which will serve all citizens”, saying the coming days would be “a time of political negotiatio­n” not just between parties but between her and party leaders.

“The next few days will show which parties will be able to find a majority in parliament to support their coalition,” said Čaputová, a pro-western liberal who has a fraught relationsh­ip with Fico, whom she is suing for defamation.

Fico, whose Smer-SD party won nearly 23% of the vote and will have 42 seats in the 150-seat parliament, repeatedly attacked Čaputová during the election campaign, accusing her of being a puppet of the US and serving foreign interests.

The 59-year-old is expected to open negotiatio­ns with the moderate Hlas – a spin-off from Smer formed after Fico’s was forced to reign in 2018 amid mass protests over the murders of an investigat­ive journalist and his fiancee – which finished third on 15%.

The third member of the coalition is thought most likely to be the nationalis­t, pro-Russian Slovak National party (SNS), which scored 5.6% and with which he has previously governed. That grouping would have 79 seats in the 150-seat parliament.

Analysis have said the Christian Democrat KDH party could prove an addition – or even an alternativ­e – to SNS. The liberal pro-western Progressiv­e Slovakia party, which came

second on 18%, has said it will try to form a coalition if Fico fails.

Fico campaigned on pro-Moscow rhetoric that would shift Slovakia closer to Hungary in challengin­g the EU consensus on supporting Ukraine against Russia’s invasion – but Hlas, led by former Fico deputy Peter Pellegrini, would exert a moderating influence.

Fico reiterated on Sunday that he backed humanitari­an and reconstruc­tion aid for Ukraine but not sending more arms – although analysts have said this may have little impact since Slovakia’s stocks of spare weapons and ammunition are now low.

A Fico-led government would signal another turn away from political liberalism in central Europe, which could become more marked if Poland’s ruling conservati­ve nationalis­t Law & Justice party is reelected later this month.

However, Slovakia’s ballooning budget deficit means the new Bratislava government is likely to see continued EU funding as essential to its success, making Fico less likely to seek conflict with Brussels and the country’s EU partners.

Analysts have also noted that in his previous terms as prime minister, Fico always managed to reconcile populist, nationalis­t rhetoric at home with a more pragmatic, pro-western approach on the European and wider Nato stage.

 ?? Photograph: Vladimír Šimíček/AFP/Getty Images ?? President Zuzana Caputova invites Smer party leader Robert Fico to try to form a new government. She is also suing him for defamation.
Photograph: Vladimír Šimíček/AFP/Getty Images President Zuzana Caputova invites Smer party leader Robert Fico to try to form a new government. She is also suing him for defamation.

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