• About Us
  • DMCA Removal
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Advertising
  • Contact Us
Sunday, May 22, 2022
Politics69
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • POLITICS
  • USA
  • CANADA
  • UK
  • AUSTRALIA
  • WORLD
  • CoronaVirus
  • VIDEOS
  • News
  • POLITICS
  • USA
  • CANADA
  • UK
  • AUSTRALIA
  • WORLD
  • CoronaVirus
  • VIDEOS
No Result
View All Result
Politics69
No Result
View All Result

Home » WORLD » Pro-EU politicians hail defeat of Slovenia’s hard-right prime minister | international News

Pro-EU politicians hail defeat of Slovenia’s hard-right prime minister | international News

William by William
April 25, 2022
Reading Time: 4 mins read
3
SHARES
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
Advertisements

RELATED POSTS

In the firing zone: evictions begin in West Bank villages after court ruling | international News

Syria’s barrel bomb experts in Russia to help with potential Ukraine campaign | international News

YouTube removes more than 9,000 channels relating to Ukraine war | international News

Left and liberal pro-EU politicians have welcomed the defeat of Slovenia’s rightwing populist prime minister, Janez Janša, to a political insurgent who has pledged to restore “normality” to the central European nation.

Advertisements

With nearly all ballots counted, political newcomer Robert Golob gained nearly 35% of the vote for his Freedom Movement launched in January. He is expected to form a government with the support of smaller leftwing groups, ending the hard-right government led by Janša, who styled himself on Hungary’s autocratic leader, Viktor Orbán, and took nearly 24% of the vote.

Pro-EU politicians reacted with delight to Golob’s victory, which emerged as Emmanuel Macron beat his far-right rival, Marine Le Pen to take a second term as French president. “These results are a bloody nose for illiberals and a chance to make Europe stronger,” said Stéphane Séjourné, a Macron ally, who leads centrist MEPs in the European parliament. “The EU [and] Slovenia is better off without the rightwing populist Janez Janša, who attacked the free press [and] democratic institutions in Slovenia,” Séjourné said.

The leader of the Socialist group in the European parliament, Iratxe García Pérez, said Slovenians had “chosen change” and no longer wanted the “populist and authoritarian” Janša leadership. “The Freedom Movement now has the opportunity to usher in a new era with a centre-left government that fully supports EU values,” she wrote.

During Janša’s two-year government, Slovenia has experienced the sharpest democratic decline in eastern Europe and Central Asia, according to Freedom House. While the NGO noted that political rights and freedoms were “generally respected” it said Janša’s government had made “continued attempts to undermine the rule of law and democratic institutions, including the media and judiciary”.

Florian Bieber at the University of Graz said it was a positive result for the EU. “Janez Janša has been a very disruptive figure, not just in Slovenia” he said. “He encouraged the idea that he could export [Orbán’s] model of government to other countries and that has certainly been defeated in Slovenia and that is encouraging, so it suggests the limits of Orbán’s appeal.”

Nika Kovač, director of the 8 March Institute, an NGO that ran a voter mobilisation drive, said that on Monday “we woke up in a radically different Slovenia. It was a decision about which country we want to live in. I think people were voting not just for the party, but for the direction we need to go.”

Turnout reached 70% of the 1.7 million electorate, much higher than the 52% of the previous election in 2018.

Kovač said she had faced online abuse, including death threats and attacks on her appearance, from Janša supporters. The 8 March Institute that she leads is calling on the new government to pass an “omnibus law” that would repeal 11 decisions taken by the National Assembly during Janša’s term, including measures to safeguard the autonomy of police and bolster the rights of environmental campaigners in court proceedings.

Janša, leader of the Slovenian Democratic party, returned to power in March 2020, after two previous stints in office. He regained power when the previous centre-left prime minister resigned, saying he did not have enough votes to pass important legislation.

The rightwing populist, who used Twitter to launch ad-hominem attacks on journalists, soon ran into conflict with the EU. For much of 2021 his government withheld funds from the Slovenian Press Agency, resulting in the organisation losing 10% of its journalists. He criticised the judiciary and claimed without evidence that the constitutional court was responsible for coronavirus deaths, after judges ruled that his government’s Covid-19 legislation was incompatible with the constitution.

“He was pretending he was Orbán who has an outright majority, which he [Janša] never had, so in a certain way he was overplaying his hand,” said Bieber. The political scientist added that Janša remained within the margin of his previous electoral score, so “it’s not that he lost a lot”.

Janša was one of the first EU leaders to visit Kyiv after the outbreak of war, but this failed to help him at the polls, said Bieber. “There is a limit for populist nationalist conservative politics in Slovenia. That you can’t really win elections with that alone.”

During the campaign Golob promised to restore “normality” and billed the elections as a “referendum on democracy”. The former energy executive, who ran a company promoting solar power, is also calling for a green energy transition.

Analysts say it remains to be seen whether Golob can overcome the difficulties that have beset previous political startups on the centre-left, which have fizzled out amid infighting and organisational problems.

“The problem with these kind of parties is that they don’t have apparatus, they don’t have experience, they don’t have knowledge how to run governmental policies and this after a year or two could create a lot of tensions,” said political analyst Miha Kovač, who is the father of Nika Kovač. “There is a serious danger that Slovenia will become politically unstable in a year or two,” he said.

Meanwhile Janša, one of Slovenia’s longest-serving politicians, is expected to continue to lead his party. “He is irremovable, he is there for eternity,” said Miha Kovač. “He is the most experienced person in the Slovenian parliament. He will take a holiday now, I assume, and then he will wait for his chance to jump in when he sees the first sign of governmental coalition falling apart.”

  • Boris Johnson news – live: 500,000 EU citizens ‘in limbo’ awaiting decision over right to stay in UK
  • Grenoble approves wearing of burkini in public swimming pools | international News
  • Deal with Jacinda Ardern’s Labour party is proving toxic for New Zealand’s Greens | Morgan Godfery | international News

( Information from theguardian.com was used in this report. To Read More, click here )

Advertisements

Share1Tweet1
Previous Post

Three Children Missing After Falling Into Mississippi River | US News video

Next Post

$5 return for every dollar invested in R&D, universities say

William

William

Related Posts

WORLD

In the firing zone: evictions begin in West Bank villages after court ruling | international News

May 22, 2022
WORLD

Syria’s barrel bomb experts in Russia to help with potential Ukraine campaign | international News

May 22, 2022
WORLD

YouTube removes more than 9,000 channels relating to Ukraine war | international News

May 22, 2022
WORLD

Mexico’s migrant checks on buses and highways ruled racist and illegal | international News

May 22, 2022
WORLD

Australia’s rightwing government weaponised climate change – now it has faced its reckoning | international News

May 22, 2022
WORLD

Ukrainian man drives 3,700km to be reunited with parents and fiancee – who live just 10km away | international News

May 22, 2022
Next Post

$5 return for every dollar invested in R&D, universities say

Twitter board set to accept Elon Musk’s US$43B offer: sources

Popular News

  • Airlines could be grounded by pilot shortage after hundreds retire or change jobs | UK News

    224 shares
    Share 99 Tweet 52
  • Laura Kuenssberg’s replacement as BBC political editor ‘should be a Brexiteer’ | UK News

    36 shares
    Share 14 Tweet 9
  • N.B. ER doctor sets up volunteer drive-thru COVID-19 testing site in Dieppe | Covid19 News

    35 shares
    Share 14 Tweet 9
  • Marine officer whose videos blasted Milley, other leaders faces court martial | Politics

    32 shares
    Share 13 Tweet 8
  • Longtime owner of well-known White Rock restaurant dies from COVID-19 | Covid19 News

    29 shares
    Share 12 Tweet 7
  • New Brunswick to provide COVID-19 update Wednesday | Covid19 News

    26 shares
    Share 10 Tweet 7
  • All but 50 cars sold in bittersweet ‘Rust Valley Restorers’ auction

    21 shares
    Share 8 Tweet 5
  • Another 17 COVID-19 cases reported in Waterloo on Tuesday | Covid19 News

    20 shares
    Share 8 Tweet 5
  • Pupils could lose out on face-to-face lessons if they don’t get vaccinated, warn ministers | UK News

    25 shares
    Share 13 Tweet 5
  • Declared COVID-19 outbreaks in Saskatchewan | Covid19 News

    19 shares
    Share 8 Tweet 5
  • About Us
  • DMCA Removal
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Advertising
  • Subscription
Contact Us

© 2021 Political69 - gets you smarter, faster with political news & information that matters.

No Result
View All Result
  • Politics News
  • POLITICS
  • USA
  • CANADA
  • UK
  • AUSTRALIA
  • WORLD
  • CoronaVirus
  • VIDEOS
  • DMCA Removal
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Contact Us

© 2021 Political69 - gets you smarter, faster with political news & information that matters.