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Slovakia’s Fico loses majority amid extreme right gains

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Slovakia's leftist Prime Minister Robert Fico said Sunday he would begin difficult coalition talks after winning elections on an anti-refugee platform but losing his parliamentary majority.

Smaller parties, including the extreme right, scored first-time seats and a record total of eight parties reached the five percent threshold to enter parliament.

With 99 percent of votes counted, Fico's Smer-Social Democrats (Smer-SD) party had 49 seats, down sharply from his comfortable 83-seat majority in the 150 member parliament.

Having earlier dubbed the result a "big mishmash" of parties, Fico announced the start of coalition talks.

"Today we begin the first preliminary negotiations", he said, vowing to "try to assemble a meaningful and stable government."

"It isn't going to be easy. We'll have to do everything to rule out the likelihood of early elections."

Radoslav Prochazka  leader of the political party SIET casts his vote during the general elections i...
Radoslav Prochazka, leader of the political party SIET casts his vote during the general elections in Trnava, Slovakia, on March 5, 2016
Samuel Kubani, AFP

The liberal Freedom and Solidarity SaS came second with 21 seats, followed by the conservative OLANO-NOVA which took 19 seats. Its leader Igor Matovic told Slovakia's TASR news agency: "This is a big earthquake."

In the run-up to Saturday's vote, analysts did not rule out a repeat of Fico's hollow victory in 2010, when a gaggle of liberal centrists and moderate right-wingers teamed up to govern after he won, but failed to form a coalition.

SaS leader Richard Sulik on Sunday ruled out a coalition with Fico and signalled his willingness to try to form a government should Fico fail.

"We'll see if Smer-SD is able to form a government. If it is, all is done. If not, it's our turn," Sulik told journalists.

He added: "When it comes to forming the government, we only rule out cooperation with Smer-SD..."

- 'Fascists in parliament' -

Building a coalition "could take weeks, even months", political analyst Samuel Abraham told AFP, adding that for Fico to clinch his third term, he would likely "distance himself" from the far right and woo three or four centrist parties like SaS.

Demonstrators join an anti-immigration rally in September 2015  in Bratislava
Demonstrators join an anti-immigration rally in September 2015, in Bratislava
Samuel Kubani, AFP/File

The far-right Slovak National Party (SNS) made it back into parliament after a four-year absence with 15 seats.

The extreme right nationalist LS-Nase Slovensko (Our Slovakia) led by Marian Kotleba secured 14 seats to enter parliament for the first time.

"It will be a major disaster at the time when the Slovak Republic will preside over the European Union to have fascists in our parliament," Smer-SD MEP Monika Flasikova Benova said.

"Kotleba is a neo-Nazi... Fico used nationalist rhetoric regarding migrants and this strengthened the extreme right in Slovakia," Abraham added.

Another analyst, Abel Ravasz, said "Fico will need at least two to three partners to form a coalition and a government.

Slovakia's Prime Minister Robert Fico (L) talks to Slovakian police officers deployed in Macedo...
Slovakia's Prime Minister Robert Fico (L) talks to Slovakian police officers deployed in Macedonia during a visit to the border between Greece and Macedonia
Dimitar Dilkoff, AFP/File

"The opposition can only form a government if it can gather six centrist and right parties in an alliance".

Fico's strongly anti-refugee policies echo those of other hardliners in the EU's poorer ex-communist east, including Czech President Milos Zeman, Hungarian Premier Viktor Orban and Poland's Jaroslaw Kaczynski.

-- 'Vitriolic' poll campaign --

All have shunned refugees as Europe grapples with its worst migration crisis since World War II.

Fico vowed to "never bring even a single Muslim to Slovakia" and filed a lawsuit against an EU-wide plan to redistribute refugees across the bloc.

As Slovakia prepares to take over the EU presidency in July, Fico starkly warned that "we have reached the point when... Greece is likely to be sacrificed for the sake of Schengen", referring to the 26-nation passport-free travel zone.

Analyst Ravasz told AFP that Fico missed the mark with his unwavering anti-refugee drive as bread and butter issues like salary hikes for public sector workers came to the fore in the final days of the campaign.

"His favourite topic, the migrant issue lost a lot of momentum in the previous weeks and the new topical issues, namely the protests of teachers and health personnel, were not handled well by Fico."

Slovakia’s leftist Prime Minister Robert Fico said Sunday he would begin difficult coalition talks after winning elections on an anti-refugee platform but losing his parliamentary majority.

Smaller parties, including the extreme right, scored first-time seats and a record total of eight parties reached the five percent threshold to enter parliament.

With 99 percent of votes counted, Fico’s Smer-Social Democrats (Smer-SD) party had 49 seats, down sharply from his comfortable 83-seat majority in the 150 member parliament.

Having earlier dubbed the result a “big mishmash” of parties, Fico announced the start of coalition talks.

“Today we begin the first preliminary negotiations”, he said, vowing to “try to assemble a meaningful and stable government.”

“It isn’t going to be easy. We’ll have to do everything to rule out the likelihood of early elections.”

Radoslav Prochazka  leader of the political party SIET casts his vote during the general elections i...

Radoslav Prochazka, leader of the political party SIET casts his vote during the general elections in Trnava, Slovakia, on March 5, 2016
Samuel Kubani, AFP

The liberal Freedom and Solidarity SaS came second with 21 seats, followed by the conservative OLANO-NOVA which took 19 seats. Its leader Igor Matovic told Slovakia’s TASR news agency: “This is a big earthquake.”

In the run-up to Saturday’s vote, analysts did not rule out a repeat of Fico’s hollow victory in 2010, when a gaggle of liberal centrists and moderate right-wingers teamed up to govern after he won, but failed to form a coalition.

SaS leader Richard Sulik on Sunday ruled out a coalition with Fico and signalled his willingness to try to form a government should Fico fail.

“We’ll see if Smer-SD is able to form a government. If it is, all is done. If not, it’s our turn,” Sulik told journalists.

He added: “When it comes to forming the government, we only rule out cooperation with Smer-SD…”

– ‘Fascists in parliament’ –

Building a coalition “could take weeks, even months”, political analyst Samuel Abraham told AFP, adding that for Fico to clinch his third term, he would likely “distance himself” from the far right and woo three or four centrist parties like SaS.

Demonstrators join an anti-immigration rally in September 2015  in Bratislava

Demonstrators join an anti-immigration rally in September 2015, in Bratislava
Samuel Kubani, AFP/File

The far-right Slovak National Party (SNS) made it back into parliament after a four-year absence with 15 seats.

The extreme right nationalist LS-Nase Slovensko (Our Slovakia) led by Marian Kotleba secured 14 seats to enter parliament for the first time.

“It will be a major disaster at the time when the Slovak Republic will preside over the European Union to have fascists in our parliament,” Smer-SD MEP Monika Flasikova Benova said.

“Kotleba is a neo-Nazi… Fico used nationalist rhetoric regarding migrants and this strengthened the extreme right in Slovakia,” Abraham added.

Another analyst, Abel Ravasz, said “Fico will need at least two to three partners to form a coalition and a government.

Slovakia's Prime Minister Robert Fico (L) talks to Slovakian police officers deployed in Macedo...

Slovakia's Prime Minister Robert Fico (L) talks to Slovakian police officers deployed in Macedonia during a visit to the border between Greece and Macedonia
Dimitar Dilkoff, AFP/File

“The opposition can only form a government if it can gather six centrist and right parties in an alliance”.

Fico’s strongly anti-refugee policies echo those of other hardliners in the EU’s poorer ex-communist east, including Czech President Milos Zeman, Hungarian Premier Viktor Orban and Poland’s Jaroslaw Kaczynski.

— ‘Vitriolic’ poll campaign —

All have shunned refugees as Europe grapples with its worst migration crisis since World War II.

Fico vowed to “never bring even a single Muslim to Slovakia” and filed a lawsuit against an EU-wide plan to redistribute refugees across the bloc.

As Slovakia prepares to take over the EU presidency in July, Fico starkly warned that “we have reached the point when… Greece is likely to be sacrificed for the sake of Schengen”, referring to the 26-nation passport-free travel zone.

Analyst Ravasz told AFP that Fico missed the mark with his unwavering anti-refugee drive as bread and butter issues like salary hikes for public sector workers came to the fore in the final days of the campaign.

“His favourite topic, the migrant issue lost a lot of momentum in the previous weeks and the new topical issues, namely the protests of teachers and health personnel, were not handled well by Fico.”

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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