Slovakia votes for president amid deep divisions over Ukraine

Candidates in the upcoming Slovakian Presidential elections (L-R) Patrik Dubovsky, Krisztian Forro, Stefan Harabin, Ivan Korcok, Marian Kotleba, Jan Kubis, Igor Matovic, Milan Nahlik, Peter Pellegrini and Robert Svec are pictured before the start of the debate on public broadcaster television RTVS in Bratislava, Slovakia, on March 20, 2024. – Slovaks will vote on March 23, 2024 in a presidential election seen as a race between the ruling populist government inclining toward Russia and a pro-Ukrainian candidate backed by the opposition. (Photo by TOMAS BENEDIKOVIC / AFP)

Slovaks head to poll today in the first round of a tight presidential election pitting the Moscow-leaning ruling camp against a pro-Kyiv candidate amid deep divisions in the country on the war in neighbouring Ukraine.


Parliament speaker Peter Pellegrini and liberal ex-foreign minister Ivan Korcok, who is backed by the opposition, are the clear frontrunners among nine contenders.

Though the office is largely ceremonial, Slovakia’s president ratifies international treaties, appoints top judges and is commander-in-chief of the armed forces.

The head of state can also veto laws passed by parliament.

Pellegrini is backed by populist Prime Minister Robert Fico, who has questioned Ukraine’s sovereignty amongst a list of inflammatory comments over Russia’s invasion.

Korcok is staunchly pro-Ukraine like outgoing president Zuzana Caputova, a government critic who chose not to seek a second term.


Latest opinion polls have suggested a tight race for the presidency of the NATO and EU member of 5.4 million people.

An Ipsos agency survey indicated that Pellegrini, a former prime minister, would garner 37 percent of the vote, while Korcok would bag 36 percent.

An April 6 runoff is likely as neither is expected to win over 50 percent in the first round. Polling closes at 2100 GMT on Saturday.


– ‘Fico 2.0’ –

Casting his ballot in the capital Bratislava, software engineer Tomas Gubala told AFP he voted for Korcok.

“Korcok is the only viable option as Pellegrini is basically a Fico 2.0,” he said.

Entrepreneur Roman Gejdos backed Pellegrini, calling him “for sure the best possible candidate”.

“I have full confidence in him. He has great experience in managing the country, compared with the other candidates,” he told AFP.


Analysts say a Fico-backed president could further cement the anti-Ukrainian foreign policy to resemble that of Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban.

“If Pellegrini wins, Slovakia could go the ‘Orban way’,” Tomas Koziak, a political analyst at the University of International Business ISM Slovakia, told AFP.

Hungary has become increasingly at odds with the European Union leadership, frequently criticised over rule of law issues and hampering the bloc’s efforts to help Ukraine.

Koziak said that the pro-Western Korcok would take an “uncompromising” stance on Russia.


– Divided over Ukraine –

The war in Ukraine since February 2022 has been an electoral campaign fixture that has split the country.

“The Slovak political scene is divided between those who are in favour of the continuation of the war at all costs, and those who demand the start of peace negotiations,” Pellegrini told AFP.


“I belong to the latter,” he said.

His long-time ally Fico has over the years appointed Pellegrini to various positions, including parliamentary speaker and education minister.

The 48-year-old became head of government after Fico was toppled as premier in 2018, following the killings of journalist Jan Kuciak and his fiancee.

The double murder sparked large rallies that forced Fico’s resignation as Kuciak had been working on links between the Italian mafia and Fico’s Smer-SD party.


– ‘Peace cannot mean capitulation’ –

Korcok is a diplomat who has represented Slovakia in the United States, Germany and Switzerland. The 59-year-old has criticised Fico’s calls to negotiate with Moscow.

“The Russian Federation has trampled on international law… I do not think Ukraine should give up part of its territory to achieve peace,” he told AFP.

“The first prerequisite for us to be able to talk about a peaceful solution to this war is that Russian missiles stop hitting Ukrainian schools and hospitals.”


In the final presidential debate, the two clashed over Ukraine, with Pellegrini urging “an immediate ceasefire and the opening of peace negotiations”.

“Peace cannot mean capitulation,” Korcok replied, adding that peace could come “immediately” on condition that Russian troops withdraw.

Though running as an independent, Korcok is backed by opposition parties who believe a Pellegrini win would pave the way for presidential pardons of government allies found guilty of corruption.

Other presidential contenders include pro-Kremlin former Supreme Court chief Stefan Harabin, far-right former lawmaker Marian Kotleba and anti-graft ex-premier Igor Matovic.

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