A party headed by a pro-Kremlin figure came out top after securing more votes than expected in an election in Slovakia, preliminary results show, in what could pose a challenge to NATO and EU unity on Ukraine.

According to preliminary results released by Slovakia’s Statistical Office at 9 a.m. local time, Robert Fico’s populist SMER party won 22.9% of the vote.

Progressive Slovakia (PS), a liberal and pro-Ukrainian party won 17.9%.

Fico, a two-time former prime minister, now has a chance to regain the job but must first seek coalition partners as his party did not secure a big enough share of the vote to govern on its own.

  • Buffalox@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I cannot fathom how Slovakians arrive at the conclusion that sucking up to Russia is in any way in their best interest?

    I bet there’s a lot of Russian propaganda behind it, but how does reality not beat propaganda? It’s like a nation of 25+% anti-vaxxers!

    • drekly@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I’d imagine corruption in government plays a huge role. Seems to be a lot of it these days.

      • Hyperreality@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Which is why they just voted for a corrupt oligarch who may have ties to the maffia and who may be complicit in the murder of a journalist.

        As the Americans say, ‘Drain the Swamp’.

    • mea_rah@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I think it’s important to point out, that “winning elections” does not mean that the majority of Slovaks support them. They just won as a party with most votes. (23% so not even a quarter)

      They just won the mandate to form a government for which they’ll need at least two other parties to form a majority. The anti EU/NATO stance might be a problem here as it’s not universally shared among possible coalition partners.

      It is misleading to draw such a strong “Slovakia is pro-russian country” conclusion based on a single party getting the most votes, because many of the other parties that are at the very least silent if not outright pro-nato/eu with significant amount of the votes.

      Even comparison to Hungary is a huge stretch as Orbán’s party alone got more than 50% of the votes. As it is now, Smer has to form a coalition with other (in many ways more moderate) parties which is already not 100% given - it would not be the first time when the winning party ends up in opposition. And going forward they either avoid these friction points (so they end up acting more moderate) or they risk coalition breaking apart with early election or opposition forming government.

    • illi@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      It’s like a nation of 25+% anti-vaxxers!

      Well… yes, actually.

        • illi@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          Yeah, and covid helped them very much. Fico was seemingly on his way out but then covid happened, the current government was incompetent in many ways and people extremely irritaded by everything. Fico (among others) ramped up the propaganda and disinformtion campaign, told people what they wanted to hear and slingshoted himself back to popularity.

    • deleted@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I don’t think they’re mainly pro Russian.

      Maybe against NATO and US foreign policy.

      Nowadays non G7 countries need to pick a side. And most have seen what American interference did to other countries.

      For more information please visit: Iraq, Libya, Syria, Tunisia, and Afghanistan.

      • Hyperreality@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        The absurd thing about Iraq (and Syria) is that the countries complaining most about immigration from the middle-east - Poland, Hungary, the UK, Italy, the Czech Republic, Bulgaria, … - happily joined Bush’s war and arguably helped cause much of the last two decades of migration.

        It would have been far fairer that only countries that were part of the ‘coalition of the willing’ were forced to accept refugees from Iraq or Syria.

        Meanwhile countries like Germany, which warned against invading, got much of the blame of the inevitable wave of migration caused by an invasion they tried to prevent.

        Same thing with climate change. The bastards who prevented doing anything about it, are now complaining about all the migration it’s causing.

        Voters in some countries, seem to think only the guy who’s pissing on their leg, has the solution to ensuring their feet stay dry.

  • absquatulate@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    As usual CNN is making out of this a bigger deal than it actually is. These are slovak parliamentaries, so it’s not FPTP, therefore he didn’t “win” ( yet, anyway ). This seems to be just the social-democratic party’s growth from 19% in the last election to 23%, which would be in trend with growing conservative sentiment in europe. Besides, PS also grew from 8% to 18%, but that doesn’t generate as many clicks as “SLOVAKIA IS NOW PRO-RUSSIA!” so it’s barely a sidenote. Key takeaways are that they will have to seek coalition if they really want to pose a challenge to NATO policies.

  • NoiseColor@startrek.website
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    1 year ago

    Russian bots do a lot of damage. I see it in my own country Slovenia. All the biggest public forums are overrun by extreme pro Russian sentiment. Any reasonable debate is out of the question. It creates a bubble for radicalising people, especially young people that need a reason to rebel against the government, the west and EU.

      • NoiseColor@startrek.website
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        1 year ago

        Number one would be Luka Dončič. Second probably Slavoj Žižek. Tito was not Slovenian. Melanija unfortunately is.

        • Hyperreality@kbin.social
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          I don’t most people outside Slovenia have heard of Žižek. Dončič basketball fans, but otherwise no.

          So it’s probably Melania. Which I find kinda funny. Kinda like how Salt Bae is probably one of the most famous Turks on social media.

          Shit floats. LOL.

          • NoiseColor@startrek.website
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            1 year ago

            Maybe if you are thinking about Americans. Internationally people don’t care about Melania more than they do about Dončić.

            I don’t think Melania ranks top 5.

  • tanja
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    1 year ago

    Honestly, I don’t understand why this happens

    • SamsonSeinfelder@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      Old female demography. Mostly uneducated (only school, no further education), mostly russian TV watching groups eating up russian propaganda and misinformation about fear of EU, Immigrants and LGBT. You can pick any country in east europe from poland to the south balkan, the russian misinformation is very effective pandering the non-existing “great replacement”, a lie that russia is pushing that the EU want to replace the citiziens of each country with a different ethnicity. Why? Doesn’t matter, fear is not rational. At the same time russia is bringing young people from syria (a region they themself keep destabilized to create desperate masses to flee into Europe) to Moscovia with fake letters of free University Invites and then pack these people up in busses and brings them through Belarus to the outer borders of the EU countries to increase the stories, pictures and scenes of mass immigration to prop up the talking point of the far right in all these countries. It is very effective and people who only watch russian TV will never see the grand scheme and will vote hard right, against their own good.

  • sickpusy@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    Not a supporter of the war but just noticed that western media is covering this with a sprinkling of their own propaganda. Just read telegraph’s piece on this. They seem to think that nato’s expansion is normal and just fine. And they also seem to call the presence of Nazi groups in Ukraine Russian propaganda.

    There is clear propaganda war going on on both sides. Anti nato doesn’t neccesarily mean pro russia. A lot of western people don’t seem to be able to wrap their heads around this.

  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    1 year ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    A party headed by a pro-Kremlin figure came out top after securing more votes than expected in an election in Slovakia, preliminary results show, in what could pose a challenge to NATO and EU unity on Ukraine.

    According to preliminary results released by Slovakia’s Statistical Office at 9 a.m. local time, Robert Fico’s populist SMER party won 22.9% of the vote.

    Fico, a two-time former prime minister, now has a chance to regain the job but must first seek coalition partners as his party did not secure a big enough share of the vote to govern on its own.

    Slovakia, an eastern European nation of about 5.5 million people, was going to the polls to choose its fifth prime minister in four years after seeing a series of shaky coalition governments.

    If Poland’s governing Law and Justice party manages to win a third term in Polish parliamentary elections next month, this bloc of EU troublemakers could become even stronger.

    The campaign was marked by concerns over disinformation, with Věra Jourová, the European Commission’s top digital affairs official, saying in advance the vote would be a “test case” of how effective social media companies have been in countering Russian propaganda in Slovakia.


    The original article contains 942 words, the summary contains 201 words. Saved 79%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!