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Czech president asks election winner to form new government

The Czech Republic’s president has asked the leader of the winning coalition in last month’s parliamentary election to form a new government

Via AP news wire
Tuesday 09 November 2021 14:06 GMT
Czech Republic Election
Czech Republic Election (Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

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The Czech Republic’s president on Tuesday asked the leader of the winning coalition in last month’s parliamentary election to form a new government.

President Milos Zeman who is currently hospitalized, said in a statement that he approached Petr Fiala, the coalition’s candidate for the post of the prime minister, to lead negotiations with representatives of the parties elected to the lower house of Parliament in the Oct. 8-9 vote “with a goal to create a new government.”

Zeman asked Fiala to inform him about the results of the negotiations.

In the Czech Republic, the president usually selects the election winner to form a new government. If the candidate is successful in doing so, Zeman will swear him in as the prime minister and appoint his government.

Zeman’s announcement came a day after two coalitions that garnered a majority of votes in the election signed a power-sharing deal.

A three-party, liberal-conservative coalition known as Together, composed of the Civic Democratic Party, Christian Democrats and the TOP 09 party, led the election with a 27.8% share of the vote.

Together teamed up with a center-left liberal coalition made up of the Pirate Party and STAN — a group of mayors and independent candidates — which came in third place with 15.6% of votes.

The new partnership will hold 108 seats in the the 200-seat lower house of Parliament, relegating populist Prime Minister Andrej Babis and his centrist ANO (YES) movement to the opposition.

Babis narrowly lost the election with 27.1%.

The five parties in the potential governing coalition are closer to the European Union than Euroskeptic Babis. As part of their deal, the parties agreed to form an 18-member government.

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