Slovakia Split Over Ukraine in Presidential Vote

A woman with two children leaves Ukraine after crossing the border into Slovakia, February 25, 2022. Photo: Peter Lazar/AFP

Slovakia will hold a presidential election this month that could either temper or harden the NATO and EU member’s views on Ukraine, whose sovereignty it has questioned.

Pollsters suggest the March 23 ballot will result in a showdown between an ally of the Russia-friendly prime minister and a liberal diplomat.

The frontrunners among the 11 contenders are Peter Pellegrini, a former prime minister and current speaker of parliament, and ex-foreign minister Ivan Korcok.

Pellegrini won the backing of Prime Minister Robert Fico, who has refused to provide military aid to Ukraine, questioned its sovereignty, and called for peace with Russia. 

Korcok is staunchly pro-Ukraine and holds similar views to outgoing President Zuzana Caputova, a vocal government critic who chose not to run for a second term.

“In the event of Pellegrini’s victory, we may expect a further deepening of the current government position and current narratives,” said Michal Mislovic, a political analyst at the Median polling agency.

“If Korcok wins, we can at least expect that he will be a counterweight to the government and parliament in this regard,” Mislovic told AFP.

Divisions Over Ukraine

Though the office is largely ceremonial, the president ratifies international treaties, appoints top judges including the Supreme Court chief justice, and is the commander-in-chief of the armed forces.

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

Pollsters expect a tight race. The latest Focus agency survey showed that Pellegrini would take 35 percent of the vote, while Korcok would receive 34.

This would send them to a run-off on April 6, as a second round is held when no candidate receives more than 50 percent of the ballot.

The war in Ukraine, which began with Russia’s invasion in February 2022, has been a fixture of the electoral campaign in this country of 5.4 million. 

“It is a topic that divides the adult population of Slovakia to a large extent,” Mislovic said.

Pellegrini also acknowledged that.

“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,” he said.

“I belong to the latter,” Pellegrini told AFP.

‘Schizophrenic Approach’

The 48-year-old is the chairman of Hlas-SD, a junior member of the government coalition led by Fico’s Smer-SD that also includes the small nationalist SNS party.

Analyst Radoslav Stefancik said Pellegrini tended to echo the government’s position on Ukraine.

“The government takes a schizophrenic approach…. On the one hand, it sends verbal signals that it is sympathetic toward the Russian government. On the other hand, it supports the actions of the European Union and NATO in relation to Russia,” said the analyst from the University of Economics in Bratislava.

Korcok, 59, is squarely in the pro-Ukraine camp. 

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

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

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

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

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