Politics

16 Feb 2022, 12:11 PM

STA, 15 February - Trade unions representing workers in health and social care maintain they will go on strike on Wednesday, as talks with the government on their strike demands, including a pay rise, have failed to make any meaningful progress, the unions told the STA.

The trade unions announced the strike in late January, saying the government had failed to resume talks by the agreed deadline, and they insist on it after the latest round of talks with Health Ministry representatives, as they believe the government has failed to resolve the situation.

The negotiations were held behind closed doors for several hours. On top of the same pay rise that the government endorsed for doctors and dentists, the unions' demands also include an improvement in working conditions.

"Today, as has been the case since the strike was announced, the trade unions' side has been striving to reach an agreement that would prevent Wednesday's strike," Irena Ilešič Čujovič, the head of the union of health and social care staff, told the press after today's talks.

She said that the trade unions had made very valid and specific proposals, and that they had also tried to explain their arguments for the strike agreement to the government's negotiating team today.

The trade unions were expecting a counter-proposal from the government that would show it is interested in resolving their strike demands.

"However, we're sad to note that the government has not reached out when it comes to the very minimum demands that the (...) trade unions had, so no agreement has been reached, and tomorrow the announced strike in healthcare and social care will be carried out," she added.

The government did endorse the negotiating positions on the matter, but the unions have expressed their disappointment over them, and the situation was exacerbated by negotiations with doctors and dentists, with whom the government had agreed to raise their salaries by six pay grades, some even by seven.

At the end of today's negotiations, the trade unions and the government reached an agreement on ensuring a minimum working process during the strike to safeguard the health and lives of Slovenian citizens.

The strike will include the cancellation of all non-emergency health services and the closure of pharmacies between 10am and 4pm, with the exception of those on call.

Public broadcaster RTV Slovenija meanwhile reported that the doctors' and dentists' trade union Fides held a meeting today to discuss the developments.

Fides has recently criticised Health Minister Janez Poklukar for, it said, rushing to put out the fire with pre-election "candies" instead of specific solutions that he had the opportunity to implement, meaning a pay rise for doctors and dentists.

This came after the Constitutional Court last week stayed, pending its final decision, the implementation of a provision in the latest Covid relief law that would raise the pay ceiling in the single public sector wage system only to the benefit of doctors and dentists.

According to unofficial sources of RTV Slovenija, Fides is not in favour of announcing a strike, but will insist on doctors and dentists exiting the single pay system.

Ilešič Čujovič said that the talks had taken into account the new situation following the court's decision with the trade unions representing workers in health and social care requesting that the further negotiations be concluded by 4 March. In an agreement reached in November, this deadline was set for 24 April, when the general election is due.

"We think that three weeks should be enough time to diagnose the problems that we are all aware of," she added.

Health Minister Janez Poklukar said that he saw no reasons for the strike, as eventually the issue had been raised over the changing of deadlines in an agreement that had already been reached last year.

"If we make some agreements, then it is usually fair for all of us to stick to them," the minister said, while calling the strike announcement a "legitimate tool of the trade unions" and regretting the decision.

Poklukar also regretted that the starting points for talks had not been prepared in time, while noting that the starting points adopted at the end of January were a good basis for negotiations and provided for broad dialogue and seeking of consensus.

Labour Minister Janez Cigler Kralj, who is also in charge of social affairs, said that the strike was irresponsible and unjustified and that the government was still willing to talk.

He noted that last November, the government had agreed with representative social care trade unions for a wage increase of between two and four brackets, and added that investing in employees, infrastructure and long-term care programmes remained the ministry's priorities.

The Association of Social Institutions of Slovenia meanwhile expressed support for the strike demands, noting that the existing standards and norms were outdated, as they had not been changed for decades, and they no longer meet the needs of beneficiaries.

Responding to the planned strike, the UKC Ljubljana medical centre said that after two years of the coronavirus epidemic, it was not possible to delay medical treatment without detrimental consequences for patients.

Therefore, scheduled examinations, treatments and operations are not to be postponed at the country's largest hospital in the wake of the strike. The UKC Ljubljana management added, though, that it respected the right of employees to strike.

16 Feb 2022, 10:05 AM

STA, 15 February 2022 - Health experts outlined a gradual easing of measures against the Covid-19 epidemic at a consultation with the government on Tuesday, proposing the abolition of the Covid pass for shops, banks, post offices and administrative units, and the abolition of quarantines in case of high-risk contacts.

Health experts have proposed several ways to loosen the anti-epidemic measures, said Mateja Logar, head of the government's Covid-19 expert group, after the consultation on the current epidemiological situation.

As announced by Health Minister Janez Poklukar at a press conference after the meeting, the experts discussed the gradual phasing out of the recovered, vaccinated, tested (PCT) rule, testing and quarantines, among other things.

Logar said that the expert group would propose to the government to scrap the PCT rule for activities where the risk of transmission is relatively low due to short-term contacts - retail, administrative units, banks, post offices, petrol stations.

However, they propose to maintain the rule that sets out a maximum number of people inside such establishments at the same time, and it is still important to maintain general hygiene measures, as well as to keep remote work where possible, she added.

The experts stressed that it was still important to respect the basic principle of staying at home if a person is sick. They will also propose some changes to the operation of other sectors, such as catering, congress and trade fair activities.

In the catering sector, they will propose to abolish the PCT rule in outdoor areas, while maintaining the limit on the number of guests on terraces or gardens. Scrapping the PCT rule for the interior of pubs is not being considered for the time being.

Slovenia's chief epidemiologist Mario Fafangel said that experts also propose to end quarantines for high-risk contacts and to stop searching for high-risk contacts of an infected person.

Fafangel believes that contact searching "simply no longer produces the desired results". The responsibility for notifying people of high-risk contacts will now rest with the infected individuals themselves.

Epidemiologists also suggest that people who have had high-risk contacts within the same household should test themselves regularly for seven days from the date of contact.

Any changes are still to be decided on by the government, but minister Poklukar said that imposing mandatory quarantines in case of high-risk contacts could come to end as early as Friday.

"I will deliver all these recommendations to the government and I am confident that we can implement many of them relatively quickly in the next few days by amending the decrees currently in force," he added.

He also announced that free rapid testing will be phased out alongside the phasing out of the PCT rule, while Logar added that a PCR test will again become the norm to confirm infection in people with coronavirus symptoms.

Poklukar also stressed that protecting the most vulnerable people and the healthcare system itself remained the top priority, especially in light of the number of hospital beds occupied by patients with Covid-19, which is still relatively high.

However, given that the number of people that require hospitalisation is steadily dropping, hospitals anticipate that they could return to normal operation soon after 10 March, according to current projections.

Logar also said that the opinions and recommendations of the expert group have taken into account the characteristics of the omicron variant, as it can now be confirmed that it causes a slightly different and milder form of the disease.

Bojana Beović, the head of the national advisory committee on immunisation, believes that no new and more infectious variants than the omicron are expected to emerge, but added that the virus's future disease-causing capacities were still unclear.

15 Feb 2022, 11:30 AM

STA, 15 February 2022 - Cultural institutions and associations have addressed a letter to decision-makers to fully reopen cultural venues in Slovenia, and lift all coronavirus restrictions which govern organising and visiting cultural events by 21 February at the latest.

The appeal, which was among others sent to the president, government, parliament and political parties, was signed by 70 organisations, including most theatres and museums, several festivals and arts centres, as well as Kino Šiška and the GIZ KOS association of concert organisers.

Slovenia's culture and events sector have quickly adapted to provide for safe events, "but they cannot adapt to excessive measures which hamper or fully prevent a large segment of events which can be organised only without seats and distancing and with venues filled to full capacity if events are to be economically feasible".

The letter says that Slovenia is one of few countries where not only masks and a Covid pass but also distancing of visitors who need to sit on fixed seats is required. It says that compared to Great Britain, Ireland, Denmark, Spain, Sweden, France, Hungary, Italy, Austria and Croatia, only Slovenia has such strict restrictions.

The signatories argue that the restrictions no longer contribute to improving the epidemiological situation, so they urge the government to gradually scrap them, first the restrictions about distancing and fixed seats, and in the next stage, which should follow soon, the Covid pass, while masks should become recommended.

The letter says that after two years of closures and restrictions, and events held under impossible conditions in between, "it is time for the doors of cultural venues to open widely and for culture to breath with full lungs".

14 Feb 2022, 12:21 PM

STA, 11 February 2022 - The International Press Institute has a released a report on Hungarian investments in foreign media that suggests the Hungarian model of government control of the media is being transposed to Slovenia, which it says is important in light of Slovenia's upcoming general election.

The report says that after subjugating media at home, the Hungarian government, aided by companies controlled by its political allies, has started building a media empire in Slovenia and North Macedonia that is supposed to "act as megaphones for its regional ideological allies."

Both Slovenia and North Macedonia have thus seen in recent years an inflow of Hungarian investments in media, either in media serving Hungarian national minorities in several countries, or media connected with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban's ideological allies.

Such investments - the most notable examples in Slovenia include the TV channel Planet TV, publisher Nova Obzorja and TV station and news portal Nova24 - raise serious questions about the exporting of Fidesz's model of illiberal democracy to countries in Hungary's neighbourhood and beyond, the report says.

And while Fidesz politicians insist such investments are purely commercial, IPI says the evidence suggests that they are "rather part of a broad political strategy of influencing media and supporting ideological allies of Fidesz," in Slovenia's case Prime Minister Janez Janša.

The report, available at https://ipi.media/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/hu.pdf, was written in collaboration with independent investigative reporters and leans heavily on Slovenian investigative journalism portals.

13 Feb 2022, 10:58 AM

STA, 12 February 2022 - The Foreign Ministry has advised Slovenian citizens against travelling to Ukraine due to the deteriorating security situation in the country. Citizens who are currently in Ukraine are meanwhile advised to "leave the country without hesitation in a safe manner".

The ministry said in a statement for the STA on Saturday that Slovenian citizens should "leave Ukraine with commercial flights or personal vehicles."

According to the ministry, there are between 70 and 80 Slovenian citizens in Ukraine. "These are mostly people who are married to Ukrainian citizens, so probably not all of them will leave Ukraine," it added.

Slovenia has thus joined the countries that, out of precaution due to a possible Russian invasion in Ukraine, have urged their citizens to leave the country as soon as possible.

The United States and the United Kingdom called on their citizens to leave the country on Friday, and Germany, Italy, Belgium and Spain followed suit today.

12 Feb 2022, 10:13 AM

STA, 11 February 2022 - The anti-government protesters who gathered in Republic Square on Friday believe government officials deserve medals "for fight against democracy and the rule of law". They said Police Commissioner Anton Olaj deserves bronze, Interior Minister Aleš Hojs silver and Prime Minister Janez Janša gold.

The protesting People's Assembly said in a press release that Slovenia was not in the forefront only in the Olympics but also in the destroying of democracy. It believes Janša is using the Olympics for his self-promotion and election campaign.

To illustrate the situation in the country, the protesters decided to give out medals to government officials. Olaj was given the bronze medal for launching proceedings against former parliamentary Speaker Pavel Gantar, journalist Blaž Zgaga and others.

Addressing the rally, Gantar expressed his support to the protesters, which have been rallying for 95 Fridays. "You are proving that the civil society in Slovenia is not a dead body that can be tossed around by anybody and walked over," he said.

He said that those in power were trying to turn the parliament into a "caricature". He stressed media needed to be protected and urged protesters to turn out in the 24 April general election.

The protesters gave the silver medal to Hojs, arguing that a parliamentary inquiry had confirmed suspicions of political interfering in police work, destruction of the National bureau of Investigation, and political staffing.

The gold medal went to Janša as "the main architect of political manipulation, attacks on the media, violations of the constitution, interfering with the division of powers, intimidation of critics and ruthless political staffing".

Political parties running in the April election will on Monday present their views on the 138 demands of the Voice of the People initiative, the organisers of the rally said. This is to help voters decide on who they will vote for in the election, they added.

12 Feb 2022, 08:22 AM

What follows is a weekly review of events involving Slovenia, as prepared by the STA.

If you’d like to keep up on the daily headlines then follow those here, or get all our stories in your feed on Facebook.

FRIDAY, 4 February
        LJUBLJANA - The National Assembly rejected the appointment of Marjan Divjak as vice-governor of the central bank. The Democrats (SDS) proposed that the vote be postponed, but their motion was rejected and the vote went ahead with 44 voting in favour and 40 against in a secret ballot, short of the required super majority.
        LJUBLJANA - The National Assembly voted a bill on electronic communications, put forward by the government to transpose EU law, unfit for further reading. The bill would bar high-risk vendors from the market in a provision directed against Chinese Huawei. While not mentioning the vendor specifically, the bill would ban providers from using the equipment of high-risk suppliers if they are labelled by such by the government based on the opinion of the National Security Council.
        LJUBLJANA - The National Assembly failed to overturn the upper chamber's veto on a bill raising the required level of Italian language proficiency for staff at Italian-language schools and kindergartens. While the coalition voted in favour, the centre-left opposition voted against.
        LJUBLJANA - The opposition Left announced it will withdraw its motion for a referendum on the income tax act after the government indicated the referendum could be held on the same day as the general election. The amendments will probably be passed during this government's term and the Left will strive to win the election and then "correct the law," Left leader Luka Mesec said.
        LJUBLJANA - The Finance Ministry unveiled a new draft law on cryptocurrency taxation. It proposes a 10% taxation rate and a general tax exemption on up to EUR 10,000 of redeemed cryptocurrency per year. The proposed solutions would apply to all natural persons who pay taxes in Slovenia, but not to legal persons and individuals that hold cryptocurrencies as a business asset.
        DOBROVO - Agriculture Minister Jože Podgoršek held talks with his Italian counterpart Stefano Patuanelli. They discussed plans for the joint promotion of Slovenian and Italian wines from the border-spanning region, especially the Rebula white wine, known in Italy as Ribolla.
        LJUBLJANA - Slovenia's exports rose by 19.8% year-on-year to EUR 39.4 billion in 2021 and imports increased by 30.8% to EUR 42 billion, the Statistics Office reported. A trade deficit of EUR 2.6 billion was recorded, the highest in the last ten years.
        
SATURDAY, 5 February
        BEIJING - Slovenian ski jumpers Urša Bogataj and Nika Križnar made history at the Winter Olympics. Bogataj won gold and Križnar won bronze in the women's normal hill individual event, the first time that more than one Slovenian athlete made the Olympic podium in the same event.
        CARDIFF, UK - Ema Kozin, the best Slovenian female boxer, lost to American Claressa Shields in Cardiff, UK in a fight for the world champion title in a number of categories in the female middleweight class. This is Kozin's first defeat of her professional fighting career.

SUNDAY, 6 February
        LJUBLJANA - Slovenia reiterated its support for the inclusion of nuclear energy in the EU's taxonomy of sustainable energy sources. The Finance Ministry said nuclear energy will be needed to maintain low-carbon energy production in the long run, not only during the transition period.
        BEIJING, China - Slovenian ski jumper Peter Prevc finished fourth in the men's normal hill individual event at the Beijing Winter Olympics. He was half a point short to clinch what could have been his third Olympic medal after the two he won at Sochi 2014.

MONDAY, 7 February
        VATICAN CITY, Vatican - President Borut Pahor met Pope Francis during an official visit to the Vatican to mark the 30th anniversary of diplomatic ties between Slovenia and the Holy See. The pair noted the importance of dialogue and discussed the situation in the Western Balkans, the Ukraine crisis, as well as bilateral cooperation.
        ROME - President Borut Pahor held talks with his Italian counterpart Sergio Mattarella. EU issues topped the agenda. The talks focused on peace and stability in the EU's eastern neighbourhood, the need to coordinate post-pandemic economic recovery policies, and the need for debates on the common European future to be more ambitious.
        LJUBLJANA - Freedom Movement, the party of Robert Golob, led the field in a poll commissioned by RTV Slovenija, ahead of the ruling Democrats (SDS). One out of five respondents said they would vote for Freedom Movement, an increase of 6.8 percentage points from January. The SDS gained three points to 15%.
        LJUBLJANA - Slovenia's annual inflation ran at 5.8% in January, the highest since August 2008, picking up pace from 4.9% reported at the end of last year mostly due to costlier fuels and energy. Consumer prices rose by 0.4% from December.
        BEIJING, China - Slovenian ski jumpers Nika Križnar, Urša Bogataj, Timi Zajc and Peter Prevc won the gold medal in the mixed team normal hill event at the Winter Olympics to make history as the first nation to win the event in its Olympic premiere in Beijing.
        CLERMONT FERRAND, France - Animation filmmaker Špela Čadež received a Special Mention at this year's Clermont-Ferrand International Short Film Festival for her animated short Steakhouse in what is the tenth international award for the film.

TUESDAY, 8 February
        DUBAI, UAE - Foreign Minister Anže Logar held talks with his Emirati counterpart Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan as he started a tour of Gulf countries. The ministers confirmed excellent bilateral ties, which have been deepened since Slovenia opened its embassy in Abu Dhabi in 2018, and discussed opportunities for stronger cooperation.
        STRASBOURG, France - Agriculture Minister Jože Podgoršek welcomed an initiative for a new business model for low-carbon farming that is based on the actual sequestration of carbon and involves the option of evaluating that on the market. Podgoršek told his counterparts at an informal meeting that the initiative was an opportunity for extra income for farmers and foresters.
        BEIJING - Slovenian snowboarders won two medals at the Olympic parallel giant slalom. Tim Mastnak got silver in the men's category as one of the medal favourites, while Gloria Kotnik won bronze in the women's competition, a feat few had expected prior to the Olympic Games.

WEDNESDAY, 9 February
        LJUBLJANA - President Borut Pahor formally called the general election in Slovenia for 24 April, announcing that he would give the mandate to form the government to the person with sufficient support in the new parliament after the election.
        LJUBLJANA - Prime Minister Janez Janša self-tested positive for coronavirus. He posted a photo of a positive test result on Twitter, saying he had all the symptoms typical of Covid-19, although mild.
        DOHA, Qatar - Foreign Minister Anže Logar met his Qatari counterpart Mohammed bin Abdulrahman bin Jassim Al Thani to speak about economic cooperation and regional and global issues, including energy. Logar also took the opportunity to talk about Slovenia's candidacy for a non-permanent member of the UN Security Council.
        ZAGORJE OB SAVI - The new green party Vesna held its founding congress, at which environmentalists Urša Zgojznik and Uroš Macerl were elected its co-presidents. The former said the goal was to enter the parliament and demand that programmes in the fields of environment, economy, agriculture, youth policy and democracy be implemented.
        LJUBLJANA - The current robust economic growth is blurring a worsening of Slovenia's public finances, the Fiscal Council said in its latest assessment of the country's public finances. It estimated that the structural measures taken during the Covid epidemic which are unrelated to it will affect the public finances by reducing GDP by 2.2% a year.
        LJUBLJANA - Slovenia's competition watchdog found Renault Nissan Slovenija and four car dealerships had engaged in anti-competitive behaviour for over ten years in the repair and maintenance of Renault vehicles. One of the companies admitted its involvement and provided further evidence in exchange for a milder sentence.

THURSDAY, 10 February
        LJUBLJANA - The government adopted a bill to encourage digital inclusion. The centrepiece of the EUR 31 million project is a scheme of EUR 150 digital vouchers that secondary school kids, students and adults over 55 will be able to use to attend various digital literacy courses or buy digital devices.
        LJUBLJANA - The European Commission downgraded Slovenia's growth forecast for this year by 0.4 percentage points from its autumn forecast to 3.8%, projecting a more moderate growth rate of 3.6% in 2023. This compares to the 4% growth forecast for the euro area this year and 2.7% in 2023.
        LJUBLJANA - Slovenia's industrial output expanded by 10.2% in 2021 on the back of strong performance in manufacturing, the latest Statistics Office data shows. Industrial revenue increased by over 15% and the value of stocks by almost 5%.
        LJUBLJANA - Slovenia's job market saw a record 22,900 vacancies in the final quarter of 2021 as the number of occupied posts hit 792,100, another all-time high, shows fresh data from the Statistics Office. The job vacancy rate in the fourth quarter was 2.8%.
        BRUSSELS, Belgium - Six out of the eight Slovenian MEPs addressed a letter to European Parliament President Roberta Metsola to express regret over a statement of hers that they say conveys an "untrue and repeatedly criticised position of the former Italian President Giorgio Napolitano" regarding the foibe massacres during and after WWII.
        RIYADH, Saudi Arabia - Foreign Minister Anže Logar held talks with his Saudi counterpart Prince Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud and several other cabinet members as he wrapped up his tour of the Gulf. Economic cooperation was in the focus, as was Slovenia's bid to become a non-permanent member of the UN Security Council.

11 Feb 2022, 15:54 PM

STA, 11 February 2022 - A new movement has been set up in Maribor that will strive to abolish Covid restrictions on all levels of society and for normal functioning of education and healthcare. If necessary, the movement will turn into a party and stand in the upcoming general election, said its founders in Maribor on Friday.

According to Gaber Marolt, coordinator of the Movement of the Free and Well Informed (Gibanje Svobodni in Ozaveščeni Slovenije - SOS), the country's fight against the epidemic is "completely misguided" and the restrictive measures "are causing nothing but harm".

After analysing the current political options, the movement's founders came to a conclusion that none of the existing parties promises normalisation of the current situation in the country.

"Since we can actively affect the situation in the country exclusively from parliament this conclusion has led us to decide that a movement or a political party must be created in Slovenia that will ensure normal life without pointless restrictions," said Marolt, Aleš Goršak, Iris Magajna and Žiga Legat, representatives of the movement.

The SOS will be an "independent folk's movement" that will strive for a new type of rule, where the goal will be a society that is "based on achievements, facts that can be checked, mutual respect and trust".

The focus will be on the people, freedom, and welfare, human rights will be respected and laws will be clear and fair, the founders said.

Their priority will be efforts to normalise the conditions at schools, lift Covid restrictions, make informing on Covid-19 and other diseases more transparent and allow free movement of people and goods.

Individuals from the movement have so far been active in various initiatives stressing the rights of children.

In cooperation with some other initiatives, the movement is filing into parliament today a demand for expanding early treatment of Covid, for which they had collected several hundred signatures.

10 Feb 2022, 13:02 PM

STA, 10 February 2022 - Slovenia confirmed 12,137 new coronavirus infections on Wednesday as the country continues to be on the downward slope of the Omicron-driven wave. Another 19 fatalities among 19-Covid patients were reported.

Week-on-week decline in Covid cases continues since more than 16,500 cases were logged a week ago. Both the seven-day average of daily cases and the 14-day incidence per 100,000 people thus dropped - the former by some 640 to 9,220 and the latter by nearly 100 to 8,143.

The National Institute of Public Health estimates there are now 171,691 active cases in Slovenia, down by 2,000 on the previous day.

Some 3,250 PCR tests and almost 124,100 rapid antigen tests were performed yesterday.

Figures released by the government show 530 patients are hospitalised with Covid as their main condition as of this morning, including 121 in intensive care. This is down by 18 and four, respectively, from yesterday. In all, 1,038 patients now in hospitals have tested positive for coronavirus.

The latest data on COVID and Slovenia

10 Feb 2022, 12:55 PM

STA, 9 February 2022 - The ruling Democrats (SDS) and the other coalition parties expressed on Wednesday their readiness for election and a wish for programme-oriented campaigning, with the parties of the current opposition also saying they are ready and that they expect good results, as President Borut Pahor formally called the general election for 24 April today.

In response to Pahor's announcement, representatives of parties currently represented in the National Assembly expressed their readiness for the election process to start.

The ruling Democrats (SDS) welcomed Pahor's announcement, with the leader of the SDS deputy group, Danijel Krivec, expressing the wish for a programme-oriented election campaign, so that "we move away a bit from all that is happening at the moment".

They expect an exchange of views and arguments, thus winning voters over on the basis of concrete commitments and actions, not empty phrases and platitudes, added Krivec.

SDS president and Prime Minister Janez Janša said on Facebook as he responded to Pahor's announcement that it would be the first regular election in Slovenia since 2008.

"The coalition of the SDS, NSi and Concretely successfully chaired the EU Council, ensured stability, recovery and development. Thanks also to the constructive part of the opposition and minority deputies."

Janša said that the coalition had managed this "despite the shots in the back by KUL", in reference of the informal Constitutional Arch Coalition formed by the four centre-left opposition parties.

The coalition New Slovenia (NSi) said that the party was looking forward to the election with confidence, a good legacy from the current mandate and with the conviction that they can win the trust of the electorate again.

Gregor Perič, the leader of the Concretely deputy group, said that the newly merged party was ready for the election as well, and that its new political format will aim to highlight the advantages of cooperation and integration.

Perič also considers it very important that the election results are recognised by all as legal and legitimate and that there is no shadow of doubt cast over them.

Representatives of the KUL alliance of four opposition parties also responded to Pahor's announcement today, stressing that their post-electoral cooperation agreement was ready and clearly outlined.

The Left, Social Democrats (SD), Marjan Šarec List (LMŠ) and the Alenka Bratušek Party (SAB) thus reiterated that they would get behind the leader of the party who would win the highest share of the votes among them.

As for possible cooperation with the newly-formed Freedom Movement under Robert Golob, who has a high level of support according to recent polls, Left coordinator Luka Mesec ruled nothing out and pointed out the need for further negotiations.

The leader of LMŠ, Marjan Šarec, also commented on president Pahor's decision to give the mandate to form a government to the person with sufficient support in the new parliament after the election.

That was a good call that will enable Slovenia's politics to avoid the scenario seen in 2018, said Šarec, when "Janez Janša didn't even accept the mandate because he clearly had nobody to form a coalition with".

The main concern for the opposition parties thus remains to achieve the highest possible voter turnout, so that the supporters of the current government do not get the opportunity to form a government again, which was also reiterated by the SAB leader Alenka Bratušek.

As President Pahor also called on the parties to maintain a high level of political culture during the campaign, Mesec echoed these sentiments, saying that he fears that this year's election campaign will be dirty.

The leader of the National Party, Zmago Jelinčič, predicted "an interesting campaign with revelations both from the left and the right," adding that he "expects people not to fall for the wunderkinds and the new faces again".

After today's signing of the presidential decree to call the election, parties and groups of voters can enter their bids for the election starting from 14 February. These need to be submitted by 24 March, when the official election campaign starts.

09 Feb 2022, 12:50 PM

STA, 9 February 2022 - Prime Minister Janez Janša self-tested positive for coronavirus on Wednesday. He posted a photo of a positive test result on Twitter, saying he had all the symptoms typical of Covid-19, although mild.

Janša said that his family had successfully avoided coronavirus for two years until Tuesday, when his two sons had self-tested positive, while his test had been negative.

See the latest data on COVID and Slovenia

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