Croatia president facing election runoff

CONFLICT: The election is the continuation of a longstanding feud between the prime minister and president, and the rest are just incidental topics, an analyst said

AFP, ZAGREB

Croatian President Zoran Milanovic is to face conservative rival Dragan Primorac in an election runoff in two weeks’ time after the incumbent narrowly missed out an outright victory on Sunday, official results showed.

The results came after an exit poll, released immediately after polling stations closed, showed that Milanovic, backed by the opposition left-wing Social Democrats, had scooped more than 50 percent of the first-round vote and would therefore avoid the Jan. 12 runoff.

Milanovic won 49.1 percent of the vote and Primorac, backed by the ruling conservative HDZ party, took 19.35 percent, according to results released by the state electoral commission from nearly all of the polling stations.

Croatian President and presidential candidate Zoran Milanovic gestures as he delivers a speech after the first results of the presidential election in Zagreb on Sunday.

Photo: Reuters

Milanovic on Sunday evening pledged to his supporters who gathered in Zagreb to “fight for Croatia with a clear stance, one that takes care of its interests.”

Such a strong lead for Milanovic, whom surveys labeled the favorite ahead of the vote, raises serious concerns for Croatian Prime Minister Andrej Plenkovic’s HDZ.

Primorac late on Sunday labeled the big difference between him and Milanovic a “challenge.”

“In the first round there were … a lot of candidates, it was not easy to present the program fully. Now it’s a great opportunity that Milanovic and I be one on one … to see who represents what,” Primorac told his supporters in Zagreb.

The election came as the EU and NATO member nation of 3.8 million people struggles with biting inflation, widespread corruption and a labor shortage.

Among the eight contenders, center-right lawmaker Marija Selak Raspudic and green-left lawmaker Ivana Kekin followed the two main rivals, the exit poll showed. The two women each won about 9 percent of the vote.

The president commands the Balkan nation’s armed forces and has a say in foreign policy, but despite limited powers, many believe the office is key for the political balance of power in a nation mainly governed by the HDZ since independence in 1991.

“All the eggs should not be in one basket,” said Nenad Horvat, a salesman in his 40s.

He sees Milanovic, a former leftist prime minister, as the “last barrier to all levers of power falling into the hands of HDZ,” echoing the view of many that was reflected in Sunday’s results.

The 58-year-old Milanovic has been one of Croatia’s leading and most colorful political figures for nearly two decades.

Sharp and eloquent, he won the presidency for the Social Democrats in 2020 with pledges to advocate tolerance and liberalism, but he used the office to attack political opponents and EU officials, often with offensive and populist rhetoric.

Milanovic, who condemned Russia’s aggression against Ukraine, has nonetheless criticized the West’s military aid to Kyiv.

That prompted the prime minister to label him a pro-Russian who is “destroying Croatia’s credibility in NATO and the EU.”

Milanovic countered that he wanted to protect Croatia from being “dragged into war.”

Milanovic regularly pans Plenkovic and his HDZ party over systemic corruption, calling the prime minister a “serious threat to Croatia’s democracy.”

Milanovic on Sunday said that in the current global situation, all political stakeholders in the nation should be “on the same side as much as possible, at least when it comes to fundamental issues such as national security or borders.”

For many, the election is a continuation of the longstanding feud between two powerful politicians.

“This is still about the conflict between the prime minister and president,” political analyst Zarko Puhovski said. “All the rest are just incidental topics.”

Primorac, a 59-year-old physician and scientist returning to politics after 15 years, campaigned as a “unifier” promoting family values and patriotism.


Read news

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *