Bloomberg
Slovakia’s former president launched a political party to capitalize on public discontent with the ruling leftists who are struggling to contain the fallout from a journalist’s murder before the 2020 election.
Anti-government sentiment has been rising in the ex-communist European Union nation for over a year since the killing of an investigative reporter exposed links between politicians, law enforcement officials and organised crime.
Andrej Kiska, who didn’t seek re-election before his term ended on June 15, is joining a wide group of opposition forces seeking to unseat the Smer party that’s dominated the country’s politics for over a decade. Priorities of the new pro-European grouping include restoring justice, improving health care and education, Kiska said.
“We are angry, we are disappointed, we know what needs to be done and we want to do it,†Kiska, a frequent critic of the Smer-led coalition cabinet during his term, told reporters in the central Slovak town of Banska Bystrica on Monday.
The wave of public outrage gave rise to new political outfits and propelled civic activist Zuzana Caputova to succeed Kiska and become Slovakia’s first female president.
One of the leaders of protests that led to the resignation of veteran Prime Minister Robert Fico last year has joined Kiska’s party.
The former president, who was the most trusted politician as recently as last year, slipped to the fifth place in June, according to a survey by the Focus pollster.