Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
06BRATISLAVA494
2006-06-19 16:31:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Bratislava
Cable title:  

SMER AND SDKU COMPETE TO FORM NEW RULING COALITION

Tags:  PGOV PREL PINR KDEM SOCI LO 
pdf how-to read a cable
VZCZCXRO3687
OO RUEHDBU RUEHFL RUEHKW RUEHLA RUEHROV RUEHSR
DE RUEHSL #0494/01 1701631
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
O 191631Z JUN 06
FM AMEMBASSY BRATISLAVA
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 9971
INFO RUEHZL/EUROPEAN POLITICAL COLLECTIVE
RHEHNSC/NSC WASHDC
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 BRATISLAVA 000494 

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

NSC FOR DAMON WILSON

E.O. 12958: DECL: 06/19/2021
TAGS: PGOV PREL PINR KDEM SOCI LO
SUBJECT: SMER AND SDKU COMPETE TO FORM NEW RULING COALITION

REF: BRATISLAVA 491

Classified By: Ambassador Rodolphe M. Vallee for Reasons 1.4 (B) and (D
).

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 BRATISLAVA 000494

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

NSC FOR DAMON WILSON

E.O. 12958: DECL: 06/19/2021
TAGS: PGOV PREL PINR KDEM SOCI LO
SUBJECT: SMER AND SDKU COMPETE TO FORM NEW RULING COALITION

REF: BRATISLAVA 491

Classified By: Ambassador Rodolphe M. Vallee for Reasons 1.4 (B) and (D
).


1. (C) SUMMARY: In the wake of the June 17 elections
(reftel),Smer chairman Robert Fico was emboldened to begin
thinking strategically about the government he would form
with the political capital his party earned at the polls.
However, Prime Minister Mikulas Dzurinda -- himself
encouraged by greater support than expected for his own party
-- came out of the corner swinging, attempting to put
together a SDKU-KDH-SMK-HZDS "three plus one" coalition that
would deny Fico most (but not all) of his potential partners.
One HZDS interlocutor told us that they prefer this "three
plus one" option to continue the reforms, with Meciar
remaining party chairman but not seeking a role in the
government. On the other hand, HZDS is desperate to govern
and will go with Smer as option B. KDH, disappointed in its
lower-than-expected results, remains cloistered, considering
closely whether to go with Smer, or SDKU. Sources say the
party is currently split into three "camps:" those that want
to work with Smer, those that want to be in opposition, and
those that would work something out with Meciar. Ironically,
the "losing" parties will decide the shape of the next GOS.
END SUMMARY.

FICO GETS MOST VOTES, EMERGES CONFIDENT...
--------------


2. (C) Smer chairman Robert Fico emerged from June 17
elections confident that his party -- which performed better
than he had expected (reftel) -- would receive the mandate
from President Gasparovic on June 19 to construct a coalition
according to Smer's preferences. He even tipped his hand to
the press over the weekend, outlining three possible
coalition options that included Smer-KDH-SNS, Smer-KDH-SMK,
or Smer-HZDS-SNS. We believe Gasparovic went through the act
of meeting with all party leaders to show a presidential lack
of bias. He has called for a press conference at 6:00pm June
19, at which he authorized Fico to form the new government

beginning June 20. Only if Fico is unsuccessful would
Gasparovic give Dzurinda a chance -- an that option would
require KDH, SMK, and HZDS to hold out against Fico.
Dzurinda is already deep in negotiations to orchestrate such
a course of events; Dzurinda advisors confirmed that, as
Gasparovic was on television asking Fico to form a
government, Dzurinda was meeting with the KDH leadership.
While Fico will get the first attempt at forming a
government, Dzurinda -- who has done it twice before -- will
be doing his best to make sure Fico is not successful.

...BUT DZURINDA STRIKES FAST
--------------


3. (C) PM Dzurinda clearly has been emboldened by SDKU's
higher-than-expected percentage, and the fact that more
Slovaks voted for reform parties than against. He
immediately reached out to HZDS and KDH to try to lay the
foundations for a SDKU-KDH-SMK-HZDS coalition. Such a
coalition would have an 80 to 70 advantage, four more than
the 76 needed for a majority. Smer was surprised and angry
to emerge from a 11:00am meeting on June 19 with President
Gasparovic without an immediate mandate to form a government.
Gasparovic, despite his ideological closeness to Fico, had
promised to first meet with all parties. Dzurinda's advisors
told us that SDKU was working hard on cementing a coalition
deal before Dzurinda's 1:00pm meeting with Gasparovic. Smer
vice chairman Pavol Paska told us that they were furious at
Gasparovic's refusal to offer them the mandate, noting that
"we won a third of the votes; we have a right to form the
government."


4. (C) Smer immediately reached out to us at several
levels, telling us they had heard that Dzurinda was pushing
KDH to accept cooperation with HZDS, claiming the U.S. had
decided HZDS was "acceptable to the international community."
Smer jumped to the conclusion that the U.S. supports
Dzurinda's effort, though we have made clear to all parties
repeatedly that we would not and are not playing a role in
what is an internal Slovak affair.

HZDS MIGHT GO ALONG WITH DZURINDA'S PLAN
--------------


5. (C) HZDS Vice Chairman Milan Urbani told us June 19 that
HZDS prefers a "continuation of reforms" and a "three plus
one" coalition made up of the former center-right government
coalition with HZDS (SDKU-KDH-SMK-HZDS). Urbani said that
KDH is the only party reticent about this formula, with

BRATISLAVA 00000494 002 OF 002


former Minister of Justice Daniel Lipsic particularly opposed
to cooperation with Meciar. Urbani said that HZDS insists
that there is a solution to this impasse that can be reached
without removing Meciar from his party chairmanship; he would
not elaborate, except to say that Meciar does not want a
cabinet Ministry. (NOTE: Urbani is from the "pro-reform"
wing of HZDS, and may represent that viewpoint more strongly
than Viliam Veteska, who Meciar relies on to build bridges to
Smer. END NOTE.)


6. (C) Urbani said that HZDS is determined to be in the
government, and will not hesitate to work with Smer if the
"three plus one" proposal does not work out. Urbani said
they already have an offer from Smer, which Fico wants them
to sign the afternoon of June 19.


7. (C) COMMENT: HZDS, a political powerhouse which came in
second place in 2002 elections, finished a disappointing
fifth this year. "Slovaks are stupid" Urbani said, "our
voters went with Slota's anti-Hungarian agenda. We must live
with it."

KDH IN CLOISTER
--------------


8. (C) SDKU parliamentarian Ferdinand Devinsky told us that
his party is working on the "three plus one," but that KDH
remains divided about whether to work with them. Devinsky
admitted this would be a difficult chore, but noted on the
positive side that KDH has not drawn any "we will not work
with Meciar" lines in the sand since the election. No one in
KDH is saying "no" to HZDS, just Meciar, and if a solution
can be found that limits his influence, something might be
arranged. Dzurinda is working hard to find such a solution.

COMMENT: THE ROAD AHEAD
--------------


9. (C) The high number of votes received by both Smer and
SDKU has emboldened both, creating a tense political
atmosphere in Bratislava. SDKU won an advantage by its fast
action attempting to build a coalition, but Gasparovic has
awarded Smer the first attempt at forming a government. It
remains to be seen whether SDKU's advantage is strategic and
will result in a three plus one coalition, or if it was
simply a tactical speed bump for Smer -- and PM hopeful
Robert Fico.
VALLEE