Presidential elections were held in
Slovakia in March 2019. Incumbent President
Andrej Kiska did not run for a second term.
Fifteen candidates contested the first round on 16 March, of which two later formally withdrew their bids before voting took place, but their names still had to remain on the ballot papers.
Zuzana Čaputová of the
Progressive Slovakia party finished ahead of the other candidates, receiving 40.6% of the votes, but failed to achieve the necessary threshold of 50%+1 vote from all registered voters to avoid a run-off.
Maroš Šefčovič, the Vice-President of the
European Commission for the Energy Union, who was running as an independent supported by the
Direction – Social Democracy (SMER–SD) party, came in as the runner-up with 18.7% of the vote and earned a place in the run-off as well.
In the second round on 30 March, Čaputová was elected with 58.4% of the vote to Šefčovič's 41.6%. She became the first woman to be elected to the presidency and became Slovakia's youngest-ever president upon her inauguration which took place on 15 June 2019.
Polls indicated that he was Slovakia's most trusted politician and that he would have likely been the frontrunner in the election, had he chosen to present himself as a candidate.[1] He had originally planned to announce whether he would run for a second term in September 2018.[2] but moved it on 15 May 2018.[3]Freedom and Solidarity had announced it would support Kiska's candidacy.[4] However, Kiska announced on 15 May 2018 that he would not run for re-election, arguing that this move might end "the era of political confrontation" his country faced and citing a desire to spend more time with his family.[5] Kiska is notably pro-European.[1]
Kiska's decision had been rumoured since February 2018 and political parties had already started to look for candidates.[6][7]
The anti-immigration party
We Are Family had its candidate selected in May 2018.[10]
The governing coalition's biggest party
Smer-SD, as of May 2018 still lacked a candidate.[11] In January 2019, it was announced that the party candidate would be
Maroš Šefčovič.[8]
The centre-right Hungarian minority party
Most-Híd nominated its leader
Béla Bugár on 9 June 2018.[13]
Electoral system
The
President of the Slovak Republic has been elected for a five-year term, and by popular vote since
the elections in 1999.[14][15] Its role is limited, but not just ceremonial. The President has the power to nominate the
Prime Minister, to veto bills (unless confirmed by a two-thirds majority), and to nominate judges on the highest tiers of the judicial branch.[16]
The President is elected through a
two-round method; if no candidate reaches 50%+1 votes in the first round, the top two candidates of the first round take part in a second round.[17]
For a candidacy to be valid, the
Constitution of Slovakia requires the collection of 15,000 signatures of Slovak citizens, or the support of 15 of the 150 MPs in the
legislature. The candidate must be an eligible voter over 40 years old, must resign from any other conflicting public office, and is limited to two terms in office.[18]
Candidates
Candidates who claimed 15,000 citizen signatures or have 15 MP signatures by midnight of 31 January 2019 were as follows:
Robert Mistrík, researcher, entrepreneur and co-founder of
SaS, decided to endorse Zuzana Čaputová[59]
Campaign
During the campaign, Šefčovič (a
Roman Catholic)[60] spoke against any changes in
LGBT rights status in Slovakia, strongly opposing both
civil partnerships or
same-sex adoptions. He criticised his opponent Čaputová (who is in favour of both) as a candidate who is forcing a "new ultraliberal agenda" on Slovakia, comparing the second round of elections to a referendum on such an agenda, which he considers to be "in exact contradiction to traditional Christian values".[61][62] He also stated that "we can not support any further steps towards civil unions or same-sex adoptions because these would go precisely against our traditional Christian values", calling this stance as his "very natural position" due to his Christianity.[63][64] According to his opinion, discussions about "such experiments bring great unrest to society".[65]
Šefčovič has also criticised his opponent Čaputová for her opinions on the
European migrant crisis and related policies. He asserted the importance of a speedy deportation policy, so that "people who do not have any business here are sent to their home countries as quickly as possible".[66] Furthermore, he argued out that "it has to be Slovaks who decide who comes to our country".[65]
Štefan Harabin ran on a platform of "traditional Slovak culture based on Christianity and family, formed by a man–father and woman–mother" and rejecting "
gender ideology".[67]
During the campaign Harabin accused Muslim migrants of "killing and raping European women in Germany and France" and claimed his opponents wanted to destroy Slovak culture. He also condemned
NATO,
European Union institutions as well as homosexuals.[68] According to
Globsec, Harabin was the most favoured candidate by "pro-Kremlin disinformation channels" on
Facebook, receiving 174 positive and no negative posts.[69]
Zuzana Čaputová of the
Progressive Slovakia party finished far ahead of the other candidates, receiving 40.6% of the votes, but failed to achieve the necessary threshold of 50%+1 vote from all registered voters to avoid a run-off.
Maroš Šefčovič, the Vice-President of the
European Commission for the Energy Union, who was running as an independent supported by the governing Smer-SD,[94] was the runner-up with 18.7% of the vote and earned the other place in the run-off. Voter turnout in the first round was 48.74%, the highest percentage for that stage of presidential elections since direct voting for the position was introduced in 1999.[95]
In the second round, Čaputová won election to the presidency, garnering 58.4% of the vote to Šefčovič's 41.6%. She became the first woman to be elected to the position and became Slovakia's youngest-ever president upon her inauguration on 15 June 2019.[96] The second round turnout of just 41.80% was the lowest for any round of presidential elections in Slovakia.[97] The number of votes with which Čaputová was elected to office is also the lowest for any directly elected Slovak president to date.[97]
^Per convention, candidates' ages are calculated based on the date of publication of the official list of candidates by the National Council of the Slovak Republic on 1 February 2019.