Kotleba – People's Party Our Slovakia
Slovakia’s Far-Right ĽSNS Party: Saved by Its Perceived Irrelevance
Neither Kotleba nor Slovak Togetherness was a stranger to such rhetoric, yet the party never amounted to anything more than a marginal political force.
Democracy Digest: Slovakia’s Infectious ‘Infodemic’
In a country where polls show more than half of people believe conspiracy theories and two-thirds do not trust state institutions, hoaxes and fake news have an infectious power.
Live: Coronavirus Updates
Why Populists Love the Pandemic
Roma: Europe's Neglected Coronavirus Victims
Hungary 'No Longer a Democracy' After Coronavirus Law
In Pictures: Slovaks Vote in Watershed Election
See also:
Slovak Democracy Seen at Stake in Make-or-Break Election
Slovak Far Right Courts Youth Vote in Pivotal Ballot
Kotleba: Slovak Extremist Who Made Far Right Fashionable
Don't Underestimate Slovakia's Neo-Nazi Threat
Slovak Election Dilemma: To Talk or Not to Talk to Fascists?
- Read more about In Pictures: Slovaks Vote in Watershed Election
- Log in to post comments
Slovakia at Crossroads in Election Marred by Fake News
See also:
Slovak Democracy Seen at Stake in Make-or-Break Election
Slovak Far Right Courts Youth Vote in Pivotal Ballot
Kotleba: Slovak Extremist Who Made Far Right Fashionable
Don't Underestimate Slovakia's Neo-Nazi Threat
Slovak Election Dilemma: To Talk or Not to Talk to Fascists?
Slovak Far Right Courts Youth Vote in Pivotal Ballot
Nicknamed the "forbidden survey", it was crowdfunded by civic initiative 50dni.sk. (Meaning "50days", the name is a cheeky reference to a government proposal late last year to introduce a 50-day moratorium on polls, which was scuppered by the constitutional court.)
See also:
Kotleba: Slovak Extremist Who Made Far Right Fashionable
Kotleba: Slovak Extremist Who Made Far Right Fashionable
A priest from Trnava, a city 40 kilometres to the east, offered his blessing to Kotleba, his party and its supporters — intoning that they could "save our beloved country".
See also:
Slovak Far Right Courts Youth Vote in Pivotal Ballot
Slovak Democracy Seen at Stake in Make-or-Break Election
Don't Underestimate Slovakia's Neo-Nazi Threat
Don’t Underestimate Slovakia’s Neo-Nazi Threat
"Namely because of the situation we've seen since 2016, when a party supposedly built on a neo-Nazi ideology entered parliament," said Vilagi from Comenius University in Bratislava.
She was referring to the far-right Kotleba - People's Party Our Slovakia (LSNS), which is polling in second or third place ahead of the country's February 29 parliamentary election.
- Read more about Don’t Underestimate Slovakia’s Neo-Nazi Threat
- Log in to post comments
Slovak Election Dilemma: To Talk or Not to Talk to Fascists?
Four years later, with LSNS polling around 14 per cent ahead of a parliamentary election at the end of February, that question has a new urgency.
The party's rise has polarised Slovak society and divided opinion among commentators, experts and political leaders about whether to sup with the devil — and if so, with how long a spoon.
Slovakia, 2019: The Year of President Zuzana Caputova
"She brought a spirit of positive energy that has broken the bad mood that Slovaks have had for a long time," Zuborova, an analyst at the Bratislava Policy Institute think tank, told BIRN in an interview.
"She also represented a new hope that Slovakia might take a different direction than the rest of Central Europe."
The Affluent Slovak Town Where Neo-Fascism is Vogue
In recent European Parliament elections, 16 per cent of voters in the Hlohovec district backed the People's Party Our Slovakia (LSNS), widely seen as neo-fascist. In one of the town's electoral districts, support for the party topped 30 per cent.