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Slovenia approves Jansa as PM-designate, paving way for reforms

By Thomson Reuters May 22, 2026 | 11:05 AM

LJUBLJANA, May 22 (Reuters) – Slovenia’s parliament approved right-leaning leader Janez Jansa as prime minister-designate on Friday, paving the way for a ​new government that has pledged tax ‌reliefs, pro-business reforms and changes to pension funding.

Jansa, seeking a fourth term, secured 51 votes in the 90-seat parliament, ending a political deadlock since a March election ‌produced ​no outright majority.

A five-party centre-right ⁠coalition backing Jansa said ⁠its priorities include tax relief for businesses and households, support for startups and fast-growing firms, and the creation of a fund to ​help finance the pension system. It also pledged to cut red tape, tackle corruption and ⁠shift more power to ⁠local governments.

“Our goal is Slovenia as ​a highly developed, competitive, and socially cohesive state based ​on knowledge, innovation, fairness, and quality of ‌life,” Jansa told lawmakers.

Jansa’s Slovenian Democratic Party (SDS) came second in the March 22 parliamentary election with 28 seats, behind the liberal Freedom Movement (GS) ⁠of former prime minister Robert Golob with 29. Golob’s party went into opposition last month after failing to form ⁠a majority ‌coalition.

The SDS and four centre-right parties – New ⁠Slovenia, Democrats, Slovenian Peoples Party and ​Focus – ‌signed a coalition agreement on Thursday.

The ​five-party bloc ⁠controls 43 seats and secured additional backing from the right-wing Resnica party, which will not formally join the government. Deputies representing national minorities also supported Jansa’s appointment.

(Reporting by Daria Sito-Sucic, Editing by ​William Maclean)