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Czech president appeals to Constitutional Court after NATO delegation snub

By Thomson Reuters Jun 23, 2026 | 4:37 AM

PRAGUE, June 23 (Reuters) – Czech President Petr Pavel appealed to the Constitutional Court in a dispute over the scope of his authority after the government denied his request to lead ​the Czech delegation at a NATO summit next month, ‌the presidential office said on Tuesday.

The government, led by Pavel’s former rival for presidency Andrej Babis, said on Monday it would not include Pavel, a former senior NATO official, in its delegation to the alliance’s summit in July, saying it ‌was ​up to the government to defend its positions, ⁠including low defence spending.

“I ⁠consider the decision to exclude the president from the delegation to be an unprecedented and extremely unfortunate step,” Pavel said in a separate statement.

He said that presidents had led Czech delegations at 19 ​out of 20 past NATO summits under various presidents and governments, with the one exception being for health reasons.

The court said ⁠it had received the complaint and would ⁠consider giving it priority. It was not clear whether ​the court would rule in time for Pavel to potentially take part ​in the summit.

Under the Czech constitution, the president has ‌limited powers and foreign policy is defined by the government.

Pavel, a career general who led the Czech army and also served as the head of NATO’s Military committee from 2015 to 2018, has insisted that ⁠he take part in the July 7 to 8 summit in the Turkish capital, Ankara.

He has been a strong supporter of Ukraine in its defence ⁠against Russia, while ‌Babis’ cabinet has scaled back support.

Pavel has been ⁠in conflict with the government, mainly with the junior ​eurosceptic ‌Motorists Party, since he refused to appoint one ​of its ⁠officials as foreign minister.

The Czechs are among the last in NATO in terms of defence spending. The country did not meet the minimum 2% of gross domestic product last year and is on course to miss the minimum again this year.

(Reporting by Jason Hovet and Jan Lopatka, editing ​by Milla Nissi-Prussak)