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Czech Republic: the Pirates have fallen overboard from the government

On 1 October, the left-liberal Czech Pirate Party (Pirates) exited the government coalition. This development was a direct consequence of Prime Minister Petr Fiala’s (of the right-wing Civic Democratic Party, ODS) decision to remove the party leader, Ivan Bartoš, from the government. This action aligned with the outcome of an online vote in which 79% of the Pirates’ members endorsed the party’s plan to leave the ruling coalition. The day prior, Bartoš concluded his role as Deputy Prime Minister for Digitisation and Minister of Regional Development. Fiala’s main accusation against him pertained to delays in the digitisation of procedures related to construction projects. On 1 October, the other two government members representing the Pirates—Minister of Legislation, Michal Šalomoun, and Minister of Foreign Affairs, Jan Lipavský—submitted their resignations. Subsequently, only Šalomoun’s resignation was accepted. Lipavský, having resigned from the party, will continue his role as Minister of Foreign Affairs by agreement with the remaining coalition parties. The cabinet still maintains its majority in the Chamber of Deputies.

Regardless of the formal reasons behind this move, the removal of the Pirates’ leader from the government and the subsequent departure of other party members from the Fiala cabinet should primarily be viewed in the context of the parties’ tactics ahead of the key election in the Czech political cycle—the election to the Chamber of Deputies, scheduled for autumn 2025. The poor results obtained in the recent elections and party support polls have prompted the ruling coalition parties to revise their strategies (see ‘Czeskie wybory regionalne: triumf Babiša rok przed wyborami parlamentarnymi’).

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