EU membership in the balance
Wednesday’s victories for the right-wing nationalist party set the stage for tension with neighbouring Greece and Bulgaria, which, in turn, threatens to sputter already-slow EU accession talks.
North Macedonia’s road to EU membership started in 2005, but progress was blocked for years by Greece in a dispute over the country’s name. That was resolved in 2018 when the country added “North” to its name.
However, Mickoski, the president of VMRO-DPMNE, which heads a 22-party coalition called Your Macedonia, refuses to acknowledge the new title.
Mickoski has also promised to maintain a hard line with Bulgaria over linguistic and historical issues. That tussle, in which Bulgaria has demanded that Skopje recognise a tiny Bulgarian minority, has seen Sofia block EU accession talks.
Now that the VMRO-DPMNE has secured a majority in the parliamentary election, Mickoski will likely be the country’s next prime minister.
The governing centre-left SDSM had pinned its hopes on unlocking talks with the EU and appeasing Bulgaria. It tried to amend the constitution to acknowledge the Bulgarian minority but lacked the numbers to push the motion through parliament.
“These elections will practically set the future of Macedonia: if we will move towards a progressive society, to the EU, or if we are headed to some past time when we had isolation and ethnic conflicts,” warned SDSM chief Kovacevski.
Powerful populism
However, the left-leaning SDSM party has struggled to maintain momentum since a heavy first-round loss in the presidential poll, with Mickoski’s populist agenda proving powerful.
Siljanovska-Davkova received 40 percent of the vote in the first round of the presidential race on April 24, unexpectedly leaving the incumbent Pendarovski a distant second with 19.9 percent.
Mickoski has pledged to create tens of thousands of jobs and reverse poor economic growth and soaring inflation. North Macedonia has lost about 10 percent of its population to emigration over the past 20 years.
The VMRO-DPMNE president has also adopted increasingly aggressive language towards the DUI – the country’s largest Albanian party – stirring anxieties over fragile interethnic relations.
In 2001, NATO pulled North Macedonia back from the brink of civil war during an ethnic Albanian rebellion and promised faster integration into the EU and NATO.
The country of 1.83 million joined the military alliance in 2020, but impatience over its slow progress towards EU membership has been growing.
Source link : https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2024/5/8/north-macedonian-elections-set-to-test-eu-ambitions
Author :
Publish date : 2024-05-08 07:00:00
Copyright for syndicated content belongs to the linked Source.