With a pro-Orban prime minister gone, things are looking up in Slovenia
A slide towards autocracy has stopped and the economy is roaring
“Karma is a bitch!” says Robert Golob, who assumed power as Slovenia’s new prime minster on June 1st. Slovenia’s greatest looming problem is reducing the country’s dependence on Russian gas and oil, and not many people in the country know more about energy than Mr Golob himself. With the news dominated by Ukraine, Slovenia’s election on April 24th failed to make much impression abroad. But the political demise of Janez Jansa, the former prime minister and an enthusiastic fan of Donald Trump and of Hungary’s Viktor Orban, marks an about-turn for the tiny country of 2.1m people.
This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “The turnaround”
Europe June 25th 2022
- Emmanuel Macron loses his parliamentary majority
- Is the West supplying Ukraine with enough weapons?
- Italy is the latest victim of Ukraine-related divisions
- With a pro-Orban prime minister gone, things are looking up in Slovenia
- A stunning victory for Spain’s conservative opposition in Andalucía
- Briefly united by Ukraine, Europe faces divisions on the home front
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