Czech opposition populist party wins in regional municipal elections, first-round senate vote

Reports are calling this a "wake-up call" for the ruling coalition

Czech Republic's former Prime Minister Andrej Babiš. (AP Photo/Petr David Josek, File)
By Liz Heflin
2 Min Read

The opposition ANO party led by former Prime Minister Andrej Babiš won the weekend regional general assembly and first-round senate elections in the Czech Republic, the Czech Statistical Office announced on Sunday.

ANO won in 10 of the 13 regions, with 292 of the 685 regional self-government mandates, 114 more than in the last election four years ago. The governing coalition Civil Democratic Party (ODS) came in second with 106 mandates, an increase of seven.

The Mayors and Independents (STAN) party, also in the coalition government, came third with 73 representatives, plus another 20 for the Liberec Region movement within STAN. The government coalition Christian Democrat KDU-CSL finished in fourth place with 49 mandates, the opposition Freedom and Direct Democracy (SPD) came fifth with 32, followed by TOP 09 with 16 mandates.

The fifth member of the government coalition, the Pirate Party, on the other hand, will have only three representatives in the regional assembly, a loss of 94 seats versus the last election. The party leadership offered his resignation, and there are reports that the party will leave the government coalition as a result.

Babiš’ ANO movement also won in the first round of the Senate election, with 19 candidates advancing to the second round. Five seats were won outright, including two ANO candidates, while the remaining 22 seats at stake in Czechia’s 81-seat Senate will be decided in a second round of voting next week.

Babiš founded the Patriots for Europe grouping in the European Parliament last June with Hungary’s Viktor Orbán and the Austrian Freedom Party (FPÖ) president, Herbert Kickl, with it fast becoming the third-largest group in the EP.

Orbán took to X to celebrate Babiš’ victory, with the two known as close allies when Babiš served as prime minister.

Babiš is known for his opposition to mass immigration and EU centralization. He is also skeptical about Czechia’s continued support for Ukraine.

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