Babiš
triumphs in Czechia, sending ripples through the EU
The
right-wing populist vows to slash support for Ukraine, challenge increased
military spending and confront Brussels over the Green Deal.
October
4, 2025 5:25 pm CET
By Ketrin
Jochecová
https://www.politico.eu/article/babis-poised-to-triumph-in-czech-election/
PRAGUE —
Right-wing populist Andrej Babiš and his ANO movement gained a decisive win in
a pivotal Czech parliamentary election, preliminary results showed on Saturday,
in a vote that risks turning Czechia into another headache for the EU.
ANO was
well ahead with 35 percent of the vote late Saturday, with ballots counted in
more than 98 percent of electoral districts. That compared with Prime Minister
Petr Fiala’s governing center-right coalition Spolu (Together), which had
around 23 percent.
“I am
happy,” Babiš told journalists at campaign headquarters Saturday evening. He
was greeted with loud applause from ANO members while an old Italian hit by
Ricchi e Poveri played over the loudspeakers.
Based on
past election experience, the State Election Commission, which is compiling
provisional results from more than 14,800 locations across Czechia and
worldwide, is expected to confirm the final outcome by Monday. But the
introduction of new mail-in voting could cause delays.
In total,
4,462 candidates and 26 parties are competing. Voter turnout was estimated at
68 percent, the highest since the 1998 elections.
The STAN
(Mayors and Independents) party, the fourth member of the current governing
coalition, trailed in third with 11 percent, followed by the far-right,
eurosceptic Freedom and Direct Democracy (SPD) at 8 percent — down from 13
percent in recent opinion polls. The Pirate Party, former governing coalition
member that quit last year, was on 8 percent.
The
election surprise is the right-wing populist Motorists for Themselves party,
which is on track to enter the parliament with around 7 percent despite
hovering barely above the 5 percent threshold during the campaign. The far-left
Stačilo! (Enough) party, which had been polling higher, is likely to fall
short.
Europe
has been watching the Czech elections with caution, as Babiš has vowed to scrap
the ammunition initiative for Ukraine, challenge NATO’s plans to boost military
spending, and confront the European Commission over the Green Deal.
Critics
fear that if the right-wing billionaire regains power, the Czech Republic could
become a new bête noire for the EU alongside Viktor Orbán’s Hungary and Robert
Fico’s Slovakia.
“I
believe that if we look at his statements and his allies in Europe — like
Viktor Orbán and what he has done with Hungary — he [Babiš] will start pushing
the Czech Republic toward the margins,” Czech Foreign Minister Jan Lipavský
told POLITICO.
“I don’t
want the Czech Republic to end up on the margins of Europe, like what happened
to Hungary or Slovakia,” Lipavský said. “And today there is a big difference
between being part of a willing coalition or not.”
Alarming
prospect
Babiš
will likely fall short of securing a majority in the 200-seat lower house,
meaning he will need parliamentary support to form a government. All of the
country’s mainstream parties have ruled out working with Babiš after the
election, leaving him no choice but turn to more extreme options.
His
likely partners are Motorists for Themselves, who, just like Babiš, do not want
to take Czechia out of the EU or NATO; or SPD, who do not share that stance.
That prospect has alarmed analysts and political opponents alike. ANO, SPD and
the Motorists are part of the Patriots for Europe group in the European
Parliament, which was co-founded by Babiš.
Babiš on
Saturday evening said he aims to form a single-party minority government,
supported by the SPD and the Motorists for Themselves.
“We will
lead talks with the SPD and Motorists and strive for a single-party government
led by the ANO movement,” he said.
That is
just the sort of arrangement that raises warning flags for Otto Eibl, a
political analyst at Masaryk University in Brno.
“I don’t
think that a government led by Andrej Babiš, if it were a minority government,
would necessarily mean the same thing as what we see with Fico in Slovakia or
Orbán in Hungary,” Eibl said. “Where it starts to become a real issue is with a
coalition government — or even a minority government propped up by the
communists, SPD, or any of those parties that make up these unnatural
coalitions. That’s where the problems could arise,” he said.
Babiš
campaigned on promises of cheaper energy, higher pensions and putting Czechia’s
interests ahead of Ukraine’s. His populist appeal is likened to that of Donald
Trump in the United States.
A
billionaire agricultural tycoon, Babiš already served as prime minister from
2017 to 2021. He ran for president in 2023 but lost to Army General Petr Pavel.
Babiš is
a well-known figure in Brussels, especially due to a long-standing legal case
in which he is suspected of defrauding the EU of €2 million to allow his
agriculture empire Agrofert to receive subsidies intended for medium-sized
businesses.
That case
is now back on the table as Babiš is currently awaiting a verdict from the
Prague District Court. Unless new evidence is found, the court is obliged to
take its lead from Prague’s High Court, which in June overturned an earlier
ruling clearing Babiš of wrongdoing.
Babiš
denies any guilt, insisting the case is politically motivated. However, it
could still jeopardize his return as prime minister if the president chooses
not to appoint him over his conflict of interest tied to Agrofert, a scenario
which remains unlikely but not impossible.
President
Pavel said he will meet all the parties that make it into the parliament on
Sunday.

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