Slovak Prime Minister Matovic quits, hands baton to ally Heger

March 31, 2021 - 3:41 PM
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Slovakia's Finance Minister Eduard Heger gives a statement next to Former Slovakia's Prime Minister Igor Matovic (not pictured) at the Presidential Palace in Bratislava, Slovakia, March 30, 2021. (Reuters/Radovan Stoklasa)

PRAGUE — Slovak Prime Minister Igor Matovic resigned on Tuesday, opening the way to forming a new government after a month-long political crisis sparked by a dispute over use of Russian coronavirus vaccines.

President Zuzana Caputova tasked Finance Minister Eduard Heger to form the new government, in an orchestrated handover of power from Matovic to his Ordinary People (OLANO) party colleague and trusted ally.

All four parties in the ruling coalition have agreed to participate in a new cabinet with Heger at the helm, while Matovic will take the finance portfolio.

Matovic offered the swap to appease his coalition partners following a series of disputes that boiled over at the start of March, when Matovic secretly ordered a shipment of Russian COVID-19 vaccines his partners had opposed because they lack clearance for usage in the European Union.

Matovic was keen to boost vaccinations as the country of 5.5 million was slowly emerging from its worst wave of the pandemic, which has filled hospitals and put Slovakia among Europe’s worst-hit countries in recent weeks.

With Matovic and his main rival, Freedom and Solidarity (SaS) leader Richard Sulik – both outspoken firebrands – in the new government, the truce among the parties may be shaky.

“It could be even less stable, because besides the conflict line between Matovic and Sulik, another could appear within OLANO between Matovic as chairman and Heger as the prime minister,” said political scientist Tomas Nociar.

Heger, 44, was a manager and parliamentary deputy from Matovic’s OLANO party from 2016 to 2020, when he took over the finance portfolio.

OLANO won the election a year ago with an anti-corruption agenda following the murder of an investigative journalist and his fiancée in 2018. A series of investigations have started since it came to power. —Reporting by Robert Muller and Jan Lopatka; Editing by Alison Williams and Bill Berkrot