SKOPJE, May 8 (NNN-AGENCIES) — North Macedonia appears to be on a collision course with its EU neighbours Greece and Bulgaria, with double-header elections Wednesday likely to return the country’s right-wing opposition to power.
The vote could have a major effect on the Balkan country’s dream of joining the European Union.
After scoring a landslide win in the first round of presidential elections last month, the nationalist VMRO-DPMNE party was heading into the run-off vote and simultaneous parliamentary elections brimming with confidence.
Party chief Hristijan Mickoski has refused to acknowledge the country’s new name and a historic agreement with Greece in 2018, which added “North” to its title to settle a long-running dispute and allowed the country to join NATO.
Mickoski has also vowed to stand firm in a tussle with Bulgaria over linguistic and historical issues that has seen Sofia block North Macedonia’s EU accession talks for the past two years.
Bulgaria has demanded Skopje change its constitution to acknowledge its tiny Bulgarian minority.
“Victory is within reach and it is a consequence of all the suffering and humiliation this government brought,” Mickoski told supporters at a rally in the capital fired up by his nationalist message.
If his VMRO-DPMNE party secures a majority in the parliament, Mickoski will likely be the country’s next prime minister.
Since taking over the right-wing VMRO-DPMNE in 2017, Mickoski has revamped the tattered party after its former leader and ex-PM Nikola Gruevski fled corruption convictions and was given asylum in Viktor Orban’s Hungary.
Mickoski has also pledged to create tens of thousands of jobs, a message that has found a welcome audience with many in the country battered by abysmal economic growth and soaring inflation.
North Macedonia has lost some 10 percent of its population to mass emigration over the past two decades, with few opportunities for the young.
“VMRO-DPMNE has a great advantage and has the possibility of getting an even wider mobilisation of voters,” said political analyst Xhelal Neziri.
In the run-up to Wednesday’s contest, Mickoski has used increasingly aggressive language toward the country’s largest Albanian party — the DUI — stirring anxieties that the rhetoric could undercut fragile inter-ethnic relations.
Albanians make up more than a quarter of the country’s population of 1.8 million, with the DUI’s leader Ali Ahmeti leading a brief armed revolt for greater rights for Albanians in 2001.
Since declaring independence from Yugoslavia in 1991, successive governments have followed an unwritten rule that an ethnic Albanian party must be included in the governing coalition.
The DUI, along with an alliance of minority parties, appears set to capture the largest number of Albanian votes despite Mickoski lambasting its leaders over alleged corruption.
“Whenever I tell the truth, they distort it as an attack against Albanians,” said Mickoski.
The ruling centre-left Social Democrats (SDSM) have warned that the elections will decide whether Macedonia has a future in the EU, but they have struggled to regain the initiative since their first-round loss in the presidential poll.
“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 former prime minister and SDSM chief Dimitar Kovacevski.
The SDSM are pinning their political hopes on unlocking talks with the EU and appeasing Bulgaria.
They tried to amend the constitution to acknowledge the Bulgarian minority but lacked the numbers to win a parliamentary vote. — NNN-AGENCIES