Menu

Now Reading
North Macedonia name change remains main issue in second-round presidential vote

Menu

North Macedonia name change remains main issue in second-round presidential vote

download
download
Photo: Reuters

North Macedonia goes back to the polls today for a run-off election between pro-EU and pro-name change Stevo Pendarovski and nationalist, Gordana Siljanovska-Davkova, who rejects the name-change.

The candidates tied in the first-round of voting on April 21, with each attracting about 42% of the vote. Polling indicates a similarly tight contest today.

However, widespread disillusionment with the name-change has resulted in voter-apathy, with only 41.8% turnout in the first-round. This threatens the constitutional requirement for a 40% turnout to legitimise the vote.

Although the presidency is largely ceremonial, with most executive power concentrated in the pro-name change Social Democrat government, failure to obtain a clear result today would firstly trigger a constitutional crisis caused by a vacant presidency and secondly, a snap parliamentary election, which would replay the divisiveness of the name-change debate.

See Also
Magistrates at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in The Hague, on May 24, 2024. Photo: Nick Gammon/AFP

Even if Siljanovka-Davkova wins—she has vowed to take the matter to the international court in the Hague—her chances of overturning the deal are slim. In a recent debate, she played-down the priority she would place on the issue in office. This reflects the difficulty of opposing the deal as a president with limited executive power and the general popularity of NATO/EU membership—which Athens no longer opposes Skopje’s pathway to—amongst North Macedonians.

Wake up smarter with an assessment of the stories that will make headlines in the next 24 hours. Download The Daily Brief.

View Comments (0)

Leave a Reply

Scroll To Top