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North Macedonia PM Zaev Resigns After Poor Poll Showing

  North Macedonia’s embattled Prime Minister Zoran Zaev said on Sunday that he was resigning following his party’s poor showing in municipal elections over the … Continue reading North Macedonia PM Zaev Resigns After Poor Poll Showing


Prime Minister Zoran Zaev (C) speaks during a news conference at his party’s headquarters in Skopje late on Octobar 31, 2021. North Macedonia’s embattled Prime Minister Zoran Zaev said on Sunday that he was resigning following his party’s poor showing in municipal elections over the weekend. STR / AFP
Prime Minister Zoran Zaev (C) speaks during a news conference at his party’s headquarters in Skopje late on Octobar 31, 2021. North Macedonia’s embattled Prime Minister Zoran Zaev said on Sunday that he was resigning following his party’s poor showing in municipal elections over the weekend.
STR / AFP

 

North Macedonia’s embattled Prime Minister Zoran Zaev said on Sunday that he was resigning following his party’s poor showing in municipal elections over the weekend.

“I take the responsibility for the results of these elections. I resign as prime minister,” Zaev said during a press conference.

“I have brought freedom and democracy, and democracy means taking responsibility,” he said.

The premier offered few details or a timeline of when he would resign — a move that must be approved by parliament. Zaev said he opposed a new round of elections following his resignation.

The country’s main opposition party VMRO-DPMNE, which scored big wins in the weekend’s elections, including in the country’s capital Skopje, appeared to call for a new round of parliamentary elections after the announcement.

“The government has been de-legitimised and that is the new reality that will be manifested in the parliament over time. However, it’s best if this happens through early parliamentary elections,” said opposition leader Hristijan Mickoski.

Zaev was elected prime minister in 2017 after 10 years of right-wing rule led by strongman Nikola Gruevski whose government was shaken by a huge wiretapping scandal revealed by Zaev himself.

In 2018, Zaev struck a tough deal with Athens to add the geographical qualifier ‘North’ to the country’s official name in order to distinguish it from the Greek province of Macedonia.

The name change was a precondition to paving the way for potential NATO and European Union membership.

However, the country has faced threats from Bulgaria to block the beginning of talks due to a separate spat: Sofia disputes the origin of the Macedonian language, calling it a Bulgarian dialect.

Both countries also lay claim to certain historical events and figures, mainly from the Ottoman era.

Zaev had also pledged to tackle the pandemic and its economic effects, along with making progress on EU accession talks after the country officially became a candidate for membership but has had little to show for it in recent months.

North Macedonia held parliamentary elections in 2020 that saw Zaev’s Social Democrats return to power, after his party narrowly won a victory over right-wing rivals.

His governing coalition, a tie-up with the largest party representing the ethnic Albanian minority, continues to hold a wafer-thin majority in the parliament.

 

 

 

Prime Minister Zoran Zaev (C) speaks during a news conference at his party’s headquarters in Skopje late on Octobar 31, 2021. North Macedonia’s embattled Prime Minister Zoran Zaev said on Sunday that he was resigning following his party’s poor showing in municipal elections over the weekend.