North Macedonia votes for new president in poll focusing on EU accession, rule of law

Macedonians cast ballots in hopes of electing a president to guide the country's long-anticipated EU membership. The first round is underway, with a second round likely on May 8th. Seven candidates are running, but none are expected to win outright, requiring a second round with a 40% turnout threshold.


PTI | Skopje | Updated: 24-04-2024 23:39 IST | Created: 24-04-2024 23:39 IST
North Macedonia votes for new president in poll focusing on EU accession, rule of law
  • Country:
  • Macedonia

Voters in North Macedonia cast ballots on Wednesday for a president they hope will oversee the country's long-anticipated entry into the European Union.

The small Balkan country has orbited the EU for nearly two decades with little to show for its efforts to join the 27-nation bloc.

A second round of voting is almost certain to follow on May 8 — coinciding with parliamentary elections — as no candidate is expected to exceed the 50 per cent threshold of registered voters required for outright victory.

By 6:30 p.m. local time (1630GMT), half an hour before polling stations closed, turnout was 48.25 per cent, according to the latest data available from the State Electoral Commission.

Seven candidates are running for the largely ceremonial position, with the brief campaigning period focusing on EU accession, the rule of law, fighting corruption and reducing poverty.

Electoral commission head Aleksandar Dashtevski said during a morning news briefing that voting was going smoothly, with only a minor technical problem with biometric devices at some polling centres which was quickly resolved.

The main candidates are incumbent President Stevo Pendarovski and Gordana Siljanovska Davkova.

Pendarovski, 61, is running for a second five-year term with support from the country's governing social democrats.

Siljanovska Davkova, 70, is backed by the centre-right main opposition VMRO-DPMNE coalition.

Pendarovski said on Wednesday he expected the electoral process to be "peaceful and transparent".

"I have no doubt that the first and second round will be in line with the highest European and international standards," he said.

The two front-runners have differed on how to deal with neighbouring Bulgaria's insistence on Skopje enshrining in its constitution recognition of a Bulgarian ethnic minority. EU member Bulgaria has said it will otherwise block North Macedonia's bloc membership bid.

North Macedonia has been a candidate to join the EU since 2005, but membership talks only began in 2022 and the process is expected to take years.

Other presidential candidates include law professor Biljana Vankovska, running for the leftist party Levica, and two members of the ethnic Albanian minority: Foreign Minister Bujar Osmani, and Arben Taravari from an opposition ethnic Albanian party.

Voter Stavre Temelkovski said he had high expectations that North Macedonia would become a full-fledged EU member soon.

"I expect a civic movement to win, for us to be a part of all those pro-Western systems, and to start a process of healing for a state which has waited for almost three decades,'' he said. "Many generations are exhausted." Unless someone wins outright Wednesday, the two leading candidates will go through to a second round, where turnout must be at least 40 per cent for a valid result.

North Macedonia has 1.8 million registered voters, out of a population of 2.3 million.

Polls closed at 7 p.m. local time. There are no exit polls and the first results were expected early Thursday.

About 320 international observers were monitoring the election.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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