Current:Home > BackSlovak president says she’ll challenge new government’s plan to close top prosecutors office-InfoLens
Slovak president says she’ll challenge new government’s plan to close top prosecutors office
View Date:2024-12-23 11:15:41
Slovakia’s president said Friday she would seek to block the new government’s plan to return the prosecution of major crimes from a national office to regional ones, using either a veto or a constitutional challenge. But the governing coalition could likely override any veto.
The government of populist Prime Minister Robert Fico plans to change the penal code to abolish the special prosecutors office that handles serious crimes such as graft and organized crime by mid-January, and return those prosecutions to regional offices, which have not dealt with such crimes for 20 years.
President Zuzana Caputova said in a televised address Friday that she thinks the planned changes go against the rule of law, and noted that the European Commission also has expressed concerns that the measure is being rushed through.
The legislation approved by Fico’s government on Wednesday needs parliamentary and presidential approval. The three-party coalition has a majority in Parliament.
President Caputova could veto the change, but that likely would at most delay the legislation because the coalition can override her veto by a simple majority. It’s unclear how any constitutional challenge to the legislation would fare.
Fico returned to power for the fourth time after his scandal-tainted leftist party won Slovakia’s Sept. 30 parliamentary election on a pro-Russian and anti-American platform.
His critics worry that his return could lead Slovakia to abandon its pro-Western course and instead follow the direction of Hungary under Prime Minister Viktor Orbán.
Since Fico’s government came to power, some elite investigators and police officials who deal with top corruption cases have been dismissed or furloughed. The planned changes in the legal system also include a reduction in punishments for some kinds of corruption.
Under the previous government, which came to power in 2020 after campaigning on an anti-corruption ticket, dozens of senior officials, police officers, judges, prosecutors, politicians and businesspeople linked to Fico’s party have been charged and convicted of corruption and other crimes.
Several other cases have not been completed yet, and it remains unclear what will happen to them under the new legislation.
The opposition has planned to hold a protest rally in the capital on Tuesday.
veryGood! (9)
Related
- Contained, extinguished and mopping up: Here’s what some common wildfire terms mean
- Small airplane crashes into neighborhood in Oregon, sheriff's office says
- Sudden death of ‘Johnny Hockey’ means more hard times for beleaguered Columbus Blue Jackets
- Jason Duggar Is Engaged to Girlfriend Maddie Grace
- How Saturday Night Live Reacted to Donald Trump’s Win Over Kamala Harris
- Horoscopes Today, August 31, 2024
- Small airplane crashes into neighborhood in Oregon, sheriff's office says
- US wheelchair rugby team gets redemption, earns spot in gold-medal game
- Stock market today: Asian stocks decline as China stimulus plan disappoints markets
- 2024 US Open is wide open on men's side. So we ranked who's most likely to win
Ranking
- BITFII Introduce
- Race for Alaska’s lone US House seat narrows to final candidates
- Nikki Garcia Ditches Wedding Ring in First Outing Since Artem Chigvintsev's Domestic Violence Arrest
- 41,000 people were killed in US car crashes last year. What cities are the most dangerous?
- Queen Elizabeth II's Final 5-Word Diary Entry Revealed
- Can the ‘Magic’ and ‘Angels’ that Make Long Trails Mystical for Hikers Also Conjure Solutions to Environmental Challenges?
- Is there an AT&T outage? Why your iPhone may be stuck in SOS mode.
- How to know if your kid is having 'fun' in sports? Andre Agassi has advice
Recommendation
-
Stock market today: Asian shares meander, tracking Wall Street’s mixed finish as dollar surges
-
California lawmakers approve legislation to ban deepfakes, protect workers and regulate AI
-
John Stamos got kicked out of Scientology for goofing around
-
4 killed, 2 injured in Hawaii shooting; shooter among those killed, police say
-
New Pentagon report on UFOs includes hundreds of new incidents but no evidence of aliens
-
Tennessee football fan gets into argument with wife live during Vols postgame radio show
-
Storm sets off floods and landslides in Philippines, leaving at least 9 dead
-
NCAA blocks Oklahoma State use of QR code helmet stickers for NIL fund