Home World World Leaders eyeing the forthcoming Czech Elections.
World - September 30, 2025

World Leaders eyeing the forthcoming Czech Elections.

Sept 2025 : Czech is poised for its forthcoming Parliamentary Elections on 03rd and 04th October, 2025. While the voters are enthusiast about exercising their electoral franchise, many fear the country may turn away from its pro-European path, taking away one of Ukraine’s staunchest supporters as its battle to repel invading Russian forces nears a fourth year.

Most polls analysis have indicated that billionaire Andrej Babis and his populist ANO party will win the parliamentary elections with around 30% of the vote. That means Babis would have to form a coalition government with fringe parties that would bring the country closer to Viktor Orban’s Hungary and Robert Fico’s Slovakia in terms of its outlook on Ukraine: stopping aid for Kyiv and becoming less enthusiastic about Czech membership in Western institutions.

While not in total alignment with Moscow’s positions, Prague would become more vocal on the need to immediately stop the war and aim for peace which would be most likely on the Kremlin’s terms. Expect less harsh rhetoric toward China, as well.

Polling and political analyst Michael Ashcroft said in an analysis that the Czechs may join “what is from Kyiv’s point of view a worrying trend in Central and Eastern Europe, with the existing stance of the Hungarian and Slovakian governments and the new Polish president much less inclined to defend Ukrainian sovereignty. The consequences could include isolating Ukraine from Western European partners, disrupting military supplies and sowing further division in the alliance“.

Just as it did in Moldova, where elections those were held last weekend had experienced a massive Russian disinformation campaign try and swing voters away from pro-Europe parties, the Kremlin has been looking to take advantage of the waning support for aid to Ukraine that has help fueled Babis’s rise back to prominence.

A Czech research group uncovered nearly 300 anonymous TikTok accounts aimed at amplifying pro-Russian narratives and backing radical parties in the final weeks of the election campaign. The Center For Research Into Online Risks said in a statement on September 28 that Czech TikTok accounts with millions of followers “are systematically spreading pro-Russian propaganda and support for anti-system parties through manipulated engagement“. The center added that the accounts are not tied to a single political entity, instead “combining support for multiple anti-system parties simultaneously. The cumulative reach of these accounts is 5 to 9 million views per week, more than the combined official accounts of the leaders of the largest Czech political parties on TikTok“, it said.

Analysts have asserted that the key thing to look out for now is which parties gain enough votes to enter parliament as Babis will likely need a coalition to govern.

Spolu (Together), an alliance of center-right parties that includes the incumbent Prime Minister Petr Fiala’s Civic Democrats, is polling at around 20%, whereas the other parties of the current pro-Western coalition government Stan (Mayors and Independents) and the Pirates are predicted to end up with 10% to 12% each.

All of these parties have said they have no interest in joining a coalition with ANO or even backing it with votes to pass legislation as a single-party minority government. Nevertheless, these are pre-election narratives, and their tune could change after the vote, especially amid growing fears that more radical coalition alternatives could derail the Czech Republic’s pro-Western course. As junior coalition partners, these parties could demand key posts in the Foreign Ministry and Defense Ministry.

Secondly, there are factions in the current government, notably in the Civic Democrats, that share ANO’s political positions, committed to NATO but weaker on EU membership where it has voiced clear opposition to euro adoption and Brussels policies such as mandatory refugee quotas and the green deal.

But the Central European country could also change radically if Babis teams up with any of the current opposition parties that are even more radical than ANO. These include the far-right SPD, polling above 10%, as well as a smaller far-right outfit AUTO (Motorists For Themselves) and the far-left Stacilo (Enough), both of which are expected to clear the 05% threshold needed to gain seats in parliament.

Governing with any of these would likely lead to a real rapprochement with Orban and Fico, both of whom have been critical of aid to Ukraine and are also in the vanguard of countries in Europe that continue to purchase Russian oil and natural gas following Moscow’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

A key figure, in what follows the voting, will be pro-Western President Petr Pavel, who plays a role in government formation as well as foreign policy in general. Pavel, a former senior NATO general, has made it clear he won’t allow the government to stray too far from the Western course.

Babis has been a constant fixture of Czech politics for the past 15 years, first serving as finance minister and deputy prime minister before leading the country from 2017 to 2021, as well as attempting to become president only to be trounced by Pavel in 2023. One of the country’s richest people, with considerable stakes in agribusiness and media, his time in the public spotlight has been dogged by legal disputes and accusations of conflicts of interest and EU subsidy fraud.

It’s also his business interests that many believe could keep him, and by extension the Czech Republic, anchored in the West as good relations between France, Germany, and Austria as well as the continued flow of EU agriculture and cohesion funds are more important than anything Beijing and Moscow can offer.

Moreover, Babis has chartered a more populist course in recent years and was one of the creators of the biggest populist forces on the Continent: Patriots For Europe, a political family also consisting of Orban’s Fidesz, Marine Le Pen’s National Rally, Spain’s Vox, and Austria’s Freedom party. He has also voiced support for Fico’s Smer party even though it is not formally part of this alliance.

Rallying against all, Brussels, environmentalism, and immigration, they would also find sympathetic ears beyond Central Europe with right-wing populists of various hues on the rise or in power in many other Western capitals as well.

Team Maverick

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