fbpx
Wikipedia

Slovenian Democratic Party

The Slovenian Democratic Party (Slovene: Slovenska demokratska stranka, SDS), formerly the Social Democratic Party of Slovenia (Slovene: Socialdemokratska stranka Slovenije, SDSS),[15][16] is a conservative[3] parliamentary party; it is also one of the largest parties[17] in Slovenia, with approximately 30,000 reported members in 2013.

Slovenian Democratic Party
Slovenska demokratska stranka
AbbreviationSDS
LeaderJanez Janša
Founded16 February 1989
HeadquartersTrstenjakova ulica 8, Ljubljana
Youth wingSlovenian Democratic Youth[1]
Membership (2013)30,000[2]
Ideology
Political positionRight-wing[10][12][13]
European affiliationEuropean People's Party
International affiliationCentrist Democrat International
International Democrat Union
European Parliament groupEuropean People's Party
Colours  Yellow   Blue
Anthem
"Slovenska pomlad"[14]
"Slovenian Spring"
National Assembly
27 / 90
European Parliament
2 / 8
Mayors
12 / 212
Municipal council
583 / 2,750
Party flag
Website
sds.si

It has been described as nationalist[18] and right-wing populist,[9] encompassing both national[19] and social conservatism.[20] Led by former Prime Minister of Slovenia Janez Janša, the SDS is a member of the European People's Party (EPP), Centrist Democrat International[21] and International Democrat Union.[22]

SDS has its origins in the Slovenian anti-Communist pro-democracy dissident labour union movement of the late 1980s. The Social Democratic Union of Slovenia (later renamed Social Democratic Party and, in 2003, Slovenian Democratic Party) was first headed by trade unionist France Tomšič, then by the prominent Slovenian pro-independence and pro-democracy dissident Jože Pučnik, who resigned in 1993. The party was part of the Democratic Opposition of Slovenia (DEMOS) coalition.

The party's early ideological orientation was liberal, social democratic, and civic nationalist, reflecting a broad and somewhat fragmented coalition. In the 1992 parliamentary elections, SDS barely passed the parliamentary threshold, joining a Liberal Democracy of Slovenia-led coalition government. In 1993, Janez Janša, another prominent pro-democracy dissident turned politician, became party leader (a post he has held continuously since); Janša also served as Minister of Defense between 1990 and 1994. In 1994, Janša was ousted from his ministerial post due to his involvement in the Depala Vas affair; SDS consequently left the coalition government. SDS largely remained in opposition for the following 10 years, gaining in popularity and shifting its ideological outlook rightwards in the meanwhile. In 1995, SDS absorbed the conservative National Democratic Party, a former DEMOS coalition partner.

In 2004, SDS placed first in that year's parliamentary elections, forming a centre-right governing coalition with Janša as PM. The government oversaw the country's entry into the European Union and NATO, and a period of rapid economic growth. The government faced allegations of curtailing media freedom. In the 2008 parliamentary elections, SDS was surpassed by the Social Democrats.

SDS placed second in the 2011 parliamentary elections but managed to secure support for a SDS-led coalition government, forming the second Janša Cabinet. The government took office in the midst of the European debt crisis, instituting widely disliked austerity reforms which helped spark a series of massive anti-government protests. Opposition to the government was further fueled by corruption allegations against Janša, including his alleged involvement in the Patria affair as well as a 2013 KPK report which found that Janša had violated corruption prevention measures. The SDS-led government collapsed in early 2013 after losing support of coalition partners.

At the time of the 2014 parliamentary elections, SDS leader Janša was serving a prison sentence for a bribery conviction (which was later overturned by the supreme court and subsequently expired upon re-trial); SDS placed second. SDS won a plurality of votes in the 2018 election, however, most of the other parliamentary parties made pre-election pledges not to join a coalition government with SDS. After the centre-left coalition collapsed in early 2020, two of the parties that had seen a change of leadership since the election reneged on their pre-election pledge, clearing the path for the third Janša Cabinet. The new SDS-led government took office during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic. In recent years, Janša has been described as an illiberal leader.[23][24]

History edit

Origins edit

The Slovenian Democratic Party developed from the merger of two distinct political parties, being the legal successor of both of the Social Democratic Union of Slovenia and the Slovenian Democratic Union,[25][26][27][28] member parties of the Democratic Opposition of Slovenia (DEMOS) which defeated the Communist Party of Slovenia-derived parties in the first democratic Slovenian election in 1990,[26] and carried out the democratization of Slovenia and its secession from Yugoslavia.[citation needed]

The Social Democratic Union of Slovenia had emerged from an independent, anti-Communist trade union movement in the late 1980s. Its first president was the trade union leader France Tomšič, who in December 1987 organized a milestone workers' strike which lead to the establishment of an independent trade union, Neodvisnost, thus following the example of the Solidarity movement in Poland,[29] and, in 1989, the party (which was the first opposition party in the former communist world).[27][30][29][31] Tomšič was replaced as leader by Jože Pučnik later that year while the SDU was renamed as Social Democratic Party of Slovenia (SDS).[30] Pučnik was a former dissident who had been forced to emigrate to Germany as a political exile in the 1960s.[32] Under Pučnik's leadership, The SDU gradually developed into a moderate social-democratic party, which combined the plea for a social market economy with the support of a welfare state based on a German, Austrian and Scandinavian social model.[citation needed]

The Slovenian Democratic Union was founded in January 1989[28] as opposition to the Communist Party of Slovenia, emphasizing establishment of the rule of law and respect for human rights and fundamental political freedoms, respect for minority rights, and Euro-Atlantic integration (the European Union and NATO). It functioned as a broad but somewhat fragmented coalition of several groups with different liberal, social-liberal and civic nationalist agendas.[citation needed]

In 1991, after a conflict between the leadership and membership of SDU, the Slovenian Democratic Union split into two parties – the social-liberal wing established the Democratic Party (DSS), while the conservative faction founded the National Democratic Party (NDS).[28] Members who did not join one of these two parties joined the Social Democratic Party led by Jože Pučnik.[citation needed] Although the Social Democratic Party suffered a clear defeat in the 1992 election, barely entering Parliament, it formed a coalition with the winning Liberal Democracy of Slovenia (LDS) and entered the cabinet of Janez Drnovšek.[33][34][35][36][37]

Janša became party leader in 1993 after Jože Pučnik resigned due to health issues (Pučnik later became the honorary president of the party, a function he held until his death in January 2003).[37][38] In 1995, the National Democratic Party joined SDS, which thus became one of the legal successors of the Slovenian Democratic Union.[25][28][37]

Janša served as Minister of Defense from 1990 to 1994.[39] Janša has been accused of having abused his position to consolidate political power,[40] engaging in arms trafficking to arm combatants in the Yugoslav Wars in violation of a United Nations arms embargo,[40][41][42][43][44][45][46] and blackmailing prominent individuals, including politicians, businesspeople, journalists, and cultural and literary figures, by threatening to make public information (to which he was privy to in his ministerial role) regarding their previously undisclosed involvement with the former communist secret police.[40]

In 1994, Janez Janša was dismissed by Prime Minister Janez Drnovšek from his role as Defence Minister because of his involvement in the Depala Vas affair (which centered around an incident in which military personnel arrested and mistreated a civilian off-duty undercover police associate that was attempting to obtain classified documents about the Ministry of Defence).[47][48][37][40] SDS subsequently left the Drnovšek government as a result.[37] The dismissal prompted protests by Janša's supporters[49] and there were founded fears inside the government that Janša, backed by the nascent military, may refuse to relinquish power.[40] A 2003 Mladina article alleged that Slovenia's military's special unit (MORiS) was in 1994 performing military exercises intended to prepare the force to carry out a military coup d'état. The police force was at the same time covertly preparing to secure the state and prevent a military takeover. In a press conference shortly prior to the article's publication, Janša pointed to documents detailing these police plans to secure state institutions to argue that a coup was in fact afoot against his Ministry. In a 1999 interview with Delo, Janša commented on the events of 1994, saying: "I held immense power in my hands. [...] And in 1994, when they were deposing me, there was a lot of suggestions that we not accept this removal. I could have done that. But I didn't."[50] In 1995, Janša was charged for alleged illegal arms trafficking, but the case was never brought to trial.[42]

SDS remained in opposition for the next 10 years, except for a brief period in 2000, when it entered a short-lived centre-right government led by Andrej Bajuk,[37][51][52] while gaining popularity among – as described by one of its former supporters, Peter Jambrek – "lower, frustrated social strata".[citation needed][53]

A populist turn edit

After the year 2000, the party applied for membership in the European People's Party (EPP),[37] adopting a liberal economic policy and later pro-austerity measures upon the late-2000 economic crisis, while retaining an atlantist foreign policy.[citation needed] The rightward shift culminated in the 2003 name change from Social Democratic Party to Slovenian Democratic party.[12][25] The party was described as liberal-conservative[54] or conservative-liberal[55] in ideological orientation.

The party's radical populism, nationalistic,[12] and xenophobic attacks was also observed by political analysts.[56][57][58] Moreover, the local Slovenian Catholic Church supported it more than any other Slovenian political party. Even though not a nominally Christian party, the local church has stood fully and unconditionally behind it.[56]

2004–2008: in power (first Janša Cabinet) edit

On 3 October 2004, SDS won the 2004 parliamentary election with 29.1% of the popular vote and 29 out of 88 seats.[59] SDS then formed a coalition with New Slovenia (NSi), the Slovenian People's Party (SLS), and Democratic Party of Pensioners of Slovenia (DeSUS), holding a total of 49 parliamentary seats (out of 90).[60]

The SDS-led government passed several pro-business measures, initiated the regionalisation of the country by giving more power to local governments, and, in order to please its coalition party, DeSUS - introduced economically non-sustainable changes in the pension system.[citation needed]

SDS has been accused of catering to the interests of the Slovenian Roman Catholic Church in exchange for political support.[61][62] Nevertheless, the Church maintained a critical attitude towards some of the party's positions (the SDS-led Government has assumed a favourable attitude towards gambling tourism, stem cell research and passed a law recognizing same-sex civil unions, all opposed by the Roman Catholic Church).[citation needed]

Internal affairs edit

The government introduced measures to supervise, and to curtail the powers of the Slovenian Intelligence and Security Agency. The measures were strongly rebuked by the opposition and segments of the press as an attempt to discredit the secret intelligence service and cast a negative shadow on the policies of previous governments.[63][64]

Freedom of the press edit

The first SDS government was the target of widespread criticism due to allegations of meddling in the independence of the press.[65][66] The first SDS government has been accused of politicising the independent press by appointing political allies[67] to leadership and journalist positioned in the state Slovenian Press Agency,[61][68] daily newspaper Delo,[61][68] regional newspaper Primorske novice,[68] and public media and broadcasting organisation, RTV Slovenia.[61][68] The government was accused of using state-owned funds and companies with controlling stakes in newspaper companies to purge critical editors and journalists.[66]

State-owned companies also ceased purchasing adverts in the daily newspaper Dnevnik and weekly political magazine Mladina, two publications critical of the administration.[66][69][61]

By changing the laws governing the administration of the public broadcaster RTV Slovenia, the government enabled increased political control of the state media organisation's editorial board and its board of directors by increasing the number of board members appointed by the government.[61][70][66] The law faced a referendum challenge, but was approved by a tight margin as it also promised to lower compulsory contributions for the broadcaster's funding.[71]

In a secret 2007 deal with the head of the Laško Brewery that owned the flagship national newspaper Delo as subsidiary, PM Janša secured editorial influence over the newspaper while Laško would be allowed to acquire a stake in a state-owned grocery store corporation.[66][72][73] A new, government-friendly editor-in-chief was installed despite overwhelming opposition from the newspaper's staff,[74][66] and nearly a dozen of the newspaper's journalists resigned in protest. The remaining journalists found reporting critically on the government increasingly difficult due to pressure from the new leadership.[66] In 2008, after a souring of relations, the head of Laško accused Janša of threatening him with arrest if he refused to sell the Delo newspaper company.[75]

In 2007, over five hundred journalists launched a petition against political pressures on the media. The petition accused premier Janša of limiting press freedom in particular, but was also more broadly aimed against all infringements of press freedom by either government, political actors in general, or media company owners.[76][77] The International Press Institute voiced support for the petition and called on the government to create an independent body to investigate the claims of media influence.[78] The Association of European Journalists warned in 2007 of Slovene media companies' boards interfering in journalistic autonomy, reprimanding journalists and fostering other conditions that prevent critical reporting about the government and lead to self-censorship while journalists are also being prevented from covering issues that may go against the interests of the owners.[79][80] SDS foreign minister Dimitrij Rupel had previously advised media owners to consider thoroughly whether a battle with the government is in their interest.[81]

SDS rejected accusations of impropriety, claiming the media was in fact controlled by leftist opposition groups.[65][82]

Economy and finance edit

The first Cabinet of Janez Janša oversaw a period of rapid economic growth. GDP grew by nearly 5% between 2004 and 2006, reaching nearly 7% growth in 2007,[83] making Slovenia the fastest-growing eurozone member for that year.[84] The economic boom, however, was highly dependent on private debt, particularly corporate debt.[83] Additionally, the Janša government failed to implement meaningful structural reforms or accumulate budget surpluses during the period of sustained growth, instead opting for pork barrel politics, reducing tax burdens while engaging in economic populist overspending, making the country particularly susceptible to the coming economic crisis.[25]

Andrej Bajuk, Minister of Finance in Janša's first cabinet, listed the passage of comprehensive tax reform (which included the lowering of corporate taxes and taxes on juridical persons, a reduction of the tax burden on individual incomes, the flattening of income tax margin progression, an increase in tax deductions, and a simplification of the tax code), overseeing the implementation of the Euro and the privatisation of state-owned NKBM bank, and reducing public expenditure as the greatest accomplishments of the ministry during his term (2004–2008).[85]

According to Janša, the most prominent economic challenge confronted by his government was a bout of inflation[86] (which occurred during the 2007-08 period and was steepest for foodstuff prices).[87][86][88][89] At the close of 2007, the inflation rate in Slovenia was the highest of any Eurozone member.[90] Janša, Finance Minister Bajuk and other government officials pointed to high oil prices and a non-competitive internal food market as the main underlying causes for the inflation.[86][85][89][91][87] Janša faced criticism for his statement regarding the issue made during a gathering of regional politicians and businessmen; Janša dismissed concerns regarding rising food prices, saying that "as long as there are loaves of bread in every city dumpster the situation isn't alarming".[92][93] Economic Development Minister Andrej Vizjak similarly addressed cost of living concerns by saying that citizens "should not be loath to occasionally eat yesterday's bread", going on to say that the food price increases are an opportunity to address the overindulgence of Slovenian consumers.[92]

2008–2011: in opposition edit

In the 2008 parliamentary election (held on 21 September 2008) narrowly lost against the Social Democrats, until then the main opposition party. It also lost one seat in Slovenian Parliament, falling to 28.[94]

With the election of the Social Democrat leader Borut Pahor as Prime Minister of Slovenia, the Slovenian Democratic Party officially declared it would stay in opposition and form a shadow cabinet. The shadow government was formed in late December 2008, and it includes several independent members as well as members from other conservative parties.[95]

In the 2009 European election, the SDS was the most popular party in Slovenia with 26.9% of votes, more than eight points ahead of the second-most popular party, the ruling Social Democrats.[96]

In 2009, the MP Franc Pukšič left the Slovenian Democratic Party and joined the Slovenian People's Party; the SDS parliamentary group was thus reduced from 28 to 27 MPs.[97]

2012–2013: a year in power (second Janša Cabinet) edit

In the 2011 snap parliamentary election (held on 4 December after the centre-left governing coalition collapsed due to internal conflict and inefficacy in passing meaningful economic reforms), SDS won 26.19% of the vote, gaining 26 seats in the National Assembly, thus making SDS the second-largest parliamentary party after the newly formed centre-left party, Positive Slovenia (PS) (headed by Ljubljana mayor Zoran Janković), which won 28 MPs (28.5% of the total).[98][99][100] However, SDS succeeded in forming a ruling four-party coalition government (which included the Civic List, New Slovenia, Slovenian People's Party, and Democratic Party of Pensioners of Slovenia) (holding a combined total of 50 out of 90 parliamentary seats) some two months after the election after PS failed to form a coalition with a parliamentary majority. The coalition took power amid an alarming economic downturn (European debt crisis),[99] the worst in the independent country's history.[citation needed] The country's economic woes were further exacerbated by credit agencies' lowering of Slovenia's credit rating amid the political tumult.[99]

The coalition, headed by SDS, undertook drastic economic and financial reforms in an attempt to halt the economic downturn. Finance Minister Janez Šuštaršič pledged to speed up privatisation of state enterprises, cut public spending, and reduce budget shortfalls.[101] Janša additionally pledged to cut taxes, remove regulations, lower the deficit, and raise the retirement age.[84] The coalition passed laws transferring all state-owned enterprises into a single state holding company to accelerate privatisation efforts, and created a bad bank that would take on non-performing loans from the bad debt-ridden state-owned banks.[102] It intended to cut profit and income taxes to boost the economy,[103][104] and enact constitutional changes demanding balance budgets.[104] It also passed sweeping and highly contentious austerity measures (the Law of Public Finance Balance (Slovene: Zakon o uravnovešenju javnih financ (ZUJF))), and reportedly planned further cuts to state spending.[83][105] The ZUJF fiscal consolidation law included provisions lowering pensions (widely opposed by the public[106]), cutting wages for public sector employees, reducing education funding, social transfers and benefits.[107][83][108] The draft of the law sparked a public sector general strike,[83] and the law faced the possibility of a referendum.[109][108]

The SDS-led government proved impotent in stemming the economic troubles facing the nation. Despite the momentous reforms efforts, the economic troubles intensified, resulting in increasing levels of unemployment, plunging living standards, a fall in domestic spending, and large budget deficits.[110][83][100] The fall in domestic demand, coupled with falling exports, resulted in a double dip recession.[111][112][113] A 2016 article alleges that the sharp downturn in Slovenian economic outlook was a result of Janša's overdramatic public statements regarding the economic fitness of the nation. Janša reportedly made such ominous claims for political purposes as means of solidifying political power and as a negotiating strategy to strengthen his hand during negotiations with public sector unions. The PM's eerie pronouncements were taken at face value by foreign observers, however, creating a self-fulfilling feedback loop where gloomy statements made by top Slovene officials created more panic and dismay in the foreign press and various organisations, and vice versa, resulting in falling credit ratings and asset prices, and excessive capital injections/bailouts with funds borrowed at excessively high interest rates.[114]

In late 2012, protests began to take place in Slovenia's second largest city, Maribor, against its mayor and SDS ally, Franc Kangler, who was being investigated due to allegations of corruption.[115][116] The protests soon picked up momentum and spread across the country, becoming the largest in the independent republic's history. Protestors' main grievances were the harsh austerity measures imposed by the ruling government, looming sale-offs of state enterprises, and allegations of widespread corruption among the ruling elite. The protests also saw the worst violence in the nation's history as an independent state, with small groups of young, violent extremists - likely members of far-right and hooligan groups - clashing with police.[117][118][119][120][100] In early 2013, the instability and public resentment was compounded after the Commission for the Prevention of Corruption revealed both PM Janez Janša and the leader of the largest opposition party (PS), Zoran Janković, violated anti-corruption laws by failing to report or account for assets in their possession and received income/payments.[121][122] Janša also faced graft charges even before ascending to the premiership in 2012. He was one of the defendants being tried for corruption as result of a 2006 bribery scandal involving charges of accepting kickbacks[99][123] to fund his party's electoral campaign.[123] Media reports alleging Slovenian Intelligence and Security Agency was "infiltrated" by members of SDS also surfaced.[124] Amid mounting pressure from continuing anti-government protests,[125][126][127] a strike of public sector workers,[122] and the lowest public opinion ratings of any government in the nation's history,[128][129][130][131] coalition partners began to depart from the coalition.[132][125][110] The government finally collapsed after a vote of no confidence, and a PS consensus candidate, Alenka Bratušek, was appointed as PM (despite some protests that continued to demand a snap election).[133][134][111][100]

2013–2020: return to opposition edit

On 20 March 2013, the second Janša cabinet was replaced by the cabinet of Alenka Bratušek, a four-party centre-left coalition led by the new leader of Positive Slovenia, Alenka Bratušek.[134][111][100]

In June 2013, Janša was convicted in the Patria case, but appealed the verdict. In April 2014, the Higher Court upheld the two-year jail sentence passed on Janez Janša as result of the bribery conviction.[135][136] In June of that year, Janša began serving out his sentence, 26 years after his imprisonment for leaking military secrets as a whistle-blower (his imprisonment, trial, and public reaction were a milestone in the Slovenian path to independence). Despite his imprisonment, Janša stood as candidate for MP.[137]

In the May 2014 European Parliament election, SDS came in first place nationally, garnering 24.78% of the vote,[138][139] and winning three MEP seats (out of eight allocated for Slovenia).[140]

The party received 20.69% of the vote in the snap Slovenian parliamentary election held on 13 July 2014, and won 21 seats in parliament.[141] The party remained in opposition, this time to the cabinet of Miro Cerar.[142] Janez Janša was reelected as MP despite being imprisoned. The Constitutional Court decided not to deprive Janša of his MP mandate, and Janša was allowed leave while carrying out his political functions.[143] The Constitutional Court suspended Janša's jail sentence in December, pending the ruling regarding his appeal of the Patria verdict.[144] The Constitutional Court decided to annul the Higher Court's decision in April 2015, returning it to the lower courts for retrial.[145] In September of the same year, the statute of limitations of the Patria case expired.[146]

SDS representatives expressed the belief that the trial was politically motivated and that the imprisonment of the party frontman unfairly hindered their election efforts, declaring the elections illegitimate and "stolen", and demanded fresh elections.[147][148][149] In 2018, SDS sued the state for alleged financial damages the party incurred due to the alleged election "theft",[150][149] and lost the case.[151]

With a campaign largely based on anti-immigration populist rhetoric, SDS topped public opinion polls heading into the 2018 parliamentary election.[152] The incendiary electoral campaign sparked a rally under the title "Without Fear — Against the Politics of Hatred", with some 2,000-3,000 heart-shaped balloon-carrying marchers in attendance.[153][154][155]

During the 2018 electoral campaign, SDS also begun to send postable questionnaires ("voter consults") to Slovene households. The questionnaires contained loaded questions and proposals (e.g. "... Do you support SDS's proposal that the healthcare system be set in order?"). The effort was apparently part of the party's electoral campaign, and likely fashioned on Hungarian "national consultations", which the country's ruling party has practiced for years.[156][157][158]

SDS once again emerged as winner in the 3 June 2018 parliamentary election, garnering 24.92% of the vote and winning 25 MP seats.[159] However, the party was unlikely to be able to shore up needed support for a governing coalition, as most parliamentary parties (List of Marjan Šarec, Social Democrats, Modern Centre Party, The Left, Party of Alenka Bratušek, and Democratic Party of Pensioners of Slovenia) had declared that they would not participate in a coalition with SDS.[160][161][162][163] Some two weeks after the 2018 election, Janša again met with Hungarian PM Orbán during a private visit in Budapest. Janša and Orbán also held a conference call with US president Donald Trump during the meeting.[164] Janša stated he would be willing to relinquish his post as PM designate to some other SDS MP such a move would ease tensions and enable SDS to form a coalition government.[165] Despite the concession, the PM post was eventually occupied by the leader of the second largest parliamentary party, Marjan Šarec, who succeeded in forming a centre-left minority government (without the participation of SDS).[166]

After the 2018 parliamentary election, SDS failed to regain its traditionally strong showing of support in opinion polls which had been typical for the party while in opposition. Speaking to the media regarding the faltering performance, SDS officials blamed the government's alleged populist economic policies and a disproportionately hostile news media, while independent political analysts pointed to the big tent populist appeal of the ruling LMŠ party and its leader that attracted some traditionally conservative voters, and the momentous changes in the political environment and nature of SDS since 2011-2012.[167]

2020–2022: third Janša Cabinet edit

In early 2020, the resignation of the finance minister due to intra-government disagreements regarding the crafting of a health insurance reform bill precipitated the resignation of PM Šarec, who called for an early election.[168] SDS was however able to secure support for the formation of a new SDS-led government by forming a coalition with New Slovenia, Democratic Party of Pensioners of Slovenia (DeSUS), and Modern Centre Party (SMC).[169] While all three parties had expressed clear opposition to a formation of a Janša-led government in the past,[160][170] all had since experienced changes of leadership that was more amenable to such an arrangement.[171][172][173] The news that SMC would be entering into a coalition with Janša resulted in the departure of the party's founder and first head, Miro Cerar, after whom the party was initially named ("Miro Cerar Party").[174]

Janša was confirmed as PM on 13 March 2020.[175] The coalition agreement signed between the 4 parties stipulated, among other things: the re-introduction of the draft and 6 months of mandatory military service, utilisation of private healthcare providers to reduce waiting times, an increase in public and private healthcare funds, promote apprenticeships in vocational school, a commitment to carbon neutrality by 2050, decentralisation, decreasing public spending, an increase in funds for municipalities, tax reductions for performance pay, an increase in pensions, and an introduction of a universal child benefit instead of an income-based one.[176][177]

2022- present: return to opposition again edit

In April 2022, liberal opposition, The Freedom Movement, won the parliamentary election. The Freedom Movement won 34.5% of the vote, compared with 23.6% for Slovenian Democratic Party.[178] On 25 May 2022, Slovenia's parliament voted to appoint the leader of Freedom Movement, Robert Golob, as the new Prime Minister of Slovenia to succeed Janez Janša.[179]

Ideology and policies edit

Originally a centre-left[180] to centre-right political party,[181][182][180][183] SDS gradually drifted rightward, eventually becoming a right-wing party.[10][12][13][184][185][183]

Janša has been described as an illiberal leader.[23][24] Commenting on the question of illiberal democracies like those in Hungary and Poland, Janša stated: "For me, all of these mainstream political orientations are equal, and equally legitimate. [...] I cannot agree to the division between liberal and illiberal democracy. Democracy is democracy [...] If I fight for the affection of my voters, in a free world, everyone is equal."[186]

Deutsche Welle has described supporters of the party as "disagree[ing] with the majority of the population on more or less everything, starting with the history of World War II, where they cherish the memory of the German-allied wartime military guard."[187]

Populism edit

During the European migrant crisis, SDS sharply intensified its nationalist populist rhetoric.[152][188][189] The party came out in opposition of migrant quotas and advocated diverting financial resources from non-governmental organisations to security spending.[190] Janša also lambasted the "degenerate left".[152][191] The party's heated rhetoric and allegations of corrupt practices have led "to concerns among international observers about the direction of Slovenia, which is generally regarded as a regional success story" as SDS topped opinion polls heading into the 2018 parliamentary election.[152]

The party has co-opted former US President Donald Trump's populist rhetoric,[192] with Janša and the party echoing Trump's catchphrases "drain the swamp",[152] "deep state",[193][194] and "fake news".[153][195][196] The party has also proposed requiring that for each new regulation, two existing regulations must be repealed,[197] a proposal notably advocated for and enacted by Trump.[198] Janša has also used the phrase "Slovenia first" on multiple occasions.[199][192][200][201] Janša's rhetoric has been described as "Trumpian".[24][202]

The party periodically sends questionnaire mailers to Slovene households. The so-called Consultations with Voters[203] ask recipients to fill out answers to highly suggestive questions and enter their personal information to be eligible to receive various prizes.[203]

Domestic policy edit

Economic policy edit

SDS has been described as broadly pro-market,[204] and its economic policies have been characterised as neoliberal.[201] SDS advocates for lower taxes and speeding up privatisation efforts.[199]

Social policy edit

SDS introduced legislation allowing for same-sex civil unions while in government,[204] but has opposed recognition of same-sex marriages.[205][206] PM Janša was one of the few EU leaders to explicitly back the Hungarian government's right to prohibit the portrayal of LGBT persons and topics in mass media which could be seen by children.[207]

Education policy edit

SDS advocates for the introduction of educational programs that would introduce "patriotic education from kindergarten through high school".[208] The party holds that all expenses of compulsory curricular programs in private schools should be bourne by the state.[209]

National security edit

Janša has expressed strong support for the re-instatement of mandatory military service for males with service lasting at least 6 months (with an option of 12 months of civil service for conscientious objectors).[210][211]

In early 2016, SDS proposed the establishment of a national guard composed of some 25,000 "patriotic" volunteers. The guard would replace all current reserve formations of the Slovene armed forces, would be under direct command of the general staff, and would be mobilised during natural disasters or during "altered national security states" (like the European refugee crisis, which was ongoing at the time). Both sexes could enlist. MP Žan Mahnič stated the establishment of the formation was a priority of the party's electoral platform. The proposal was prompted by worsening global national security prospects, in part due to the "migrant crisis", an SDS representative claimed.[212] Government representatives argued that such a formation is unnecessary as the current reserve formations are sufficient.[213]

Judiciary and law enforcement edit

SDS advocates for trials to be open to the public (except in special circumstances).[214]

Environment and climate change edit

During the first SDS government, PM Janša presented climate change as the major political and societal challenge of the era. In 2007, Janša stated that "climate change is not only a problem for the government and economy; it is a challenge for the wider society and every individual" during an international conference on the matter, stressing the dangers and opportunities associated with the issue. He called on the EU to lead the efforts to combat climate change.[215] In 2008, Janša described an EU legislative package on energy and climate change as "one of the most important ... of the beginning of the 21st century", and as one of the priorities of Slovenia during its EU Council Presidency.[216] In 2008, SDS MEP Romana Jordan Cizelj stated that "counteracting climate change is not an individual choice, but a global challenge requiring the effort of the society as a whole. [...] The data reveal changes in ecosystems due to antropogenic emissions and possible trends in the future. [...] It is still possible to act. But we must act decisively, swiftly, and in unison. First in coordination within the EU, and then in the global sense."[217]

By 2018, the party seemed to have reversed its position on the issue, with MP Branko Grims prominently making multiple public statements, including in media statements and parliamentary discussions, that outright denied the existence of anthropogenic climate change.[218][219][220] Grims has said that "the talk about the warming of the Earth is a big lie", that the Earth is in fact cooling,[219] that climate change is being used as an excuse for allowing mass migrations and the expropriation of taxpayer funds[220] (that are then embezzled by academics, the "eco-industry" and leftist lobbies[218][221]), and that the political left is using the issue to exploit the youth.[221] Grims has appealed to his background as a geologist to present himself as authoritative on the issue.[219] Grims also controversially claimed that the black panther, which is ostensibly represented in the Carantanian panther sigil that has been adopted as the alternate Slovenian national symbol by some modern-era conservative political groups,[222] was native to the Slovene region but became extinct due to global cooling during the Carantanian era (the claim was dismissed by experts who said the black panther had not been endemic to the region since at least the last ice age).[223] In November 2019, Janša, discussing climate change, stated: "Times are different now, generations are growing up with an awareness that the environment is a value. Of course, some on the left scene, pervaded by cultural Marxism, have swiftly added catastrophic proclamations which are supposed to be caused by climate change. It is being preached how climate change is exclusively man-made, which is entirely unproven. Climate change has been occurring throughout the history of this planet and will continue to. To what extent we are influencing this is a big question. It is a fact that we are. It is a fact that environmental pollution of course in part affects the climate. But I think that it affects it much less than changes on the Sun, or, that is, things which humans cannot influence. This must be understood and it should not be made into ideology and the fame of new Molochs such as Greta."[224]

Other policies edit

SDS has long advocated for a change in the Slovene parliamentary electoral system, namely the shift from the current proportional electoral system to two-round plurality voting. SDS argues this would result in more stable and effective governments.[225][226]

SDS supports citizens' "legal right to bear arms", and has come out in opposition to further restrictions. It strongly opposed new EU regulation of firearms which the European Commission moved to pass after the 2015 Paris terrorist attacks.[227][228][229][230] SDS has backed legislation to loosen controls on civilian possession of firearms, firearm accessories, and other weapons.[231] In 2023, Janša called on citizens to legally arm themselves in order to "protect their family and their country" from immigrants, saying that the current government was incapable of protecting the country and its citizens.[232]

SDS supports legalising the medicinal use of cannabis, but opposes legalisation of its recreational use.[233]

SDS opposes the legalisation of assisted dying.[234]

SDS argues the current text to the Slovene national anthem—the 7th stanza of France Prešeren's A Toast ("Blessed be all nations/Which yearn to see the light of day/When where'er the Sun doth wander/The lands' strife shall be cast away/And when free every kinsman will be/Not fiends, only neighbours in foreigners we'll see!")—is "too internationalistic, and insufficiently patriotic", and advocates other stanzas from Prešeren's poem be added as text to the official anthem.[235][236][237]

The party advocates a ban on "all public expression of ideas through the use of totalitarian symbols" and "all public displays of affection for totalitarian regimes".[236][237] The party has denied accusations that it is merely attempting to outlaw the red star,[238] which was the symbol of the Slovene Partisans during WWII,[239] and is still often used in the Slovenian public sphere,[240][241][242] including as a symbol/logo of a parliamentary political party.[243][244] The proposed law would not, on the other hand, ban wearing Nazi uniforms in public or displaying symbols associated with the Nazi-aligned anti-Partisan Slovene Home Guard.[239]

Foreign policy edit

The party is pro-European, but staunchly anti-immigration and strongly opposed to EU asylum quotas.[199] The party is committed to Slovenia's continuing membership in NATO.[245]

Following the US targeted killing of Iranian gen. Qasem Soleimani, the party released a statement declaring that "SDS supports the strong US response to the provocations of the Ayatollah extremist regime ... ."[246]

Janša has expressed steadfast support for Israel and former Israeli PM Netanyahu and his government.[247] During the 2021 Israel–Palestine crisis, the SDS-led Slovenian government flew an Israeli flag on the ediface of the building housing the Slovene government as a show of support and solidarity with Israel.[248][249] PM Janša has described criticism of Israel's policies towards Palestinians as tantamount to antisemitism.[247]

After taking over the European Council presidency in 2021, the third Janša government chose confronting violent left-wing extremism and anarchism at the EU level as one of its proposed policy priorities.[250]

Post-communist cabal conspiracy edit

The central tenet of the party's view regarding the country's political situation is that a clique composed mostly of former Communist Party officials and associates has retained significant control over the economic, financial, political, social, judicial, and journalistic aspects of Slovenian public life.[251][252][253][67][201][254][255][256][257][258] SDS has accused the post-communist underground of undermining SDS-led governments and lamented that "Slovenia is the only former communist country that has not implemented the lustration."[251] In 2021, PM Janša addressed an official missive to the European Commission, calling on the European Union to launch an official inquiry into the "problem ... [of] Slovenia's communist legacy" that is ostensibly endangering "the state of democracy in Slovenia", and to aid the Slovenian government in remedying the situation.[258] SDS's emphasis on the role of former Yugoslav communist party affiliates in Slovene political and public life has been criticised as hypocritical since many SDS politicians were also active within the former Yugoslav communist regime.[257]

In a 2021 draft party resolution, SDS warned that the country's democratic order is under threat from leftist extremist forces at home and abroad, claiming that the country may be on the verge of a coup, civil war, and an establishment of a totalitarian government. The document claims that the goal of the entrenched elites has progressed beyond attempting to eliminate Janša and SDS, to attempting to institute a new communist order in the country. The document also calls for the banning of the allegedly unconstitutional party The Left (citing a fake[259] "secret manifesto" of the party), and concludes by affirming the party's commitment to prevent, by any means necessary, "the establishment of an eco-socialist system ... totalitarian system".[260][259] Shortly after releasing the party document, SDS requested a parliamentary session to be held to discuss the ostensible unconstitutional conduct of The Left party and pass a resolution calling on "all state organs to intensify their monitoring, investigations, and prevention of attempts to overthrow parliamentary democracy and other constitutional foundations" due to The Left party's policies, and inviting the ministers of interior and defense as well as the chief of national intelligence to participate in the session.[261] The speaker of parliament refused to hold the session after ascertaining that the issue was under the purview of the judicial branch.[262] After the 3rd Janša government was defeated in the 2022 Slovenian parliamentary elections, Janša repeatedly accused the succeeding Golob government of leading the country into civil war.[263][264][265] In a lengthy 2023 essay, Janša warned of impending deadly violence from leftist government supporters and warned that his side will respond to any killing of one of theirs with retaliatory mass killings: "[they are] once again reviving the ominous spirit of CIVIL WAR [...] Those who threaten DEATH today, who applaud such threats or encourage them by implementing the government measures listed above, are mostly publicly known. The digital world holds all these records. So, beware. [...] A revolt will break out, and there is no tax haven that is far away enough where those responsible can hide from the hand of justice. [...] realise that the lady with the scythe is swinging from both sides. [...] people of a particular calibre only understood this language. So, we have used it, and we believe that they have understood it. But we no longer believe that they will listen to what we have to say. They have taken things too far."[265]

SDS members and affiliates frequently employ particular phrases and concepts to represent their world-view, most notably:

  • "Udbomafia" (from UDBA, the Yugoslav secret police service) – a portmanteau neologism coined in the early 1990s to refer to an alleged cabal of former Slovenian Communist Party members and officials, and UDBA informants and collaborators that supposedly still hold the reins of economic and political power. The phrase is often used by SDS and affiliated publications.[253][266][267][268][269][270][271][254][255][256]
  • "Uncles from behind the scenes" (or "godfathers in the background," an idiom for éminence grise) – alleged sponsors and influencers of prominent Slovene politicians who are said to merely act as fronts for the vested political and economic interests of the "uncles". Former PMs Miro Cerar,[272] and Alenka Bratušek,[273] PS head Zoran Janković,[274] and anti-establishment newcomer Marjan Šarec[275] are some of the politicians accused of having "uncles from behind the scenes". The phrase was also occasionally used by former PM and President Borut Pahor, on one occasion accusing the "uncles" of attempting to topple his premiership.[276] Milan Kučan, who is most often accused of being the foremost "uncle from behind the scenes", demanded Pahor clarify his insinuation.[277] Pahor also accused his main 2017 presidential election challenger, Marjan Šarec, of being well looked after by the "uncles". Šarec likewise demanded Pahor clarify his statements, but also did not receive an answer.[278]
  • Milan Kučan – the former two-time President of Slovenia and last leader of the League of Communists of Slovenia is frequently accused by SDS of exerting supreme covert influence over the Slovenian political sphere.[251][201][253][279][280][281] In 2013, SDS alleged that Kučan was acting from behind the scenes to topple the SDS-led government; the allegation was made in a formal letter that the party addressed to multiple foreign institutions.[282] Politicians allegedly under Kučan's influence include former New Slovenia leader Ljudmila Novak and 2018 newcomer Marjan Šarec,[283][284] former PM Alenka Bratušek and Ljubljana mayor and PS leader Zoran Janković,[285][274] among others. Janša was fined €12,000 after labelling two female RTV Slovenia journalists as "cheap, used-up prostitutes" of "#pimpMilan [Kučan]" in a tweet,[286][287][288] later also receiving a 3-month suspended jail sentence for the offense.[289] During an event marking the handover of the rotating European Council leadership to PM Janša, Commissioner Ursula von der Leyen both opened and closed her speech by quoting Kučan[290] in what was seen as a subtle jibe at Janša's political camp.[291]
  • Forum 21 – a Slovenian liberal think tank established by Milan Kučan and attended by prominent members of the Slovenian political and economic elite to discuss relevant problems facing the nation.[292][293][280] SDS has accused the think tank of undue influence in appointment and policy decisions of liberal governments.[294][295][296]
  • Murgle – the upscale Murgle residential district known for its one-story houses is home to many prominent Slovenian political and economic figures, including former liberal presidents Milan Kučan (often the main target of allusions to "Murgle") and Janez Drnovšek (deceased), former PM Miro Cerar, and Liberation Front partisan and last president of the SR Slovenia, Janez Stanovnik, among others.[297] "Murgle" is thus another reference to the alleged behind-the-scenes influence exerted by the country's ostensibly retired leftist elites. Upon being sentenced to a two-year prison sentence in the Patria corruption case, Janez Janša stated that the verdict was "written in advance in Murgle and by known authors".[279] SDS later labelled the 2014 parliamentary election as illegitimate due to the conviction and resulting concurring prison term of Janša.[298][299][148] Janša also blamed "Murgle" after prosecutors filed a motion to confiscate Janša's illegally obtained holdings.[300] As part of its 2018 electoral campaign, SDS released an ad where a couple orders pizza delivery from SDS and "Pizza Murgle". The Murgle box is revealed to only contain half a pizza.[301][302][303] SDS-affiliated[304] Nova24TV news portal also promoted videos entitled "Murgle Puppet Theatre", which satirically portrayed a closed-door meeting presided over by Milan Kučan discussing political strategy with recently resigned PM Miro Cerar (leader of ruling Modern Centre Party), Agriculture Minister Dejan Židan (leader of the Social Democrats), Foreign Minister Karl Erjavec (leader of DeSUS), and Marjan Šarec (leader of the List of Marjan Šarec).[305][306]
  • First-class and second-class citizens – the Slovenian society is ostensibly divided between the first-class entrenched leftist elites seeking to perpetuate their socioeconomic privileges and stranglehold over the country, and the downtrodden masses of second-class citizens that SDS advocates for.[307][201][308][309][310][311] In 2019, Janša published a book of essays entitled First-Class Citizens: A System for the False Elite.[307] The SDS-affiliated TV channel Nova24TV has aired a program named Second-Class Citizens.[312]

Organization and political affiliation edit

As of 2013, SDS membership numbered some 30,000 strong, more than any other political party in Slovenia.[313] Slovenian Democratic Youth (Slovene: Slovenska demokratska mladina, SDM) is the independent and autonomous youth wing of the party.[314]

The party is affiliated with the Jože Pučnik Institute, the major liberal-conservative think tank in Slovenia.[315][316][317][318][319] It is also closely affiliated with the civic platform Rally for the Republic (Zbor za republiko).[320][321][322]

Committee 2014 (Slovene: Odbor 2014) is a civic organisation that was established to protest and demand the overturn of the corruption convictions in the Patria case, the freeing of SDS leader Janez Janša from prison (sentence resuling from the conviction), and the "actual implementation of the rule of law, human rights, basic freedoms, and establishment of a democratic society".[323][324] Committee 2014 held regular protests in front of the Higher Court building in Ljubljana.[323][324]

The Alliance for the Values of Slovene Independence (Slovene: Združenje za vrednote Slovenske osamosvojitve, VSO) is a patriotic veteran non-governmental organisation intended to commemorate the values of the Slovenian independence movement.[325][326] VSO leadership consists of prominent SDS members and associates. The organisation holds public speaking events, commemorations, and is engaged in other activities as well.[326][327][328]

SDS has seen some support from the Slovene Catholic Church.[26]

International affiliations edit

The party is supported by and closely affiliated with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán (Fidesz).[65][329][184][188][153][190][330][331] SDS's committed backing of Fidesz has reportedly been the decisive factor in preventing Fidesz's expulsion from the European People's Party, resulting in a more lenient suspension.[332] In a letter to the EPP leader, Janša warned of an "inevitable" split in the EPP if the vote to expel Fidesz were to take place.[333] The 3rd Janša government began reorienting Slovenia's foreign alliances away from core EU countries and towards the Visegrád Group of countries, with Janša calling the countries "our friends in the region".[334][335][336]

SDS politicians have participated in the International Visitor Leadership Program,[337] and with the International Republican Institute.[338]

Affiliated publications edit

SDS is also affiliated with several current and past publications, including its de facto party publication, Demokracija,[339] and tabloid Škandal24[340] (both owned by Nova Obzorja (English: "New Horizons") publishing company, which is in turn jointly owned by SDS and a Hungarian publishing company with close ties to Hungary's ruling party, Fidesz).[339][65] The publishing company has profited from providing literature to, and advising the SDS parliamentary group/SDS MPs (activities for which parliamentary groups receive state funds), and has also benefited financially from doing business with government agencies, which were particularly bountiful while SDS was in government.[341] Nova24TV, a media conglomerate consisting of a television channel and online news portal, was established by SDS MPs and members, and party sympathisers, and later also received financial injections from Hungarian Fidesz-affiliated companies.[342][65] Additionally, the SDS-friendly political web portal Politikis is also owned and managed by a close SDS associate.[68][343][344] Slovenski tednik and Ekspres, free newspapers distributed in the run-up to the 2008 parliamentary election, were also later found to have been directly linked to SDS and its electoral efforts.[68][71][345] As with Slovenski tednik and Ekspres, Škandal24 announced it will cease print publication the day after the 2018 parliamentary election, only continuing as an online publication.[346] In late 2017, an array of over a dozen local/regional web news portals with a common template was also set up, with editors of all linked to SDS based on publicly available information.[347][348] The websites mostly contained informative content, publishing local news with occasional articles that promoted SDS' candidates and narrative/agenda subtly mixed in.[348] The sites may have been set up primarily as a political propaganda effort in anticipation of the 2018 Slovenian local elections.[349]

Supporters and affiliates edit

The party enjoys strong support in some Slovene conservative and classical liberal intellectual circles. Public figures who have publicly voiced support for SDS or affiliated themselves with the party include economist Ljubo Sirc (joined the party in 2010),[350] philosopher Ivan Urbančič,[351][352][353] historians Vasko Simoniti[354][355] and Alenka Puhar,[356][357][358] writer and essayist Drago Jančar,[359][360] theologian and philosopher Janez Juhant,[361][362] and poet Tone Kuntner.[363] Public supporters of the party also include sportsmen Miran Pavlin,[364][365] and Katja Koren,[366][367] pop singer Marta Zore,[368] designer and cartoonist Miki Muster,[369] and actor Roman Končar.[370]

In 2008, SDS was found to have falsely attributed "supporter status" to many prominent Slovenes on its webpage. The party sent a request to comment on the ruling government for its party newspaper to numerous notable public figures. Though they were never asked whether they support the party or informed they will be listed as supporters, SDS nevertheless listed them as such.[371]

Former supporters and affiliates edit

Many prominent members have abandoned SDS due to the radicalisation of the party's ideology and disagreements over leadership style. Some also established new political parties. Most former members politically transitioned towards the centre, with a minority outflanking SDS on the far right.[183] Former public supporters include: sportsman Miran Pavlin.[364][365]

Former supporters or affiliated individuals that have since come out as critics of the party include: one of the fathers of the current Slovenian Constitution Peter Jambrek,[372][373][374][375] the former chairman of Rally for the Republic[376] and Civic List party leader[377] Gregor Virant,[378][183] and liberal economist Jože P. Damijan,[25][379][380][381][382] former Minister of Foreign Affairs Dimitrij Rupel,[183] former Minister of Internal Affairs Dragutin Mate,[383] and Minister of Education Žiga Turk,[183] former MEP Romana Jordan Cizelj,[183] former SDS MPs Andrej Čuš,[183] and Ivo Hvalica,[384][183] and "mother of the party" Vera Ban.[385] Miha Brejc became persona non grata after his son-in-law Gregor Virant distanced himself from Janša and established the Civic List.[386]

Controversies and criticism edit

In March 2021, the association of state prosecutors of Slovenia addressed a letter to the Council of Europe to voice their concerns about government pressure on prosecutors (including by PM Janša, and SDS-affiliated media).[387] The third Janša government refused to confirm the appointment of delegated prosecutors to the EU public prosecutors office that is to scrutinise potential misuse of EU funds (both nominees had previously made prosecutorial decisions that were politically disfavourable to SDS, with one having helped bring graft charges against Janša[388]), as well as refusing to confirm 14 prosecutors nominated by the judiciary leading to understaffing of the state prosecutorship. PM Janša also pressured the chief state prosecutor to pursue criminal charges against anti-government protesters[24] who used a slogan that Janša interpreted as a death threat to him and his supporters, admonishing him in a missive that "[He] will be directly responsible for any potential victim of the organised death threats."[389]

In June 2021, the top officials of four independent state oversight institutions issued a joint statement warning of persistent political pressure, impeding their work.[390]

In 2021, articles published in The New York Times, and in Der Standard described SDS as waging a culture war by trying to shift the country's museums in a more conservative and patriotic direction by appointing like-minded people in leadership positions within the institutions.[391][392]

Freedom of the press edit

SDS holds that Slovenian news media is biased and favours the left.[393][394] Shortly after assuming the role of PM for the third time, SDS leader Janez Janša published an essay entitled "War with the media" in which he expounded his views on countering an oppositional news media, concluding that the battle against the "monopoly of lies" cannot be won without a fight.[395][396]

SDS and their allies have cultivated an ecosystem of party-aligned media outlets[397] that include a TV channel,[398] news websites (including a number of regional news websites[399]),[398][400][401][402] magazines,[401] a tabloid,[403] and a press agency.[404] There was also an effort to set up a radio station.[405] Some of the party's media endavours were strategically undertaken just prior to upcoming elections;[403][402][401] regional news websites began operating prior to local elections, for example.[399] SDS-affiliated outlets have been accused of false reporting and fake news,[406][407][408][409] of publishing hateful and defamatory content,[410][411][412][413][414][415] and of publishing racist,[416][417][418][412][411] xenophobic,[412][413][418] homophobic,[412][413][411] and antisemitic content.[419][420][411] Some SDS-affiliated media projects have received financial backing from businesses affiliated with the party's political ally, Hungarian PM Viktor Orbán.[421]

Janša has also adopted a pugnacious approach to media relations, aggressively responding to almost every critical foreign press article on the political situation in Slovenia under his leadership.[397] SDS has been criticised for their adversarial approach to media relations, which not only chilled media freedom in the country, but also created a climate where personal attacks, harassment, and threats are commonplace for journalists that have landed in the party's crosshairs.[394][422] In a letter to top EU officials, various media freedom organisations also warned that PM Janša could use his European presidency position to "attack journalists" across the EU and normalise such behaviour among EU functionaries.[423]

First Janša cabinet

During Janša's first government, the party was accused of gaining influence over multiple public and private outlets, and pulling advertising from state-owned companies from outlets that reported critically about the government.[424] To bring the country's largest newspaper under its control, Janša personally arranged a corrupt deal with the owner of the newspaper in which state assets were traded in exchange for editorial control over the newspaper.[424][72][73]

Third Janša cabinet

Shortly after Janša's third government took office, a loyalist (who had been previously appointed editor-in-chief of the country's largest newspaper during Janša's first government, reportedly in a secret corrupt deal between Janša and the newspaper's owner[424][72][73]) was appointed to head SiOL, a media subsidiary of a state-owned telecom, despite receiving the approval of only 2 members of the 42-member editorial board.[425][66] In fall of 2020, the state telecom commenced the sale of TSMedia which owns SiOL. In May 2021, the board of directors of the telecom abruptly halted the sale after a Hungarian business with ties to Hungary's ruling party Fidesz (which is closely allied with SDS) was outbid 2 million € to 5 million € by another bidder.[426]

In May 2020, the government replaced 7 board members of the public broadcaster RTV Slovenia, shifting the political balance of power of the board in favour of the government and foreshadowing a push to replace the leadership of the institution.[427] In October 2020, board members close to SDS and the government began an attempt to replace the then general director of the institution before the end of his term, citing poor financial management and attacks on government representatives. Commenting on the replacement push, the director said the attempt was motivated by a desire to purge RTV of journalists critical of the government.[428] The vote to replace the director was held in November, and failed by 1 vote.[429] With the end of the regular term of the previous director approaching, a new general director was elected in January 2021, to take office in April.[430] While SDS failed to field a loyal candidate,[431] votes of board members close to the government were decisive in picking the new head.[432] Shortly after a new RTV director was chosen, PM Janša commented on a clip of RTV footage with "hopefully the new broom will fix such false reporting",[433] leading to fears that the new director will be beholden to the government after its board members supported his nomination.[434]

During the summer of 2020, the government proposed new media laws that would increase the government's influence over the state-owned press agency Slovenian Press Agency (STA), and redirect some funds from the public broadcaster to an SDS-affiliated TV channel.[394][435][436] The proposed legislation failed to gain traction after facing objections from all coalition partners.[437] After STA refused to provide a government agency with business information and explanations about editorial decisions (STA argued the government agency lacked legal authority to demand such information), the government, in an unprecedented move, halted financing the news agency, saying STA had failed to meet its contractual obligations. The loss of state financing - some half of its total revenue - imperiled STA's continued existence.[394] All coalition partners called for the resumption of STA financing.[438] In early 2021, the government proposed draft legislation that would move STA into a centrally managed pension wealth fund, granting the government greater sway over the news agency.[439] In March 2021, PM Janša called on the STA director to resign before the end of his term, calling him a "tool of the far left" who should be "held responsible for his unlawful actions". Janša also said that STA has been "selling lies as truth" under his leadership.[440] The government also called on the STA board of directors to dismiss the director, and drafted a report accusing the director of dereliction of duty and wrongdoing in his official role. The government then requested the Interior Ministry to look into whether the findings of the report warrant a criminal investigation of the director.[441] Police investigators subsequently questioned a STA board member[442] and representatives of STA[443] and the Dnevnik newspaper (due to an advertisement contract with STA), with the latter stating that the investigators asked for information that constituted business secrets, which Dnevnik refused to furnish.[442]

In May 2021, after a criminal complaint was lodged by the government, police launched an investigation of Mladina for allegedly publishing classified information. The weekly published the contents of an internal government document (which was released to the public within a fortnight). The magazine responded by claiming the publication of the document was in the public interest (and thus legal) and that the government illegitimately restricted access to the document, and said the probe was intimidation.[444]

PM Janša furtively[445] met with the owner of POP TV's parent company (the Czechia-based PPF group) in late 2020.[445][423] According to people present at the meeting with knowledge of the discussion, Janša spent most of the meeting complained about POP TV's political coverage. A deal was reportedly struck with the owners of POP TV (the most influential national TV broadcaster which also operates the most frequently visited web news portal in the country), granting lucrative government infrastructure contracts and stakes in state-owned enterprises in exchange for favourable coverage.[445] After the meeting, the parent company begun to closely monitor POP TV's political reporting to ensure coverage is sufficiently favourable to the SDS-led government, requiring news editors to translate transcripts into Czech and send them to headquarters in Prague.[445][423] Employees of the media company confirmed mounting editorial pressure in anonymous interviews.[445] SDS was reportedly also engineering a sale of the country's largest newspaper Delo to PPF from its domestic owner to also reign in its critical coverage, using lucrative state contracts and benefits as enticements/punishments.[446]

In May 2021, the Ministry of Culture, which is responsible for distributing a fixed amount of financial aid to media organisations, denied funding requests from multiple mainstream media organisations that had consistently received funding in the past (due to ostensibly unbalanced coverage) while newly apportioning the funds to multiple conservative and pro-government media organisations (multiple of which had ties to government parties); nearly all requests from conservative and pro-government media were granted. The criteria for distributing the funds had not changed.[447] The committee responsible for distributing the funds was mostly composed of individuals with ties to SDS.[447][448] The minister of culture described the shift in funding as a step towards a more balanced media environment.[449]

SDS's aggressiveness towards national and international news media and journalists has caused concern and drawn reprimands from EU politicians and institutions as Janša is poised to take over the leadership of the rotating EU Council presidency during the second half of 2021.[450][397][451][452] In March 2021, the US State Department said it was monitoring the state of the news media in Slovenia.[453][454] A deterioration in press freedoms in the country under the new government was subsequently noted in the State Department's international Human Rights report for 2020 published later the same month; media freedom was described as one of the key human rights concerns in Slovenia.[455] The issue of media freedom in Slovenia came under discussion of the European Parliament and its Democracy, Rule of Law and Fundamental Rights Monitoring Group (DRFMG). The first discussion was held on March 5 under the auspices of DRFMG; PM Janša and Culture Minister Vasko Simoniti were invited to participate but declined. The issue was also discussed by the EP during a plenary session some days later. DRFMG again discussed the issue on March 26, with the invitation to join again extended to the Slovene PM and Culture Minister. Janša initially joined discussion, but demanded a video be shown to the committee. Janša then abruptly left the videoconference after a heated exchange with the committee chair that denied his request. Janša later wrote on Twitter that he was censored by the committee.[456] A Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights report published in June 2021 found a deterioration of press freedom in Slovenia and called on the Slovene government to remedy the situation. PM Janša, responding to the report by tweet, called the Commissioner a "[...] part of #fakenews network. Well paid by our money."[457]

Astroturfing and satellite parties edit

SDS reportedly operates a network of fake social media accounts used to amplify its message and attack opponents.[458][459][460][461][462][463][464] In February 2021, an SDS MP was revealed to operate a fake Twitter account.[463][458] SDS has been reported to operate a "multimedia centre" from within its party headquarters from where party operatives engage in social media battles with political opponents and promote the party online. The party's online activities intensify prior to elections. A disgruntled former SDS MP publicly corroborated the existence of the "multimedia centre" after leaving the party,[465][466] claiming he personally used to participate in the party's media operations.[464] There have also been claims that all SDS political candidates are required to set up a Twitter account.[464]

In 2019, a former SDS politician published a screenshot of private messages from Janša after a public falling-out between the two. In the messages, Janša asked her to organise astroturfed protests in front of the parliament during a parliamentary deliberation about a referendum on immigration, saying "protests are effective if the action comes from below and looks like a spontaneous uprising".[467]

SDS has been accused of orchestrating the creation of at least five satellite parties[400][468][469][470][471][472] in attempts to sure up a larger swath of the electorate and secure loyal coalition partners, and undermine competing parties.[471][472]

Ties to far-right groups edit

SDS has been criticised for alleged links to a neo-Nazi extremist group; the Slovene branch of Blood & Honour.[153][473] The journalist who uncovered the links (Anuška Delić) was charged with leaking confidential information.[473][153] The state intelligence agency, SOVA, headed by an SDS appointee at the time of the indictment,[474] inadvertently confirmed allegations made by Delić by stating that the information revealed in the reports was consistent with findings of an ongoing investigation into the activities of the violent extremist group.[475][476] SOVA argued that the information revealed in the reports could not have been obtained by any other means than by gaining access to information collected during the agency's covert investigations, and that the publication disrupted its efforts to monitor the group by alerting B & H of the monitoring efforts.[477][478] Delić alleged the charges were "politically motivated".[479][480]

Some Blood & Honour members were allegedly also members of SDS,[481][482] and formally met with SDS MP Branko Grims.[481][483] The group (the members of which allegedly received training by members of the Slovenian armed forces on an army training area, borrowed army weaponry (a rocket launcher), attempted to purchase handguns, and were in direct correspondence with Anders Breivik by both mail and e-mail, with multiple B & H members receiving his manifesto before Breivik's killing spree[483][484]) was allegedly intimately implicated in orchestrating the violent riots which took place amid the 2012–13 Slovenian protests.[483][484] The organised group of violent agitators that disrupted a major protest in Ljubljana was found to have been trained, hired, and compensated, possibly by a political party, according to a police investigation.[485][486]

More recently, SDS has also fostered ties with Generation Identity Slovenia, the Slovenian chapter of the far-right Identitarian movement organisations.[487][488] In August 2018, the party's publishing company, New Horizons,[341] anonymously published the Slovene Identitarians' alt-right book, Manifesto for the Homeland.[489][490] The book was also promoted by SDS-affiliated media organisations and individuals, including SDS leader Janez Janša,[490][491][492] with SDS MP Žan Mahnič even going so far as to post on Twitter a photo of the book taken from his parliamentary seat, with the floor of the parliamentary chamber in the background.[493] SDS also organised a joint panel discussion on migrations with Generation Identity,[494] and Generation Identity was advertised on an SDS-affiliated TV channel.[494][495] The leader of the Austrian Identitarians, Martin Sellner, publicly thanked Janša for his support on Twitter. Sellner was at the time being investigated by Austrian authorities and ostracised by the ruling conservative Freedom Party of Austria for his financial ties with the Christchurch terrorist.[496]

During the 2020 Slovenian anti-government protests against the Third Janša government, a pro-government counter-protester group (the "Yellow Wests")[497] was favourably covered in SDS-affiliated media,[498][499][500] with the articles in which the Yellow Wests called on the public to join them shared by PM Janša on Twitter.[501][502][503] 8 of the 30-some original Yellow Wests (including their spokesman) were found to have links to neo-Nazism.[504] In 2021, the group forcefully disrupted an anti-government rally[505] in the vicinity of a state ceremony attended by multiple foreign prime ministers.[506] Riot police removed the provocators to avoid a massive brawl.[505]

Political self-dealing accusations edit

The party has been accused of political self-dealing and nepotism, appointing relatives, allies, and friends to government (and other) positions. Many close relatives of prominent SDS members have found employment in the Slovenian and European parliaments, high ranking public sector positions, and state-owned companies (some despite not meeting the official job requirements).[507][61][508][509][510][511][512][513][514][515][25]

SDS has been accused of political firings and replacements in, and selective financing of many institutions under the public sphere, and creating an environment where politisation of the public workplace was permissible and pervasive while in power.[516][511]

Cult of personality edit

SDS leader Janez Janša has continuously served as party head since 1993 without a single other contender for the post.[331] Party members are extremely loyal to Janša;[204] it has been noted that the party appears to resemble a cult,[517][384][518] with numerous past members claiming that Janša leads the party in an authoritarian manner and that no dissent is tolerated.[519][520][521][522][523][385][383] SDS MEP Romana Jordan Cizelj was reportedly the only one within the party leadership to openly voice her doubts about Janša's continued leadership of the party whilst serving a prison sentence for corruption. Jordan Cizelj was subsequently not allowed to run for re-election as MEP on the SDS ticket as punishment for her disloyalty to Janša.[385]

Campaign financing impropriety allegations edit

In the run-up to the 2018 Slovenian parliamentary election, SDS attempted to receive a loan of €450,000 from an individual residing in Bosnia and Herzegovina[524] to fund its electoral campaign. The party came into contact with the individual via Nova obzorja publishing company (partially owned by SDS). SDS also put up its share in Nova obzorja as collateral.[525] The sum borrowed exceeded limits set by campaign finance laws, however, and SDS was obliged to return the borrowed funds. A police and financial court investigation was also triggered after the terms of the loan became public.[526] An investigation into the lender was also launched, based on suspicions of money laundering, tax avoidance, destruction and falsification of business documents, and overseeing dummy companies.[527][528] The individual was allegedly a part of a criminal organisation managing dummy companies that received funds of undisclosed origins (including the funds later loaned to SDS).[528][529]

Less than a week before the 2018 parliamentary election took place, it was revealed that media/publishing companies closely affiliated and partially owned by SDS received some €800,000 from two Hungarian nationals (or, rather, their companies) - both with close ties to Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán - months before the election, bringing the total amount SDS-affiliated media companies received from Hungarian entities to over €2.2M. The SDS-affiliated media companies that received the funds in turn purchased campaign adds for SDS. Nova obzorja publishing company also attempted to loan €60,000 to the party. The same Hungarian individuals also provided funds for political allies in Macedonia. It is furthermore also known that the loan SDS attempted to obtain from a Bosnian citizen some months earlier had a Hungarian connection.[65][153][304][530][531][532][330][195] SDS-controlled media companies have reportedly also served as a conduit for Hungarian financing of media in North Macedonia to prop up Orban's political allies there. Of the at least €4M in Hungarian moneys that were reportedly originally funneled into SDS-affiliated media between mid-2018 and early 2020, over €2.5M was then channeled to Macedonian news media entities favourable to the right-wing VMRO-DPMNE party.[533]

Discriminatory remarks edit

After the 2011 parliamentary elections, which saw the victory of Ljubljana mayor Zoran Janković (who is of Serbian descent) and his party,[534][535] a contribution published on the official SDS webpage by a "Tomaž Majer" caused considerable public outrage.[536][537][538][539] Majer states that Janković was elected by "well-disciplined new citizens" living in "high-rise neighbourhoods", tracksuit-clad voters (in Slovenia, a common stereotype of immigrés from Southern republics[citation needed]) with foreign accents arriving at polling places in groups holding notes with instructions on whom to vote for. These "new citizens" were allegedly mobilised by being admonished their citizenship will be revoked if "the right" is elected.[540][535] Majer further states that one of his acquaintances (who is of Bosnian descent) was even offered monetary reward to vote for Janković. Majer also claims that the roughly 1/3 of Janković voters of Slovenian descent were ordered to vote for PS by Milan Kučan and Janez Stanovnik.[541] Several media organisations attempted to identify the author, but were unsuccessful.[535][542][543] It has been speculated that the real author of the text was in fact Janez Janša, based on similar known past statements (specifically, his 1993 commentary on the poor electoral performance of SDS during the 1992 elections).[535] In the wake of the 2011 election, Janša and several other SDS MPs and candidates expressed similar but somewhat toned-down nationalistic sentiments while commenting on the election and its winner.[535] The public reaction culminated in a "March of the Tracksuits", a rally where participants attended clothed in tracksuits to protest against division and intolerance.[538][539]

SDS MP Branko Grims, speaking to a gathering of a patriotic ultranationalist group in early 2018, said "Now is the era of Trump. He is the greatest thorn in the foot of the globalists, who control the US mechanisms, with Soros at the helm. Soros is the symbol of this. But there's also the Rothschilds and many other wealthiest families of financial speculators."[544]

SDS MP Marijan Pojbič, in a 2017 Statehood Day address on Facebook, called for "No more mayors that aren't real Slovenes, and even fewer national politicians who aren't real Slovenes by birth."[545]

In 2020, SDS politician Žan Mahnič, a former MP then serving as national security state secretary, shared a tweet of an image of white-skinned women with different hair colours accompanied with the comment "This is all the diversity Europe needs." The original author of the tweet was a user using the screen name "franca - EtnoNacionalist". Mahnič was subsequently criticised for promoting racism.[546]

In 2021, PM Janša shared a tweet saying that the amount "death, suffering, repression, desolation and societal backwardness" caused by The Communist Manifesto is second only to the Quran. The tweet was condemned by the Slovenian Muslim community, and the Turkish national broadcaster. Janša defended sharing the tweet by noting that his Twitter profile bio says re-tweets are not endorsements.[547]

Parliamentary representation edit

Electoral results edit

National Assembly edit

Election Leader Votes % Seats +/– Government
1990 Jože Pučnik 79,951 7.39 (#7)
6 / 80
  6 Coalition
1992 39,675 3.34 (#8)
4 / 90
  2 Coalition
1996 Janez Janša 172,470 16.13 (#3)
16 / 90
  12 Opposition
2000 170,228 15.81 (#2)
14 / 90
  2 Opposition
2004 281,710 29.08 (#1)
29 / 90
  15 Coalition
2008 307,735 29.26 (#2)
28 / 90
  1 Opposition
2011 288,719 26.19 (#2)
26 / 90
  2 Coalition 2012–13
Opposition 2013–14
2014 181,052 20.71 (#2)
21 / 90
  5 Opposition
2018 222,042 24.92 (#1)
25 / 90
  4 Opposition 2018–20
Coalition 2020–22
2022 279,897 23.48 (#2)
27 / 90
  2 Opposition

European Parliament edit

Election Votes % Seats +/–
2004 76,945 17.6 (#3)
2 / 7
2009 123,563 26.7 (#1)
3 / 8
  1
2014 99,643 24.8 (#1)
3 / 8
 
2019[a] 126,534 26.2 (#1)
2 / 8
  1
  1. ^ In coalition with Slovenian People's Party

Presidential edit

Election Candidate 1st round 2nd round Result
Votes % Votes %
1992 France Tomšič 7,849 0.63 Lost
1997[a] Jožef Bernik 98,996 9.50 Lost
2007[b] Lojze Peterle 283,412 28.73 318,288 31.97 Lost
2012[c] Milan Zver 198,337 24.25 Lost
2017 Romana Tomc 102,925 13.68 Lost
2022 Anže Logar 296,000 33.95 414,029 46.11 Lost
  1. ^ In coalition with Slovene Christian Democrats
  2. ^ In coalition with New Slovenia and Slovenian People's Party
  3. ^ In coalition with New Slovenia

Party leaders edit

Presidents of the Social Democratic Party and Slovenian Democratic Party

References edit

  1. ^ "Slovenska Demokratska Mladina". sdm.si. Retrieved 3 February 2022.
  2. ^ "Planet Siol: SDS je z 30.000 člani gromozanska stranka proti ostalim. Virantovcev je le za 'jurja'". Politikis (in Slovenian). 16 May 2013. Retrieved 30 June 2016.
  3. ^ a b Toplišek, Alen (2019). The populist radical left in Europe: Between populism and socialism. Giorgos Katsambekis, Alexandros Kioupkiolis. London. p. 7. ISBN 978-1-351-72048-9. OCLC 1090060657.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  4. ^ Democratic transition in Slovenia : value transformation, education, and media. Sabrina P. Ramet, Danica Fink Hafner (1 ed.). College Station: Texas A & M University Press. 2006. p. 104. ISBN 978-1-60344-584-9. OCLC 715188546.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  5. ^ "Slovenian General Election, 3 June 2018". European Movement Ireland. 3 June 2018. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  6. ^ "Another Euro Member Heads for Turmoil After Nationalist Win". Bloomberg.com. 3 June 2018 – via www.bloomberg.com.
  7. ^ "Slovenian journalists operate in increasingly toxic atmosphere". International Press Institute. 26 March 2020. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  8. ^ "Slovenian nationalist party set for power after winning election". the Guardian. 4 June 2018. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  9. ^ a b Klaus Wahl (2020). The Radical Right: Biopsychosocial Roots and International Variations. Springer Nature. p. 201. ISBN 978-3-030-25131-4.
  10. ^ a b c d . 1 June 2018. Archived from the original on 12 June 2018 – via NYTimes.com.
  11. ^ Novak, Marja (22 May 2018). "Anti-immigrant stance helps Slovenia's SDS party to poll lead". Reuters.
  12. ^ a b c d Hloušek, Vít; Kopeček, Lubomír (2010), Origin, Ideology and Transformation of Political Parties: East-Central and Western Europe Compared, Ashgate, p. 26, ISBN 9780754678403
  13. ^ a b Lewis, Paul G. (2000), Political Parties in Post-Communist Eastern Europe, Routledge, p. 167, ISBN 9780415201810
  14. ^ "O stranki - Odnosi z javnostmi".
  15. ^ "SLOVENSKA DEMOKRATSKA STRANKA (SDS)" (in Slovenian). Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  16. ^ "SDS: Več svobode, človekovih pravic in solidarnosti". Grem Volit (in Slovenian). Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  17. ^ uredništvo (16 February 2022). "Največja politična stranka v državi, SDS, praznuje 33 let". e-Maribor (in Slovenian). Retrieved 6 January 2023.
  18. ^ "Slovenian nationalist party set for power after winning election". TheGuardian.com. 4 June 2018.
  19. ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram (2018). "Slovenia". Parties and Elections in Europe. Retrieved 20 March 2019.
  20. ^ Terry, Chris (19 May 2014). . The Democratic Society. Archived from the original on 12 June 2018. Retrieved 6 May 2020.
  21. ^ "Partidos Archivo - idc-cdi". 22 September 2017. from the original on 22 September 2017. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  22. ^ "Members". www.idu.org. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  23. ^ a b "EPP's illiberal rebels lay out political vision". POLITICO. 8 July 2020. Retrieved 13 July 2021.
  24. ^ a b c d Coakley, Amanda (30 June 2021). "In Slovenia, a Trumpian Populist Assumes a Key European Post". Foreign Policy. Retrieved 13 July 2021.
  25. ^ a b c d e f Igor Guardiancich (2012). Pension Reforms in Central, Eastern and Southeastern Europe: From Post-Socialist Transition to the Global Financial Crisis. Routledge. p. 194. ISBN 978-1-136-22595-6.
  26. ^ a b c Reforming Europe : the role of the centre-right. Arvanitopoulos, Kōnstantinos., Centre for European Studies (Brussels, Belgium), Institouto Dēmokratias Kōnstantinos Karamanlēs. Berlin: Springer-Verlag. 2009. ISBN 9783642005602. OCLC 659560461.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  27. ^ a b "Umrl je prvi predsednik SDS France Tomšič". www.delo.si (in Slovenian). 25 March 2010. Retrieved 25 January 2019.
  28. ^ a b c d "Pred 20 leti je bila ustanovljena Slovenska demokratična zveza". siol.net (in Slovenian). 11 January 2009. Retrieved 25 January 2019.
  29. ^ a b "France Tomsic". www.slovenija2001.gov.si. Retrieved 25 January 2019.
  30. ^ a b "Umrl je France Tomšič". RTVSLO.si (in Slovenian). Retrieved 25 January 2019.
  31. ^ "Umrl France Tomšič". www.24ur.com. 25 March 2010. Retrieved 25 January 2019.
  32. ^ "Politični disident, ki je postal ključni akter osamosvojitve". RTVSLO.si (in Slovenian). Retrieved 25 January 2019.
  33. ^ "Drnovšek je leta 1992 med žive vrnil Janeza Janšo". siol.net (in Slovenian). 13 June 2018. Retrieved 25 January 2019.
  34. ^ "Apokalipsa politične krize". Mladina.si. Retrieved 25 January 2019.
  35. ^ "Pretekle vlade". www.vlada.si. Retrieved 25 January 2019.
  36. ^ "Potapljanje vladajoče stranke". Mladina.si. Retrieved 25 January 2019.
  37. ^ a b c d e f g "Kratka zgodovina stranke SDS". www.delo.si (in Slovenian). 4 December 2011. Retrieved 25 January 2019.
  38. ^ "Obeležujemo peto obletnico smrti Jožeta Pučnika". Dnevnik. Retrieved 25 January 2019.
  39. ^ "Predsednik vlade Janez Janša". Portal GOV.SI (in Slovenian). Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  40. ^ a b c d e Taras, Ray (May 2001). "The Radical Right in Central and Eastern Europe since 1989 . Sabrina P. Ramet". The Journal of Politics. 63 (2): 672–673. doi:10.1086/jop.63.2.2691788. ISSN 0022-3816.
  41. ^ Johnstone, Diana (2002). Fools' crusade: Yugoslavia, NATO, and Western delusions. New York: Monthly Review Press. ISBN 1-58367-084-X. OCLC 51259805.
  42. ^ a b "Yugoslavia and the profits of doom". EUobserver. 2 December 2011. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  43. ^ "Ex PM Janša To Be Reelected as SDS President". www.sloveniatimes.com. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  44. ^ "Slovenia: Two journalists threatened for saying politicians were involved in arms trafficking". Refworld. United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  45. ^ "STA: Ex-Agent Accuses Jansa of Running Parallel Arms Trading in 1990s". english.sta.si. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  46. ^ "STA: Alleged Arms Trade Ringleaders Deny Accusations". english.sta.si. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  47. ^ "STA: Dve desetletji od afere Depala vas". www.sta.si. Retrieved 25 January 2019.
  48. ^ "To so najodmevnejÅ¡e afere slovenskih obveÅ¡Äevalcev". siol.net (in Slovenian). Retrieved 25 January 2019.
  49. ^ "Politični sopotniki, ki jih je Janez Janša odgnal: Ego, večji od srca". Dnevnik. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  50. ^ "Desant na ministrstvo". Mladina.si. Retrieved 7 April 2019.
  51. ^ "Hitre zamenjave v Cerarjevi vladi. Pada že peti minister". RTVSLO.si (in Slovenian). Retrieved 25 January 2019.
  52. ^ "24ur.com - '1000 evrov pokojnine je predvolilna laž'". www2.24ur.com. Retrieved 25 January 2019.
  53. ^ Peter Jambrek o tem, da je SDS stranka frustriranih nižjih slojev, Dnevnik, 25. Cctober 2011
  54. ^ Alfio Cerami (2006). Social Policy in Central and Eastern Europe: The Emergence of a New European Welfare Regime. LIT Verlag Münster. p. 29. ISBN 978-3-8258-9699-7.
  55. ^ Vít Hloušek; Lubomír Kopecek (2013). Origin, Ideology and Transformation of Political Parties: East-Central and Western Europe Compared. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. p. 177. ISBN 978-1-4094-9977-0.
  56. ^ a b Rizman, Rudolf M. (1999), "Radical Right Politics in Slovenia", The radical right in Central and Eastern Europe since 1989, Penn State Press, pp. 155–162, ISBN 0271043792, retrieved 14 November 2011
  57. ^ Hall, Ian; Perrault, Magali (3 April 2000), , Central Europe Review, 2 (13), archived from the original on 12 January 2019, retrieved 14 November 2011
  58. ^ Rizman, Rudolf M. (2006), Uncertain path: Democratic transition and consolidation in Slovenia, Texas A&M University Press, p. 74, ISBN 9781585444236, retrieved 14 November 2011
  59. ^ . www.dvk-rs.si. Archived from the original on 8 June 2018. Retrieved 3 June 2018.
  60. ^ "Pregled mandata 2004/2005". Prvi interaktivni multimedijski portal, MMC RTV Slovenija. Retrieved 3 June 2018.
  61. ^ a b c d e f g "J. J.? Ne, hvala!". Mladina.si. Retrieved 3 June 2018.
  62. ^ "Katoliška država, državna cerkev". Mladina.si. Retrieved 5 June 2018.
  63. ^ "Specialna vojna". Mladina.si. Retrieved 3 June 2018.
  64. ^ Uredništvo. "Komisiji za nadzor Sove omejen nadzor v tekočih zadevah" (in Slovenian). Retrieved 3 June 2018.
  65. ^ a b c d e f "Safe in Hungary, Viktor Orban Pushes His Message Across Europe". The New York Times. 4 June 2018. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 5 June 2018.
  66. ^ a b c d e f g h Bilefsky, Dan (8 January 2008). "Slovene leader accused of media censorship". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  67. ^ a b "The right-wing populists doing well across Europe, from Marine Le Pen to Viktor Orban". The Independent. Retrieved 8 June 2018.
  68. ^ a b c d e f "Janšev medijski projekt kot zadnje volilno upanje SDS". Dnevnik. Retrieved 3 June 2018.
  69. ^ "Politični prsti v oglaševalskem kolaču". Mladina.si. Retrieved 7 April 2019.
  70. ^ "Kaj prinaša novi zakon?". Prvi interaktivni multimedijski portal, MMC RTV Slovenija. Retrieved 3 June 2018.
  71. ^ a b "Kako je bilo v Janševi vladi?". www.24ur.com (in Slovenian). Retrieved 3 June 2018.
  72. ^ a b c "Ne pozivajte Janše k odstopu". Dnevnik. Retrieved 7 March 2021.
  73. ^ a b c "Boško Šrot podrobneje razkril trgovanje z Delom". Dnevnik. Retrieved 7 March 2021.
  74. ^ "Jančič na čelu Delovega uredništva". RTVSLO.si (in Slovenian). Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  75. ^ Grgič, Maja (8 July 2008). "Šrot: Janša grozi, Delo ali aretacija". old.delo.si (in Slovenian). Retrieved 7 March 2021.
  76. ^ "Peticija zoper cenzuro in politične pritiske na novinarje v Sloveniji". Mladina.si. Retrieved 3 June 2018.
  77. ^ "Slovenski novinarji zoper cenzuro". Dnevnik. Retrieved 3 June 2018.
  78. ^ "Mednarodni novinarski inštitut poziva k preiskavi političnih pritiskov na slovenske medije". Dnevnik. Retrieved 3 June 2018.
  79. ^ "Labodji spev novinarjev". Dnevnik. Retrieved 16 May 2020.
  80. ^ "Sporen odpoklic dopisnikov".
  81. ^ "Cenzura na Delu?". Mladina.si. Retrieved 16 May 2020.
  82. ^ "Jože Tanko (SDS): Nekatere medije nadzira Borut Pahor". Dnevnik. Retrieved 3 June 2018.
  83. ^ a b c d e f "Austerity measures cause conflict". www.eurofound.europa.eu. Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  84. ^ a b Novak, Marja. "Slovenia parliament confirms Jansa as prime minister". U.S. Retrieved 3 June 2018.
  85. ^ a b "Dosežki ministrstva za finance po Bajuku: Davčna reforma, uvedba evra, predsedovanje EU, privatizacija NKBM in znižanje javne porabe". Dnevnik. Retrieved 3 June 2018.
  86. ^ a b c "Inflacija edini slab kazalec". RTVSLO.si (in Slovenian). Retrieved 22 March 2019.
  87. ^ a b "Skok letne inflacije na 6,9 odstotka". RTVSLO.si (in Slovenian). Retrieved 22 March 2019.
  88. ^ "Inflacija vezana na cene hrane". RTVSLO.si (in Slovenian). Retrieved 22 March 2019.
  89. ^ a b "Letna stopnja inflacije v Sloveniji 7 odstotna". siol.net (in Slovenian). Retrieved 22 March 2019.
  90. ^ "Višje cene, višja inflacija". www.24ur.com. Retrieved 22 March 2019.
  91. ^ Uredništvo (14 February 2008). "DZ: Vzrok za inflacijo na strani ponudbe". www.delo.si (in Slovenian). Retrieved 22 March 2019.
  92. ^ a b "Ostri odzivi na izjavo premiera Janeza Janše o štrucah v smetnjakih". Dnevnik. Retrieved 22 March 2019.
  93. ^ "Janša odgovarjal poslancem". RTVSLO.si (in Slovenian). Retrieved 22 March 2019.
  94. ^ . Državna volilna komisija. Archived from the original on 19 January 2019. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  95. ^ . Sta.si. 23 December 2008. Archived from the original on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 10 July 2014.
  96. ^ . Državna volilna komisija. Archived from the original on 28 May 2019. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  97. ^ "Franc Pukšič iz SDS-a v SLS?". Prvi interaktivni multimedijski portal, MMC RTV Slovenija. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  98. ^ . www.sloveniatimes.com (in Slovenian). Archived from the original on 28 January 2019. Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  99. ^ a b c d Novak, Marja. "Slovenia parliament confirms Jansa as prime minister". U.S. Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  100. ^ a b c d e "Slovenia - Government and society". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 3 June 2018.
  101. ^ "Profile-Slovenia's Finance Minister Janez Sustersic". Reuters. Retrieved 3 June 2018.
  102. ^ Novak, Marja. "Slovenia adopts reform laws but referendums possible". U.S. Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  103. ^ . www.sloveniatimes.com (in Slovenian). 7 May 2012. Archived from the original on 12 June 2018. Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  104. ^ a b "Slovenia expects EU assessment mission in April-finmin". Reuters. Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  105. ^ "Recession-hit Slovenia adopts austerity measures". tribunedigital-chicagotribune. Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  106. ^ . www.sloveniatimes.com (in Slovenian). 9 July 2012. Archived from the original on 12 June 2018. Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  107. ^ . www.sloveniatimes.com (in Slovenian). Archived from the original on 12 June 2018. Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  108. ^ a b Novak, Marja. "Slovenian austerity drive threatened by referendum call". U.S. Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  109. ^ . www.sloveniatimes.com (in Slovenian). Archived from the original on 12 June 2018. Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  110. ^ a b "Struggling Slovenia to appoint new PM to rescue economy". Reuters. Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  111. ^ a b c Novak, Marja. "Protests in Slovenia continue despite government's fall". U.S. Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  112. ^ Novak, Marja. "Fresh Slovenian protests amid bailout fears". U.S. Retrieved 3 June 2018.
  113. ^ Evans-Pritchard, Ambrose (28 March 2013). "Slovenia faces contagion from Cyprus as banking crisis deepens". Daily Telegraph. ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 3 June 2018.
  114. ^ "Kdo je pokopal Slovenijo?". Mladina.si. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  115. ^ Radosavljevic, Zoran. "Slovenia: as star wanes, anger on streets". U.S. Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  116. ^ Novak, Marja. "Violent mass protest continue in Slovenia". U.S. Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  117. ^ "Thousands protest against austerity in Slovenia". Deutsche Welle. 18 November 2012. Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  118. ^ Novak, Marja. "Slovenia police clash with protesters ahead of vote". U.S. Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  119. ^ "Anti-austerity Slovenia protesters clash with police". CBC. Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  120. ^ "Slovenia police arrest 141 in violent anti-austerity protests". Reuters. Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  121. ^ . www.sloveniatimes.com (in Slovenian). Archived from the original on 22 June 2018. Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  122. ^ a b Novak, Marja. "Slovenia gripped by strike, government on the ropes". U.S. Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  123. ^ a b "[Investigation] Arms deals and bribes: The downfall of Slovenia's former PM". Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  124. ^ An Intrusion of the Members of SDS into Sova (In Slovene: "Vdor kadrov SDS v Sovo"), Mladina, 18 January 2013
  125. ^ a b Novak, Marja. "Slovenia protest adds pressure to crumbling government". U.S. Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  126. ^ "Protests in Slovenia continue despite government's fall". Reuters. 9 March 2013. Retrieved 7 May 2020.
  127. ^ "Anti-graft protest adds pressure to Slovenian prime minister". Reuters. 11 January 2013. Retrieved 7 May 2020.
  128. ^ "Ninamedia - Arhiv anket". www.ninamedia.si. Retrieved 22 June 2018.
  129. ^ Pečauer, Marko. "Anketa Dela: Stranke z vse manjšo podporo" (in Slovenian). Retrieved 22 June 2018.
  130. ^ Pečauer, Marko. "Anketa Dela: Velikanska podpora protikorupcijski komisiji" (in Slovenian). Retrieved 22 June 2018.
  131. ^ "Za Janšev odhod!". Mladina.si. Retrieved 22 June 2018.
  132. ^ "SLS: če Janša do februarja ne odstopi gremo iz koalicije tudi mi". 14 January 2013.
  133. ^ Novak, Marja. "Slovenian coalition party asks premier to resign". U.S. Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  134. ^ a b . www.sloveniatimes.com (in Slovenian). Archived from the original on 22 June 2018. Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  135. ^ "Slovenian court confirms jail sentence for ex-PM Jansa". Reuters. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  136. ^ "Slovenia's fragile recovery". The Economist. 3 May 2014. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  137. ^ . www.sloveniatimes.com (in Slovenian). Archived from the original on 18 February 2019. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  138. ^ "EU volitve 2014 / 18". Delo.si. Retrieved 10 July 2014.
  139. ^ "European parliament elections 2014". Volitve.gov.si. 25 May 2014. Retrieved 10 July 2014.
  140. ^ "European parliament elections 2014". Volitve.gov.si. 25 May 2014. Retrieved 10 July 2014.
  141. ^ "Republic of Slovenia early elections for deputies to the national assembly 2014". volitve.gov.si. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  142. ^ . www.sloveniatimes.com (in Slovenian). Archived from the original on 1 March 2019. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  143. ^ "Janša ni smel iz zapora, saj ni pojasnil, kaj bo počel". Prvi interaktivni multimedijski portal, MMC RTV Slovenija. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  144. ^ Jančič, Peter. "Janša za zdaj izpuščen iz zapora" (in Slovenian). Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  145. ^ "Ustavno sodišče razveljavilo dveletno zaporno kazen Janezu Janši". Dnevnik. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  146. ^ "Slovenian bribery trial against ex-PM Jansa expires". Reuters. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  147. ^ . www.sloveniatimes.com (in Slovenian). Archived from the original on 1 March 2019. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  148. ^ a b "SDS poziva Pahorja, naj ponovno razpiše volitve (foto)" (in Slovenian). Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  149. ^ a b "SDS toži državo: "Volitve 2014 so bile ukradene"" (in Slovenian). Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  150. ^ "STA: SDS Patria damages trial starting". english.sta.si. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  151. ^ "Sodišče zavrnilo odškodninsko tožbo SDS proti državi". Siol.net (in Slovenian). 23 May 2018. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
  152. ^ a b c d e MacDowall, Andrew (1 June 2018). "'Drain the swamp': rightwing leader pulls ahead in Slovenia's polls". The Guardian. Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  153. ^ a b c d e f "Slovenian survivor targets victory à la Orbán". Politico. 1 June 2018. Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  154. ^ "(VIDEO in FOTO) Več tisoč ljudi na shodu proti politiki sovraštva". Časnik Večer d.o.o. (in Slovenian). Retrieved 7 June 2018.
  155. ^ "Protest v Ljubljani: "Sejanje strahu, sovražnosti in laži vodi v totalitarizem" #foto" (in Slovenian). Retrieved 7 June 2018.
  156. ^ "Posvetovanje s prevaro". Mladina.si. Retrieved 10 June 2018.
  157. ^ "Dilema izsiljene izbire: "Ste za božičnico?"". ::: IN MEDIA RES (in Slovenian). 28 May 2018. Retrieved 10 June 2018.
  158. ^ Byrne, Andrew (3 October 2017). "Hungary steps up anti-Soros rhetoric with 'national consultation'". Financial Times. Archived from the original on 10 December 2022. Retrieved 10 June 2018.
  159. ^ "Izidi glasovanja za celotno Slovenijo". volitve.gov.si (in Slovenian). 3 June 2018. from the original on 16 May 2023. Retrieved 30 June 2023.
  160. ^ a b "Stranke na levici zanikajo dogovor, a izključujejo koalicijo z Janšo #video". siol.net (in Slovenian). Retrieved 6 May 2020.
  161. ^ Mlakar, Luka (25 May 2018). "Tudi če se Janša umakne, Šarec ne bi šel v koalicijo s SDS". Siol.net (in Slovenian). Retrieved 5 February 2019.
  162. ^ "Šarec po srečanju s Cerarjem: Obstaja volja, da v koalicijo z SDS-om ne gremo". RTVSLO.si (in Slovenian). 7 June 2018. Retrieved 5 February 2019.
  163. ^ Zajc, Drago (23 June 2018). "Leva, desna ali mavrična koalicija? Nekatere so prešibke, druge naporne". Delo (in Slovenian). Retrieved 5 February 2019.
  164. ^ "STA: SDS head Janša pays visit to Hungarian PM Orban". english.sta.si. Retrieved 17 June 2018.
  165. ^ Novak, Marja. "Slovenia's president to give mandate to anti-immigrant party to..." U.S. Retrieved 17 June 2018.
  166. ^ "Comedian gets new role: prime minister of Slovenia". NBC News. 18 August 2018. Retrieved 9 March 2019.
  167. ^ "SDS brez preboja: Za neuspehe v glavnem krivi mediji". www.vecer.com (in Slovenian). 5 February 2019. Retrieved 6 February 2019.
  168. ^ "Slovenian PM Sarec resigns, early election likely". Reuters. 27 January 2020. Retrieved 18 March 2020.
  169. ^ "Four Slovenian parties agree on a future government coalition". Reuters. 25 February 2020. Retrieved 6 May 2020.
  170. ^ "Koalicija proti nestrpnosti". Mladina.si. Retrieved 18 March 2020.
  171. ^ Krebelj, Jana. "SDS, SMC, NSi in Desus bodo nadaljevale pogovore o oblikovanju koalicije".
  172. ^ "Počivalšek pripravljen tudi na koalicijo z Janšo". Mladina.si. Retrieved 18 March 2020.
  173. ^ "Tonin se s Šarcem ne bo več pogajal". Mladina.si. Retrieved 18 March 2020.
  174. ^ "Cerar izstopil iz SMC-ja. Počivalšek: Iti moramo naprej".
  175. ^ "Slovenia president names center-right Janez Jansa as PM candidate". Reuters. 26 February 2020. Retrieved 18 March 2020.
  176. ^ "Večer - Kaj prinaša koalicijska pogodba za dve leti? Veliko tople vode, a tudi hladna prha". www.vecer.com (in Slovenian). 29 February 2020. Retrieved 18 March 2020.
  177. ^ "Večer - error404". www.vecer.com. Retrieved 18 March 2020.
  178. ^ "Slovenia's Janša defeated by opposition liberal Freedom Movement". euronews. 24 April 2022.
  179. ^ "Slovenian lawmakers approve liberal-green leader as new PM". The Independent. 25 May 2022.
  180. ^ a b Matej Makarovič; Matevž Tomšič (2009). "'Left' and 'Right' in Slovenian Political Life and Public Discourse". In Constantine Arvanitopoulos (ed.). Reforming Europe: The Role of the Centre-Right. Springer. p. 264. ISBN 9783642005602.
  181. ^ Bakke 2010, p. 244.
  182. ^ Danica Fink-Hafner (2006). "Slovenia: Between Bipolarity and Broad Coalition-Building". In Susanne Jungerstam-Mulders (ed.). Post-communist EU Member States: Parties and Party Systems. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. p. 218. ISBN 978-0-7546-4712-6.
  183. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Slovenia political briefing: Changes at the far right of the political spectrum – China-CEE Institute". 3 May 2019. Retrieved 2 October 2019.
  184. ^ a b MacDowall, Andrew (1 June 2018). "'Drain the swamp': rightwing leader pulls ahead in Slovenia's polls". The Guardian.
  185. ^ Gabriella Lazaridis; Giovanna Campani (2017). "Introduction". In Gabriella Lazaridis; Giovanna Campani (eds.). Understanding the Populist Shift: Othering in a Europe in Crisis. Taylor & Francis. p. 10. ISBN 978-1-317-32606-9.
  186. ^ "Slovenia's term raises specter of EU's threat from within". AP NEWS. 4 July 2021. Retrieved 15 July 2021.
  187. ^ "DW Freedom of Speech laureate Blaz Zgaga attacked for critical remarks". Deutsche Welle. 6 May 2020. Retrieved 10 May 2020.
  188. ^ a b "Explained: Slovenia's election and Orban's populist influence". euronews. 1 June 2018. Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  189. ^ "Slovenia Elections Tilt Another European Country to the Right". The New York Times. 3 June 2018. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  190. ^ a b Novak, Marja. "Anti-immigrant stance helps Slovenia's SDS party to poll lead". U.S. Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  191. ^ "Orban ally Janez Jansa expected to top Slovenia's election". Deutsche Welle. 2 June 2018. Retrieved 13 March 2023.
  192. ^ a b Markeš, Janez. "Najprej Slovenija. Kaj pa potem?" (in Slovenian). Retrieved 5 June 2018.
  193. ^ Umek, Andrej. "Ali v Sloveniji obstaja globoka država?" (in Slovenian). Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  194. ^ "Globoka država". Mladina.si. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  195. ^ a b "Orban ally Janez Jansa expected to top Slovenia's election". Deutsche Welle. 2 June 2018. Retrieved 5 June 2018.
  196. ^ "STA: Janša says CoE Commissioner part of "fake news network"". english.sta.si. Retrieved 28 September 2021.
  197. ^ "Janez Janša: Za vsak nov predpis naj se dva ukine!". www.sds.si (in Slovenian). Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  198. ^ Lam, Bourree (30 January 2017). "Trump's 'Two-for-One' Regulation Executive Order". The Atlantic. Retrieved 2 June 2018.
  199. ^ a b c "Slovenian nationalist party set for power after winning election". The Guardian. 4 June 2018. Retrieved 5 June 2018.
  200. ^ "Janša: Najprej Slovenija, potem drugi". Prvi interaktivni multimedijski portal, MMC RTV Slovenija. Retrieved 7 June 2018.
  201. ^ a b c d e "Elections 2018, Party Profiles: SDS, the Janez Janša Party (Feature)". Retrieved 3 July 2018.
  202. ^ Higgins, Andrew (16 June 2021). "Wielding Twitter, Europe's 'Marshal Twito' Takes Aim at the Media". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 13 July 2021.
  203. ^ a b "Posvet z volivci: Zavrnitev sodelovanja je bilo neprimerno". www.sds.si (in Slovenian). Retrieved 24 June 2021.
  204. ^ a b c . www.demsoc.org. 19 May 2014. Archived from the original on 12 June 2018. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  205. ^ Novak, Marja. "Slovenia rejects same-sex marriages in a referendum". U.S. Retrieved 5 June 2018.
  206. ^ "Slovenians Deliver Major Setback to Same-Sex Marriage in Referendum". The New York Times. 21 December 2015. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 5 June 2018.
  207. ^ "Imposing 'imaginary' values risks EU collapse, Slovenian PM claims". the Guardian. 4 July 2021. Retrieved 13 July 2021.
  208. ^ "Tudi SDS za domoljubno vzgojo od vrtca do srednje šole" (in Slovenian). Retrieved 7 June 2018.
  209. ^ "STA: SDS proposal for full funding of private schools rejected". english.sta.si. Retrieved 7 June 2018.
  210. ^ "Janša: Spet je treba uvesti obvezni vojaški rok". zurnal24.si (in Slovenian). Retrieved 12 January 2020.
  211. ^ "V SDS predlagamo ponovno uvedbo naborništva v obliki služenja 6-mesečnega vojaškega roka". www.sds.si (in Slovenian). Retrieved 18 March 2020.
  212. ^ "SDS bi 25.000 domoljubov združil v nacionalni gardi". Prvi interaktivni multimedijski portal, MMC RTV Slovenija. Retrieved 7 June 2018.
  213. ^ "ZL nacionalno gardo vidi kot "desničarsko paravojsko", NSi idejo podpira". Prvi interaktivni multimedijski portal, MMC RTV Slovenija. Retrieved 7 June 2018.
  214. ^ "Program ZATE - Za pravično sojenje". www.sds.si (in Slovenian). Retrieved 10 June 2018.
  215. ^ "Prime Minister Janez Janša: Climate change is a challenge for the wider society and every individual". www.nekdanji-pv.gov.si. Retrieved 7 August 2019.
  216. ^ "Prime Minister Janez Janša: The legislative package on energy and climate change is one of the most important legislative packages of the beginning of the 21st century". www.nekdanji-pv.gov.si. Retrieved 7 August 2019.
  217. ^ "Dr. Romana Jordan Cizelj o podnebnih spremembah". www.sds.si (in Slovenian). Retrieved 2 October 2019.
  218. ^ a b "[Video] Poslanec Grims odgovarja ekosocialistom: Ekološki davki se ne porabljajo namensko, temveč gredo v žepe levičarjev!". Nova24TV (in Slovenian). 29 December 2018. Retrieved 7 August 2019.
  219. ^ a b c "Grims trdi eno, znanstveniki se z njim ne strinjajo". siol.net (in Slovenian). Retrieved 7 August 2019.
  220. ^ a b "Svet24.si - Branko Grims: "Globalno segrevanje ne obstaja. To je larifari"". Svet24.si - Vsa resnica na enem mestu (in Slovenian). Retrieved 7 August 2019.
  221. ^ a b "[Video] Grims razkrinkal levičarsko pranje možganov s podnebnimi spremembami, na račun katerih lahko nevladniki zaslužijo tudi prek 20 tisoč evrov mesečno!". Nova24TV (in Slovenian). 25 March 2019. Retrieved 7 August 2019.
  222. ^ "Od kod se je 'vzel' panter, s katerim je Šiško zamenjal Triglav?". www.24ur.com. Retrieved 7 August 2019.
  223. ^ "Branko Grims: 'Govorjenje o segrevanju zemlje je velika laž'". www.24ur.com. Retrieved 7 August 2019.
  224. ^ "Janez Janša: To je globoka država. To ni politična tvorba. To je mafija". www.demokracija.si (in Slovenian). Retrieved 27 November 2019.
  225. ^ "About SDS - Programme". www.sds.si. Retrieved 10 June 2018.
  226. ^ "Za SDS večinski volilni sistem rešitev vseh težav". Dnevnik. Retrieved 10 June 2018.
  227. ^ Uredništvo (28 December 2015). "SDS proti predlogu za otežitev dostopa do orožja". www.domovina.je (in Slovenian). Retrieved 7 June 2018.
  228. ^ "STA: SDS zaradi predloga za otežitev dostopa do orožja za izredno sejo odbora DZ". www.sta.si (in Slovenian). Retrieved 7 June 2018.
  229. ^ "Evroposlanci sprejeli strožjo zakonodajo o orožju". Prvi interaktivni multimedijski portal, MMC RTV Slovenija. Retrieved 7 June 2018.
  230. ^ "Ljudska obramba". Mladina.si. Retrieved 7 June 2018.
  231. ^ "Zakon o orožju, nova fronta političnega spopada". www.delo.si (in Slovenian). Retrieved 24 June 2021.
  232. ^ Puš, Marko (25 October 2023). "Janša: The Situation Is Serious. Arm Yourselves. Legally". Nova24TV English. Retrieved 10 November 2023.
  233. ^ "Legalizacija marihuane: "Prohibicija nikoli ne deluje"". RTVSLO.si (in Slovenian). Retrieved 28 September 2021.
  234. ^ "Predlog zakona o pomoči pri prostovoljnem končanju življenja pobudniki vložili v DZ". Dnevnik. 2023. Retrieved 10 November 2023.
  235. ^ "Kot himno bomo še peli 7. kitico Prešernove Zdravljice". Prvi interaktivni multimedijski portal, MMC RTV Slovenija. Retrieved 21 June 2018.
  236. ^ a b "Retroaktivnost v predlogu SDS-a o nezastarljivosti umora "neustavna"". Prvi interaktivni multimedijski portal, MMC RTV Slovenija. Retrieved 21 June 2018.
  237. ^ a b "SDS znova neuspešna s predlogom zakona o državnih simbolih" (in Slovenian). Retrieved 21 June 2018.
  238. ^ "Rdeča zvezda in himna ostajata, glasbene kvote ne bodo zvišane". Prvi interaktivni multimedijski portal, MMC RTV Slovenija. Retrieved 21 June 2018.
  239. ^ a b "Prepoved rdeče zvezde". Mladina.si. Retrieved 21 June 2018.
  240. ^ "Rdeča zvezda je spet razdvajala (foto)". Dnevnik. Retrieved 21 June 2018.
  241. ^ "Foto: Dan, ko je sijala rdeča zvezda" (in Slovenian). Retrieved 21 June 2018.
  242. ^ "Nosil bom rdečo zvezdo s Svetlano Makarovič na čelu ponovno na Kongresnem trgu".
  243. ^ "Vstopna". Združena levica - Demokratična stranka dela (in Slovenian). Retrieved 21 June 2018.
  244. ^ "Pod rdečo zvezdo rojena Levica ne bo večna opozicija". Dnevnik. Retrieved 21 June 2018.
  245. ^ "Program". www.sds.si (in Slovenian). Retrieved 12 January 2020.
  246. ^ "Slovenian Democratic Party (SDS) condemns unreasonable support of leftist Slovenian political forces to the Iranian regime". www.sds.si. Retrieved 12 January 2020.
  247. ^ a b "Pred sedežem slovenske vlade plapola izraelska zastava". zurnal24.si (in Slovenian). Retrieved 29 May 2021.
  248. ^ @govslovenia (14 May 2021). "As a sign of solidarity with #Israel…" (Tweet). from the original on 20 June 2021. Retrieved 29 June 2023 – via Twitter.
  249. ^ "Izraelska zastava na pročelju vladnega poslopja". www.24ur.com. Retrieved 29 May 2021.
  250. ^ "USTAVITE LEVICO!". Mladina.si. Retrieved 3 August 2021.
  251. ^ a b c "A political situation in Slovenia - SDS Communication office" (PDF).
  252. ^ "STA: Slovenian political metaphors and metonymy - a guide". english.sta.si. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  253. ^ a b c "Have you heard of Kučan's clan – a mafia-like group from the League of Communists, whose aim was to economically control Slovenia after its independence and assure the survival of their children?". Nova24TV (in Slovenian). 19 December 2017. Retrieved 5 June 2018.
  254. ^ a b Rizman, Rudi (2006). Uncertain path : democratic transition and consolidation in Slovenia (1st ed.). College Station: Texas A & M University Press. ISBN 978-1-60344-543-6. OCLC 826658018.
  255. ^ a b Cultural Policy in Slovenia. Council of Europe. 1 January 1998. ISBN 978-92-871-3681-7.
  256. ^ a b Dawisha, Karen; Parrott, Bruce (13 June 1997). Politics, Power and the Struggle for Democracy in South-East Europe. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-59733-3.
  257. ^ a b "Nekateri So Še Zmeraj V Ilegali". Dnevnik. Retrieved 10 March 2021.
  258. ^ a b "Letter of Prime Minister Janez Janša to the President of the European Comission [sic] Ursula von der Leyen". Portal gov.si. Retrieved 10 March 2021.
  259. ^ a b "Tanja Fajon: Dokument SDS, ki svari pred državljansko vojno, je absurden in nevaren". Dnevnik. Retrieved 29 May 2021.
  260. ^ "ZA OBRAMBO USTAVNIH TEMELJEV SLOVENSKE DRŽAVE - Kongresna resolucija 2021 – osnutekJR" (PDF).
  261. ^ "SDS Levici spet dela reklamo". N1 (in Slovenian). 3 June 2021. Retrieved 24 June 2021.
  262. ^ "Igor Zorčič zahtevane seje o programu Levice ne bo sklical". www.delo.si (in Slovenian). Retrieved 24 June 2021.
  263. ^ "Janša grozi z državljansko vojno". www.delo.si (in Slovenian). Retrieved 10 November 2023.
  264. ^ "Facebook". www.facebook.com. Retrieved 10 November 2023.
  265. ^ a b LK (13 July 2023). "Janez Janša: The Revival Of The Ideological Conflict And Cultural Fight – It Is Time To Face Reality!". Demokracija. Retrieved 11 November 2023.
  266. ^ Dawisha, Karen; Parrott, Bruce (13 June 1997). Politics, Power and the Struggle for Democracy in South-East Europe. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521597333.
  267. ^ Baumgartl, Bernd; Favell, Adrian (2 October 1995). New Xenophobia in Europe. Martinus Nijhoff Publishers. ISBN 9041108653.
  268. ^ Ramet, Sabrina P. (1 November 2010). Radical Right in Central and Eastern Europe Since 1989. Penn State Press. ISBN 978-0271043791.
  269. ^ "Nadaljnje delitve naroda na rdeče in črne". Mladina.si. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  270. ^ "STA: Demokracija "smells corruption" in bad bank dismissals". english.sta.si. Retrieved 5 June 2018.
  271. ^ "STA: Weekly: Parties might have been bribed in Iran money laundering". english.sta.si. Retrieved 5 June 2018.
  272. ^ "STA: Reporter takes a swing at Cerar". english.sta.si. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  273. ^ "Jerajeva: Bratuškova se ves čas posvetuje s strici iz ozadja". Revija Reporter (in Slovenian). Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  274. ^ a b "Strici iz ozadja". Mladina.si. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  275. ^ "STA: Demokracija identifies "little uncle" behind Šarec". english.sta.si. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  276. ^ "Svetovni mediji o Pahorjevem "političnem hat-tricku" v senci ljudske vstaje". Prvi interaktivni multimedijski portal, MMC RTV Slovenija. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  277. ^ "Svet iz ozadja ali politična paranoja?". Dnevnik. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  278. ^ "Ne skrbite, strici iz ozadja skrbijo za vas" (in Slovenian). Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  279. ^ a b . www.sloveniatimes.com (in Slovenian). Archived from the original on 18 June 2018. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  280. ^ a b "Milan Kučan". Mladina.si. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  281. ^ "Kučanu razpada njegov Forum 21, košarico mu je že dala tudi Pergarjeva!". www.politikis.si (in Slovenian). 14 March 2012. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  282. ^ "Stranka SDS v tujino pisala o napadu "socialistične komisije" na Janšo; KPK: Gre za novo diskreditacijo". Dnevnik. Retrieved 28 September 2021.
  283. ^ "Kučan je spoznal, da Šarec ne more zmagati – zdaj vse orožje polaga v Ljudmilo Novak, ki naj bi "razklala" desnico". Nova24TV (in Slovenian). 21 August 2017. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  284. ^ . www.vinkogorenak.net (in Slovenian). Archived from the original on 3 July 2018. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  285. ^ . www.sloveniatimes.com (in Slovenian). Archived from the original on 3 July 2018. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  286. ^ "Janša ni priznal krivde zaradi žaljivega tvita o novinarkah RTVS". Časnik Večer d.o.o. (in Slovenian). Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  287. ^ "STA: More condemnation of Janša's defamatory tweet". english.sta.si. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  288. ^ "STA: Insulting tweet labelled as attack on media". english.sta.si. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  289. ^ "Slovenia right-wing politician gets 3-month suspended jail". www.msn.com. Retrieved 25 November 2018.
  290. ^ "Von der Leynova ob zaključku na Bledu: Danes so dovoljene sanje, jutri je nov dan". www.24ur.com. Retrieved 15 July 2021.
  291. ^ "Brussels Playbook: Liberals on the offensive — Taking on China — Trust level: low". Politico. 7 July 2021. Retrieved 15 July 2021.
  292. ^ . www.forum21.si. Archived from the original on 23 May 2018. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  293. ^ "Kdo vozi forum 21?". Mladina.si. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  294. ^ "SDS: Kadroval bo Forum 21" (in Slovenian). Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  295. ^
slovenian, democratic, party, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, neutrality, this, article, disputed, relevant, discussion, found, talk, page, please, remo. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages The neutrality of this article is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article relies largely or entirely on a single source Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help improve this article by introducing citations to additional sources Find sources Slovenian Democratic Party news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2022 Some of this article s listed sources may not be reliable Please help this article by looking for better more reliable sources Unreliable citations may be challenged or deleted December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The Slovenian Democratic Party Slovene Slovenska demokratska stranka SDS formerly the Social Democratic Party of Slovenia Slovene Socialdemokratska stranka Slovenije SDSS 15 16 is a conservative 3 parliamentary party it is also one of the largest parties 17 in Slovenia with approximately 30 000 reported members in 2013 Slovenian Democratic Party Slovenska demokratska strankaAbbreviationSDSLeaderJanez JansaFounded16 February 1989HeadquartersTrstenjakova ulica 8 LjubljanaYouth wingSlovenian Democratic Youth 1 Membership 2013 30 000 2 IdeologyConservatism 3 4 5 Slovenian nationalism 6 7 8 Right wing populism 9 10 Anti immigration 10 11 Political positionRight wing 10 12 13 European affiliationEuropean People s PartyInternational affiliationCentrist Democrat International International Democrat UnionEuropean Parliament groupEuropean People s PartyColours Yellow BlueAnthem Slovenska pomlad 14 Slovenian Spring National Assembly27 90European Parliament2 8Mayors12 212Municipal council583 2 750Party flagWebsitesds wbr siPolitics of SloveniaPolitical partiesElectionsIt has been described as nationalist 18 and right wing populist 9 encompassing both national 19 and social conservatism 20 Led by former Prime Minister of Slovenia Janez Jansa the SDS is a member of the European People s Party EPP Centrist Democrat International 21 and International Democrat Union 22 SDS has its origins in the Slovenian anti Communist pro democracy dissident labour union movement of the late 1980s The Social Democratic Union of Slovenia later renamed Social Democratic Party and in 2003 Slovenian Democratic Party was first headed by trade unionist France Tomsic then by the prominent Slovenian pro independence and pro democracy dissident Joze Pucnik who resigned in 1993 The party was part of the Democratic Opposition of Slovenia DEMOS coalition The party s early ideological orientation was liberal social democratic and civic nationalist reflecting a broad and somewhat fragmented coalition In the 1992 parliamentary elections SDS barely passed the parliamentary threshold joining a Liberal Democracy of Slovenia led coalition government In 1993 Janez Jansa another prominent pro democracy dissident turned politician became party leader a post he has held continuously since Jansa also served as Minister of Defense between 1990 and 1994 In 1994 Jansa was ousted from his ministerial post due to his involvement in the Depala Vas affair SDS consequently left the coalition government SDS largely remained in opposition for the following 10 years gaining in popularity and shifting its ideological outlook rightwards in the meanwhile In 1995 SDS absorbed the conservative National Democratic Party a former DEMOS coalition partner In 2004 SDS placed first in that year s parliamentary elections forming a centre right governing coalition with Jansa as PM The government oversaw the country s entry into the European Union and NATO and a period of rapid economic growth The government faced allegations of curtailing media freedom In the 2008 parliamentary elections SDS was surpassed by the Social Democrats SDS placed second in the 2011 parliamentary elections but managed to secure support for a SDS led coalition government forming the second Jansa Cabinet The government took office in the midst of the European debt crisis instituting widely disliked austerity reforms which helped spark a series of massive anti government protests Opposition to the government was further fueled by corruption allegations against Jansa including his alleged involvement in the Patria affair as well as a 2013 KPK report which found that Jansa had violated corruption prevention measures The SDS led government collapsed in early 2013 after losing support of coalition partners At the time of the 2014 parliamentary elections SDS leader Jansa was serving a prison sentence for a bribery conviction which was later overturned by the supreme court and subsequently expired upon re trial SDS placed second SDS won a plurality of votes in the 2018 election however most of the other parliamentary parties made pre election pledges not to join a coalition government with SDS After the centre left coalition collapsed in early 2020 two of the parties that had seen a change of leadership since the election reneged on their pre election pledge clearing the path for the third Jansa Cabinet The new SDS led government took office during the early days of the COVID 19 pandemic In recent years Jansa has been described as an illiberal leader 23 24 Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins 1 2 A populist turn 1 3 2004 2008 in power first Jansa Cabinet 1 3 1 Internal affairs 1 3 2 Freedom of the press 1 3 3 Economy and finance 1 4 2008 2011 in opposition 1 5 2012 2013 a year in power second Jansa Cabinet 1 6 2013 2020 return to opposition 1 7 2020 2022 third Jansa Cabinet 1 8 2022 present return to opposition again 2 Ideology and policies 2 1 Populism 2 2 Domestic policy 2 2 1 Economic policy 2 2 2 Social policy 2 2 3 Education policy 2 2 4 National security 2 2 5 Judiciary and law enforcement 2 2 6 Environment and climate change 2 2 7 Other policies 2 3 Foreign policy 2 4 Post communist cabal conspiracy 3 Organization and political affiliation 3 1 International affiliations 3 2 Affiliated publications 4 Supporters and affiliates 4 1 Former supporters and affiliates 5 Controversies and criticism 5 1 Freedom of the press 5 2 Astroturfing and satellite parties 5 3 Ties to far right groups 5 4 Political self dealing accusations 5 5 Cult of personality 5 6 Campaign financing impropriety allegations 5 7 Discriminatory remarks 6 Parliamentary representation 7 Electoral results 7 1 National Assembly 7 2 European Parliament 7 3 Presidential 8 Party leaders 9 References 10 General sources 11 External linksHistory editOrigins edit The Slovenian Democratic Party developed from the merger of two distinct political parties being the legal successor of both of the Social Democratic Union of Slovenia and the Slovenian Democratic Union 25 26 27 28 member parties of the Democratic Opposition of Slovenia DEMOS which defeated the Communist Party of Slovenia derived parties in the first democratic Slovenian election in 1990 26 and carried out the democratization of Slovenia and its secession from Yugoslavia citation needed The Social Democratic Union of Slovenia had emerged from an independent anti Communist trade union movement in the late 1980s Its first president was the trade union leader France Tomsic who in December 1987 organized a milestone workers strike which lead to the establishment of an independent trade union Neodvisnost thus following the example of the Solidarity movement in Poland 29 and in 1989 the party which was the first opposition party in the former communist world 27 30 29 31 Tomsic was replaced as leader by Joze Pucnik later that year while the SDU was renamed as Social Democratic Party of Slovenia SDS 30 Pucnik was a former dissident who had been forced to emigrate to Germany as a political exile in the 1960s 32 Under Pucnik s leadership The SDU gradually developed into a moderate social democratic party which combined the plea for a social market economy with the support of a welfare state based on a German Austrian and Scandinavian social model citation needed The Slovenian Democratic Union was founded in January 1989 28 as opposition to the Communist Party of Slovenia emphasizing establishment of the rule of law and respect for human rights and fundamental political freedoms respect for minority rights and Euro Atlantic integration the European Union and NATO It functioned as a broad but somewhat fragmented coalition of several groups with different liberal social liberal and civic nationalist agendas citation needed In 1991 after a conflict between the leadership and membership of SDU the Slovenian Democratic Union split into two parties the social liberal wing established the Democratic Party DSS while the conservative faction founded the National Democratic Party NDS 28 Members who did not join one of these two parties joined the Social Democratic Party led by Joze Pucnik citation needed Although the Social Democratic Party suffered a clear defeat in the 1992 election barely entering Parliament it formed a coalition with the winning Liberal Democracy of Slovenia LDS and entered the cabinet of Janez Drnovsek 33 34 35 36 37 Jansa became party leader in 1993 after Joze Pucnik resigned due to health issues Pucnik later became the honorary president of the party a function he held until his death in January 2003 37 38 In 1995 the National Democratic Party joined SDS which thus became one of the legal successors of the Slovenian Democratic Union 25 28 37 Jansa served as Minister of Defense from 1990 to 1994 39 Jansa has been accused of having abused his position to consolidate political power 40 engaging in arms trafficking to arm combatants in the Yugoslav Wars in violation of a United Nations arms embargo 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 and blackmailing prominent individuals including politicians businesspeople journalists and cultural and literary figures by threatening to make public information to which he was privy to in his ministerial role regarding their previously undisclosed involvement with the former communist secret police 40 In 1994 Janez Jansa was dismissed by Prime Minister Janez Drnovsek from his role as Defence Minister because of his involvement in the Depala Vas affair which centered around an incident in which military personnel arrested and mistreated a civilian off duty undercover police associate that was attempting to obtain classified documents about the Ministry of Defence 47 48 37 40 SDS subsequently left the Drnovsek government as a result 37 The dismissal prompted protests by Jansa s supporters 49 and there were founded fears inside the government that Jansa backed by the nascent military may refuse to relinquish power 40 A 2003 Mladina article alleged that Slovenia s military s special unit MORiS was in 1994 performing military exercises intended to prepare the force to carry out a military coup d etat The police force was at the same time covertly preparing to secure the state and prevent a military takeover In a press conference shortly prior to the article s publication Jansa pointed to documents detailing these police plans to secure state institutions to argue that a coup was in fact afoot against his Ministry In a 1999 interview with Delo Jansa commented on the events of 1994 saying I held immense power in my hands And in 1994 when they were deposing me there was a lot of suggestions that we not accept this removal I could have done that But I didn t 50 In 1995 Jansa was charged for alleged illegal arms trafficking but the case was never brought to trial 42 SDS remained in opposition for the next 10 years except for a brief period in 2000 when it entered a short lived centre right government led by Andrej Bajuk 37 51 52 while gaining popularity among as described by one of its former supporters Peter Jambrek lower frustrated social strata citation needed 53 A populist turn edit After the year 2000 the party applied for membership in the European People s Party EPP 37 adopting a liberal economic policy and later pro austerity measures upon the late 2000 economic crisis while retaining an atlantist foreign policy citation needed The rightward shift culminated in the 2003 name change from Social Democratic Party to Slovenian Democratic party 12 25 The party was described as liberal conservative 54 or conservative liberal 55 in ideological orientation The party s radical populism nationalistic 12 and xenophobic attacks was also observed by political analysts 56 57 58 Moreover the local Slovenian Catholic Church supported it more than any other Slovenian political party Even though not a nominally Christian party the local church has stood fully and unconditionally behind it 56 2004 2008 in power first Jansa Cabinet edit On 3 October 2004 SDS won the 2004 parliamentary election with 29 1 of the popular vote and 29 out of 88 seats 59 SDS then formed a coalition with New Slovenia NSi the Slovenian People s Party SLS and Democratic Party of Pensioners of Slovenia DeSUS holding a total of 49 parliamentary seats out of 90 60 The SDS led government passed several pro business measures initiated the regionalisation of the country by giving more power to local governments and in order to please its coalition party DeSUS introduced economically non sustainable changes in the pension system citation needed SDS has been accused of catering to the interests of the Slovenian Roman Catholic Church in exchange for political support 61 62 Nevertheless the Church maintained a critical attitude towards some of the party s positions the SDS led Government has assumed a favourable attitude towards gambling tourism stem cell research and passed a law recognizing same sex civil unions all opposed by the Roman Catholic Church citation needed Internal affairs edit The government introduced measures to supervise and to curtail the powers of the Slovenian Intelligence and Security Agency The measures were strongly rebuked by the opposition and segments of the press as an attempt to discredit the secret intelligence service and cast a negative shadow on the policies of previous governments 63 64 Freedom of the press edit The first SDS government was the target of widespread criticism due to allegations of meddling in the independence of the press 65 66 The first SDS government has been accused of politicising the independent press by appointing political allies 67 to leadership and journalist positioned in the state Slovenian Press Agency 61 68 daily newspaper Delo 61 68 regional newspaper Primorske novice 68 and public media and broadcasting organisation RTV Slovenia 61 68 The government was accused of using state owned funds and companies with controlling stakes in newspaper companies to purge critical editors and journalists 66 State owned companies also ceased purchasing adverts in the daily newspaper Dnevnik and weekly political magazine Mladina two publications critical of the administration 66 69 61 By changing the laws governing the administration of the public broadcaster RTV Slovenia the government enabled increased political control of the state media organisation s editorial board and its board of directors by increasing the number of board members appointed by the government 61 70 66 The law faced a referendum challenge but was approved by a tight margin as it also promised to lower compulsory contributions for the broadcaster s funding 71 In a secret 2007 deal with the head of the Lasko Brewery that owned the flagship national newspaper Delo as subsidiary PM Jansa secured editorial influence over the newspaper while Lasko would be allowed to acquire a stake in a state owned grocery store corporation 66 72 73 A new government friendly editor in chief was installed despite overwhelming opposition from the newspaper s staff 74 66 and nearly a dozen of the newspaper s journalists resigned in protest The remaining journalists found reporting critically on the government increasingly difficult due to pressure from the new leadership 66 In 2008 after a souring of relations the head of Lasko accused Jansa of threatening him with arrest if he refused to sell the Delo newspaper company 75 In 2007 over five hundred journalists launched a petition against political pressures on the media The petition accused premier Jansa of limiting press freedom in particular but was also more broadly aimed against all infringements of press freedom by either government political actors in general or media company owners 76 77 The International Press Institute voiced support for the petition and called on the government to create an independent body to investigate the claims of media influence 78 The Association of European Journalists warned in 2007 of Slovene media companies boards interfering in journalistic autonomy reprimanding journalists and fostering other conditions that prevent critical reporting about the government and lead to self censorship while journalists are also being prevented from covering issues that may go against the interests of the owners 79 80 SDS foreign minister Dimitrij Rupel had previously advised media owners to consider thoroughly whether a battle with the government is in their interest 81 SDS rejected accusations of impropriety claiming the media was in fact controlled by leftist opposition groups 65 82 Economy and finance edit The first Cabinet of Janez Jansa oversaw a period of rapid economic growth GDP grew by nearly 5 between 2004 and 2006 reaching nearly 7 growth in 2007 83 making Slovenia the fastest growing eurozone member for that year 84 The economic boom however was highly dependent on private debt particularly corporate debt 83 Additionally the Jansa government failed to implement meaningful structural reforms or accumulate budget surpluses during the period of sustained growth instead opting for pork barrel politics reducing tax burdens while engaging in economic populist overspending making the country particularly susceptible to the coming economic crisis 25 Andrej Bajuk Minister of Finance in Jansa s first cabinet listed the passage of comprehensive tax reform which included the lowering of corporate taxes and taxes on juridical persons a reduction of the tax burden on individual incomes the flattening of income tax margin progression an increase in tax deductions and a simplification of the tax code overseeing the implementation of the Euro and the privatisation of state owned NKBM bank and reducing public expenditure as the greatest accomplishments of the ministry during his term 2004 2008 85 According to Jansa the most prominent economic challenge confronted by his government was a bout of inflation 86 which occurred during the 2007 08 period and was steepest for foodstuff prices 87 86 88 89 At the close of 2007 the inflation rate in Slovenia was the highest of any Eurozone member 90 Jansa Finance Minister Bajuk and other government officials pointed to high oil prices and a non competitive internal food market as the main underlying causes for the inflation 86 85 89 91 87 Jansa faced criticism for his statement regarding the issue made during a gathering of regional politicians and businessmen Jansa dismissed concerns regarding rising food prices saying that as long as there are loaves of bread in every city dumpster the situation isn t alarming 92 93 Economic Development Minister Andrej Vizjak similarly addressed cost of living concerns by saying that citizens should not be loath to occasionally eat yesterday s bread going on to say that the food price increases are an opportunity to address the overindulgence of Slovenian consumers 92 2008 2011 in opposition edit In the 2008 parliamentary election held on 21 September 2008 narrowly lost against the Social Democrats until then the main opposition party It also lost one seat in Slovenian Parliament falling to 28 94 With the election of the Social Democrat leader Borut Pahor as Prime Minister of Slovenia the Slovenian Democratic Party officially declared it would stay in opposition and form a shadow cabinet The shadow government was formed in late December 2008 and it includes several independent members as well as members from other conservative parties 95 In the 2009 European election the SDS was the most popular party in Slovenia with 26 9 of votes more than eight points ahead of the second most popular party the ruling Social Democrats 96 In 2009 the MP Franc Puksic left the Slovenian Democratic Party and joined the Slovenian People s Party the SDS parliamentary group was thus reduced from 28 to 27 MPs 97 2012 2013 a year in power second Jansa Cabinet edit In the 2011 snap parliamentary election held on 4 December after the centre left governing coalition collapsed due to internal conflict and inefficacy in passing meaningful economic reforms SDS won 26 19 of the vote gaining 26 seats in the National Assembly thus making SDS the second largest parliamentary party after the newly formed centre left party Positive Slovenia PS headed by Ljubljana mayor Zoran Jankovic which won 28 MPs 28 5 of the total 98 99 100 However SDS succeeded in forming a ruling four party coalition government which included the Civic List New Slovenia Slovenian People s Party and Democratic Party of Pensioners of Slovenia holding a combined total of 50 out of 90 parliamentary seats some two months after the election after PS failed to form a coalition with a parliamentary majority The coalition took power amid an alarming economic downturn European debt crisis 99 the worst in the independent country s history citation needed The country s economic woes were further exacerbated by credit agencies lowering of Slovenia s credit rating amid the political tumult 99 The coalition headed by SDS undertook drastic economic and financial reforms in an attempt to halt the economic downturn Finance Minister Janez Sustarsic pledged to speed up privatisation of state enterprises cut public spending and reduce budget shortfalls 101 Jansa additionally pledged to cut taxes remove regulations lower the deficit and raise the retirement age 84 The coalition passed laws transferring all state owned enterprises into a single state holding company to accelerate privatisation efforts and created a bad bank that would take on non performing loans from the bad debt ridden state owned banks 102 It intended to cut profit and income taxes to boost the economy 103 104 and enact constitutional changes demanding balance budgets 104 It also passed sweeping and highly contentious austerity measures the Law of Public Finance Balance Slovene Zakon o uravnovesenju javnih financ ZUJF and reportedly planned further cuts to state spending 83 105 The ZUJF fiscal consolidation law included provisions lowering pensions widely opposed by the public 106 cutting wages for public sector employees reducing education funding social transfers and benefits 107 83 108 The draft of the law sparked a public sector general strike 83 and the law faced the possibility of a referendum 109 108 The SDS led government proved impotent in stemming the economic troubles facing the nation Despite the momentous reforms efforts the economic troubles intensified resulting in increasing levels of unemployment plunging living standards a fall in domestic spending and large budget deficits 110 83 100 The fall in domestic demand coupled with falling exports resulted in a double dip recession 111 112 113 A 2016 article alleges that the sharp downturn in Slovenian economic outlook was a result of Jansa s overdramatic public statements regarding the economic fitness of the nation Jansa reportedly made such ominous claims for political purposes as means of solidifying political power and as a negotiating strategy to strengthen his hand during negotiations with public sector unions The PM s eerie pronouncements were taken at face value by foreign observers however creating a self fulfilling feedback loop where gloomy statements made by top Slovene officials created more panic and dismay in the foreign press and various organisations and vice versa resulting in falling credit ratings and asset prices and excessive capital injections bailouts with funds borrowed at excessively high interest rates 114 In late 2012 protests began to take place in Slovenia s second largest city Maribor against its mayor and SDS ally Franc Kangler who was being investigated due to allegations of corruption 115 116 The protests soon picked up momentum and spread across the country becoming the largest in the independent republic s history Protestors main grievances were the harsh austerity measures imposed by the ruling government looming sale offs of state enterprises and allegations of widespread corruption among the ruling elite The protests also saw the worst violence in the nation s history as an independent state with small groups of young violent extremists likely members of far right and hooligan groups clashing with police 117 118 119 120 100 In early 2013 the instability and public resentment was compounded after the Commission for the Prevention of Corruption revealed both PM Janez Jansa and the leader of the largest opposition party PS Zoran Jankovic violated anti corruption laws by failing to report or account for assets in their possession and received income payments 121 122 Jansa also faced graft charges even before ascending to the premiership in 2012 He was one of the defendants being tried for corruption as result of a 2006 bribery scandal involving charges of accepting kickbacks 99 123 to fund his party s electoral campaign 123 Media reports alleging Slovenian Intelligence and Security Agency was infiltrated by members of SDS also surfaced 124 Amid mounting pressure from continuing anti government protests 125 126 127 a strike of public sector workers 122 and the lowest public opinion ratings of any government in the nation s history 128 129 130 131 coalition partners began to depart from the coalition 132 125 110 The government finally collapsed after a vote of no confidence and a PS consensus candidate Alenka Bratusek was appointed as PM despite some protests that continued to demand a snap election 133 134 111 100 2013 2020 return to opposition edit On 20 March 2013 the second Jansa cabinet was replaced by the cabinet of Alenka Bratusek a four party centre left coalition led by the new leader of Positive Slovenia Alenka Bratusek 134 111 100 In June 2013 Jansa was convicted in the Patria case but appealed the verdict In April 2014 the Higher Court upheld the two year jail sentence passed on Janez Jansa as result of the bribery conviction 135 136 In June of that year Jansa began serving out his sentence 26 years after his imprisonment for leaking military secrets as a whistle blower his imprisonment trial and public reaction were a milestone in the Slovenian path to independence Despite his imprisonment Jansa stood as candidate for MP 137 In the May 2014 European Parliament election SDS came in first place nationally garnering 24 78 of the vote 138 139 and winning three MEP seats out of eight allocated for Slovenia 140 The party received 20 69 of the vote in the snap Slovenian parliamentary election held on 13 July 2014 and won 21 seats in parliament 141 The party remained in opposition this time to the cabinet of Miro Cerar 142 Janez Jansa was reelected as MP despite being imprisoned The Constitutional Court decided not to deprive Jansa of his MP mandate and Jansa was allowed leave while carrying out his political functions 143 The Constitutional Court suspended Jansa s jail sentence in December pending the ruling regarding his appeal of the Patria verdict 144 The Constitutional Court decided to annul the Higher Court s decision in April 2015 returning it to the lower courts for retrial 145 In September of the same year the statute of limitations of the Patria case expired 146 SDS representatives expressed the belief that the trial was politically motivated and that the imprisonment of the party frontman unfairly hindered their election efforts declaring the elections illegitimate and stolen and demanded fresh elections 147 148 149 In 2018 SDS sued the state for alleged financial damages the party incurred due to the alleged election theft 150 149 and lost the case 151 With a campaign largely based on anti immigration populist rhetoric SDS topped public opinion polls heading into the 2018 parliamentary election 152 The incendiary electoral campaign sparked a rally under the title Without Fear Against the Politics of Hatred with some 2 000 3 000 heart shaped balloon carrying marchers in attendance 153 154 155 During the 2018 electoral campaign SDS also begun to send postable questionnaires voter consults to Slovene households The questionnaires contained loaded questions and proposals e g Do you support SDS s proposal that the healthcare system be set in order The effort was apparently part of the party s electoral campaign and likely fashioned on Hungarian national consultations which the country s ruling party has practiced for years 156 157 158 SDS once again emerged as winner in the 3 June 2018 parliamentary election garnering 24 92 of the vote and winning 25 MP seats 159 However the party was unlikely to be able to shore up needed support for a governing coalition as most parliamentary parties List of Marjan Sarec Social Democrats Modern Centre Party The Left Party of Alenka Bratusek and Democratic Party of Pensioners of Slovenia had declared that they would not participate in a coalition with SDS 160 161 162 163 Some two weeks after the 2018 election Jansa again met with Hungarian PM Orban during a private visit in Budapest Jansa and Orban also held a conference call with US president Donald Trump during the meeting 164 Jansa stated he would be willing to relinquish his post as PM designate to some other SDS MP such a move would ease tensions and enable SDS to form a coalition government 165 Despite the concession the PM post was eventually occupied by the leader of the second largest parliamentary party Marjan Sarec who succeeded in forming a centre left minority government without the participation of SDS 166 After the 2018 parliamentary election SDS failed to regain its traditionally strong showing of support in opinion polls which had been typical for the party while in opposition Speaking to the media regarding the faltering performance SDS officials blamed the government s alleged populist economic policies and a disproportionately hostile news media while independent political analysts pointed to the big tent populist appeal of the ruling LMS party and its leader that attracted some traditionally conservative voters and the momentous changes in the political environment and nature of SDS since 2011 2012 167 2020 2022 third Jansa Cabinet edit Main article 14th Government of Slovenia In early 2020 the resignation of the finance minister due to intra government disagreements regarding the crafting of a health insurance reform bill precipitated the resignation of PM Sarec who called for an early election 168 SDS was however able to secure support for the formation of a new SDS led government by forming a coalition with New Slovenia Democratic Party of Pensioners of Slovenia DeSUS and Modern Centre Party SMC 169 While all three parties had expressed clear opposition to a formation of a Jansa led government in the past 160 170 all had since experienced changes of leadership that was more amenable to such an arrangement 171 172 173 The news that SMC would be entering into a coalition with Jansa resulted in the departure of the party s founder and first head Miro Cerar after whom the party was initially named Miro Cerar Party 174 Jansa was confirmed as PM on 13 March 2020 175 The coalition agreement signed between the 4 parties stipulated among other things the re introduction of the draft and 6 months of mandatory military service utilisation of private healthcare providers to reduce waiting times an increase in public and private healthcare funds promote apprenticeships in vocational school a commitment to carbon neutrality by 2050 decentralisation decreasing public spending an increase in funds for municipalities tax reductions for performance pay an increase in pensions and an introduction of a universal child benefit instead of an income based one 176 177 2022 present return to opposition again edit In April 2022 liberal opposition The Freedom Movement won the parliamentary election The Freedom Movement won 34 5 of the vote compared with 23 6 for Slovenian Democratic Party 178 On 25 May 2022 Slovenia s parliament voted to appoint the leader of Freedom Movement Robert Golob as the new Prime Minister of Slovenia to succeed Janez Jansa 179 Ideology and policies editOriginally a centre left 180 to centre right political party 181 182 180 183 SDS gradually drifted rightward eventually becoming a right wing party 10 12 13 184 185 183 Jansa has been described as an illiberal leader 23 24 Commenting on the question of illiberal democracies like those in Hungary and Poland Jansa stated For me all of these mainstream political orientations are equal and equally legitimate I cannot agree to the division between liberal and illiberal democracy Democracy is democracy If I fight for the affection of my voters in a free world everyone is equal 186 Deutsche Welle has described supporters of the party as disagree ing with the majority of the population on more or less everything starting with the history of World War II where they cherish the memory of the German allied wartime military guard 187 Populism edit During the European migrant crisis SDS sharply intensified its nationalist populist rhetoric 152 188 189 The party came out in opposition of migrant quotas and advocated diverting financial resources from non governmental organisations to security spending 190 Jansa also lambasted the degenerate left 152 191 The party s heated rhetoric and allegations of corrupt practices have led to concerns among international observers about the direction of Slovenia which is generally regarded as a regional success story as SDS topped opinion polls heading into the 2018 parliamentary election 152 The party has co opted former US President Donald Trump s populist rhetoric 192 with Jansa and the party echoing Trump s catchphrases drain the swamp 152 deep state 193 194 and fake news 153 195 196 The party has also proposed requiring that for each new regulation two existing regulations must be repealed 197 a proposal notably advocated for and enacted by Trump 198 Jansa has also used the phrase Slovenia first on multiple occasions 199 192 200 201 Jansa s rhetoric has been described as Trumpian 24 202 The party periodically sends questionnaire mailers to Slovene households The so called Consultations with Voters 203 ask recipients to fill out answers to highly suggestive questions and enter their personal information to be eligible to receive various prizes 203 Domestic policy edit Economic policy edit SDS has been described as broadly pro market 204 and its economic policies have been characterised as neoliberal 201 SDS advocates for lower taxes and speeding up privatisation efforts 199 Social policy edit SDS introduced legislation allowing for same sex civil unions while in government 204 but has opposed recognition of same sex marriages 205 206 PM Jansa was one of the few EU leaders to explicitly back the Hungarian government s right to prohibit the portrayal of LGBT persons and topics in mass media which could be seen by children 207 Education policy edit SDS advocates for the introduction of educational programs that would introduce patriotic education from kindergarten through high school 208 The party holds that all expenses of compulsory curricular programs in private schools should be bourne by the state 209 National security edit Jansa has expressed strong support for the re instatement of mandatory military service for males with service lasting at least 6 months with an option of 12 months of civil service for conscientious objectors 210 211 In early 2016 SDS proposed the establishment of a national guard composed of some 25 000 patriotic volunteers The guard would replace all current reserve formations of the Slovene armed forces would be under direct command of the general staff and would be mobilised during natural disasters or during altered national security states like the European refugee crisis which was ongoing at the time Both sexes could enlist MP Zan Mahnic stated the establishment of the formation was a priority of the party s electoral platform The proposal was prompted by worsening global national security prospects in part due to the migrant crisis an SDS representative claimed 212 Government representatives argued that such a formation is unnecessary as the current reserve formations are sufficient 213 Judiciary and law enforcement edit SDS advocates for trials to be open to the public except in special circumstances 214 Environment and climate change edit During the first SDS government PM Jansa presented climate change as the major political and societal challenge of the era In 2007 Jansa stated that climate change is not only a problem for the government and economy it is a challenge for the wider society and every individual during an international conference on the matter stressing the dangers and opportunities associated with the issue He called on the EU to lead the efforts to combat climate change 215 In 2008 Jansa described an EU legislative package on energy and climate change as one of the most important of the beginning of the 21st century and as one of the priorities of Slovenia during its EU Council Presidency 216 In 2008 SDS MEP Romana Jordan Cizelj stated that counteracting climate change is not an individual choice but a global challenge requiring the effort of the society as a whole The data reveal changes in ecosystems due to antropogenic emissions and possible trends in the future It is still possible to act But we must act decisively swiftly and in unison First in coordination within the EU and then in the global sense 217 By 2018 the party seemed to have reversed its position on the issue with MP Branko Grims prominently making multiple public statements including in media statements and parliamentary discussions that outright denied the existence of anthropogenic climate change 218 219 220 Grims has said that the talk about the warming of the Earth is a big lie that the Earth is in fact cooling 219 that climate change is being used as an excuse for allowing mass migrations and the expropriation of taxpayer funds 220 that are then embezzled by academics the eco industry and leftist lobbies 218 221 and that the political left is using the issue to exploit the youth 221 Grims has appealed to his background as a geologist to present himself as authoritative on the issue 219 Grims also controversially claimed that the black panther which is ostensibly represented in the Carantanian panther sigil that has been adopted as the alternate Slovenian national symbol by some modern era conservative political groups 222 was native to the Slovene region but became extinct due to global cooling during the Carantanian era the claim was dismissed by experts who said the black panther had not been endemic to the region since at least the last ice age 223 In November 2019 Jansa discussing climate change stated Times are different now generations are growing up with an awareness that the environment is a value Of course some on the left scene pervaded by cultural Marxism have swiftly added catastrophic proclamations which are supposed to be caused by climate change It is being preached how climate change is exclusively man made which is entirely unproven Climate change has been occurring throughout the history of this planet and will continue to To what extent we are influencing this is a big question It is a fact that we are It is a fact that environmental pollution of course in part affects the climate But I think that it affects it much less than changes on the Sun or that is things which humans cannot influence This must be understood and it should not be made into ideology and the fame of new Molochs such as Greta 224 Other policies edit SDS has long advocated for a change in the Slovene parliamentary electoral system namely the shift from the current proportional electoral system to two round plurality voting SDS argues this would result in more stable and effective governments 225 226 SDS supports citizens legal right to bear arms and has come out in opposition to further restrictions It strongly opposed new EU regulation of firearms which the European Commission moved to pass after the 2015 Paris terrorist attacks 227 228 229 230 SDS has backed legislation to loosen controls on civilian possession of firearms firearm accessories and other weapons 231 In 2023 Jansa called on citizens to legally arm themselves in order to protect their family and their country from immigrants saying that the current government was incapable of protecting the country and its citizens 232 SDS supports legalising the medicinal use of cannabis but opposes legalisation of its recreational use 233 SDS opposes the legalisation of assisted dying 234 SDS argues the current text to the Slovene national anthem the 7th stanza of France Preseren s A Toast Blessed be all nations Which yearn to see the light of day When where er the Sun doth wander The lands strife shall be cast away And when free every kinsman will be Not fiends only neighbours in foreigners we ll see is too internationalistic and insufficiently patriotic and advocates other stanzas from Preseren s poem be added as text to the official anthem 235 236 237 The party advocates a ban on all public expression of ideas through the use of totalitarian symbols and all public displays of affection for totalitarian regimes 236 237 The party has denied accusations that it is merely attempting to outlaw the red star 238 which was the symbol of the Slovene Partisans during WWII 239 and is still often used in the Slovenian public sphere 240 241 242 including as a symbol logo of a parliamentary political party 243 244 The proposed law would not on the other hand ban wearing Nazi uniforms in public or displaying symbols associated with the Nazi aligned anti Partisan Slovene Home Guard 239 Foreign policy edit The party is pro European but staunchly anti immigration and strongly opposed to EU asylum quotas 199 The party is committed to Slovenia s continuing membership in NATO 245 Following the US targeted killing of Iranian gen Qasem Soleimani the party released a statement declaring that SDS supports the strong US response to the provocations of the Ayatollah extremist regime 246 Jansa has expressed steadfast support for Israel and former Israeli PM Netanyahu and his government 247 During the 2021 Israel Palestine crisis the SDS led Slovenian government flew an Israeli flag on the ediface of the building housing the Slovene government as a show of support and solidarity with Israel 248 249 PM Jansa has described criticism of Israel s policies towards Palestinians as tantamount to antisemitism 247 After taking over the European Council presidency in 2021 the third Jansa government chose confronting violent left wing extremism and anarchism at the EU level as one of its proposed policy priorities 250 Post communist cabal conspiracy edit The central tenet of the party s view regarding the country s political situation is that a clique composed mostly of former Communist Party officials and associates has retained significant control over the economic financial political social judicial and journalistic aspects of Slovenian public life 251 252 253 67 201 254 255 256 257 258 SDS has accused the post communist underground of undermining SDS led governments and lamented that Slovenia is the only former communist country that has not implemented the lustration 251 In 2021 PM Jansa addressed an official missive to the European Commission calling on the European Union to launch an official inquiry into the problem of Slovenia s communist legacy that is ostensibly endangering the state of democracy in Slovenia and to aid the Slovenian government in remedying the situation 258 SDS s emphasis on the role of former Yugoslav communist party affiliates in Slovene political and public life has been criticised as hypocritical since many SDS politicians were also active within the former Yugoslav communist regime 257 In a 2021 draft party resolution SDS warned that the country s democratic order is under threat from leftist extremist forces at home and abroad claiming that the country may be on the verge of a coup civil war and an establishment of a totalitarian government The document claims that the goal of the entrenched elites has progressed beyond attempting to eliminate Jansa and SDS to attempting to institute a new communist order in the country The document also calls for the banning of the allegedly unconstitutional party The Left citing a fake 259 secret manifesto of the party and concludes by affirming the party s commitment to prevent by any means necessary the establishment of an eco socialist system totalitarian system 260 259 Shortly after releasing the party document SDS requested a parliamentary session to be held to discuss the ostensible unconstitutional conduct of The Left party and pass a resolution calling on all state organs to intensify their monitoring investigations and prevention of attempts to overthrow parliamentary democracy and other constitutional foundations due to The Left party s policies and inviting the ministers of interior and defense as well as the chief of national intelligence to participate in the session 261 The speaker of parliament refused to hold the session after ascertaining that the issue was under the purview of the judicial branch 262 After the 3rd Jansa government was defeated in the 2022 Slovenian parliamentary elections Jansa repeatedly accused the succeeding Golob government of leading the country into civil war 263 264 265 In a lengthy 2023 essay Jansa warned of impending deadly violence from leftist government supporters and warned that his side will respond to any killing of one of theirs with retaliatory mass killings they are once again reviving the ominous spirit of CIVIL WAR Those who threaten DEATH today who applaud such threats or encourage them by implementing the government measures listed above are mostly publicly known The digital world holds all these records So beware A revolt will break out and there is no tax haven that is far away enough where those responsible can hide from the hand of justice realise that the lady with the scythe is swinging from both sides people of a particular calibre only understood this language So we have used it and we believe that they have understood it But we no longer believe that they will listen to what we have to say They have taken things too far 265 SDS members and affiliates frequently employ particular phrases and concepts to represent their world view most notably Udbomafia from UDBA the Yugoslav secret police service a portmanteau neologism coined in the early 1990s to refer to an alleged cabal of former Slovenian Communist Party members and officials and UDBA informants and collaborators that supposedly still hold the reins of economic and political power The phrase is often used by SDS and affiliated publications 253 266 267 268 269 270 271 254 255 256 Uncles from behind the scenes or godfathers in the background an idiom for eminence grise alleged sponsors and influencers of prominent Slovene politicians who are said to merely act as fronts for the vested political and economic interests of the uncles Former PMs Miro Cerar 272 and Alenka Bratusek 273 PS head Zoran Jankovic 274 and anti establishment newcomer Marjan Sarec 275 are some of the politicians accused of having uncles from behind the scenes The phrase was also occasionally used by former PM and President Borut Pahor on one occasion accusing the uncles of attempting to topple his premiership 276 Milan Kucan who is most often accused of being the foremost uncle from behind the scenes demanded Pahor clarify his insinuation 277 Pahor also accused his main 2017 presidential election challenger Marjan Sarec of being well looked after by the uncles Sarec likewise demanded Pahor clarify his statements but also did not receive an answer 278 Milan Kucan the former two time President of Slovenia and last leader of the League of Communists of Slovenia is frequently accused by SDS of exerting supreme covert influence over the Slovenian political sphere 251 201 253 279 280 281 In 2013 SDS alleged that Kucan was acting from behind the scenes to topple the SDS led government the allegation was made in a formal letter that the party addressed to multiple foreign institutions 282 Politicians allegedly under Kucan s influence include former New Slovenia leader Ljudmila Novak and 2018 newcomer Marjan Sarec 283 284 former PM Alenka Bratusek and Ljubljana mayor and PS leader Zoran Jankovic 285 274 among others Jansa was fined 12 000 after labelling two female RTV Slovenia journalists as cheap used up prostitutes of pimpMilan Kucan in a tweet 286 287 288 later also receiving a 3 month suspended jail sentence for the offense 289 During an event marking the handover of the rotating European Council leadership to PM Jansa Commissioner Ursula von der Leyen both opened and closed her speech by quoting Kucan 290 in what was seen as a subtle jibe at Jansa s political camp 291 Forum 21 a Slovenian liberal think tank established by Milan Kucan and attended by prominent members of the Slovenian political and economic elite to discuss relevant problems facing the nation 292 293 280 SDS has accused the think tank of undue influence in appointment and policy decisions of liberal governments 294 295 296 Murgle the upscale Murgle residential district known for its one story houses is home to many prominent Slovenian political and economic figures including former liberal presidents Milan Kucan often the main target of allusions to Murgle and Janez Drnovsek deceased former PM Miro Cerar and Liberation Front partisan and last president of the SR Slovenia Janez Stanovnik among others 297 Murgle is thus another reference to the alleged behind the scenes influence exerted by the country s ostensibly retired leftist elites Upon being sentenced to a two year prison sentence in the Patria corruption case Janez Jansa stated that the verdict was written in advance in Murgle and by known authors 279 SDS later labelled the 2014 parliamentary election as illegitimate due to the conviction and resulting concurring prison term of Jansa 298 299 148 Jansa also blamed Murgle after prosecutors filed a motion to confiscate Jansa s illegally obtained holdings 300 As part of its 2018 electoral campaign SDS released an ad where a couple orders pizza delivery from SDS and Pizza Murgle The Murgle box is revealed to only contain half a pizza 301 302 303 SDS affiliated 304 Nova24TV news portal also promoted videos entitled Murgle Puppet Theatre which satirically portrayed a closed door meeting presided over by Milan Kucan discussing political strategy with recently resigned PM Miro Cerar leader of ruling Modern Centre Party Agriculture Minister Dejan Zidan leader of the Social Democrats Foreign Minister Karl Erjavec leader of DeSUS and Marjan Sarec leader of the List of Marjan Sarec 305 306 First class and second class citizens the Slovenian society is ostensibly divided between the first class entrenched leftist elites seeking to perpetuate their socioeconomic privileges and stranglehold over the country and the downtrodden masses of second class citizens that SDS advocates for 307 201 308 309 310 311 In 2019 Jansa published a book of essays entitled First Class Citizens A System for the False Elite 307 The SDS affiliated TV channel Nova24TV has aired a program named Second Class Citizens 312 Organization and political affiliation editAs of 2013 SDS membership numbered some 30 000 strong more than any other political party in Slovenia 313 Slovenian Democratic Youth Slovene Slovenska demokratska mladina SDM is the independent and autonomous youth wing of the party 314 The party is affiliated with the Joze Pucnik Institute the major liberal conservative think tank in Slovenia 315 316 317 318 319 It is also closely affiliated with the civic platform Rally for the Republic Zbor za republiko 320 321 322 Committee 2014 Slovene Odbor 2014 is a civic organisation that was established to protest and demand the overturn of the corruption convictions in the Patria case the freeing of SDS leader Janez Jansa from prison sentence resuling from the conviction and the actual implementation of the rule of law human rights basic freedoms and establishment of a democratic society 323 324 Committee 2014 held regular protests in front of the Higher Court building in Ljubljana 323 324 The Alliance for the Values of Slovene Independence Slovene Zdruzenje za vrednote Slovenske osamosvojitve VSO is a patriotic veteran non governmental organisation intended to commemorate the values of the Slovenian independence movement 325 326 VSO leadership consists of prominent SDS members and associates The organisation holds public speaking events commemorations and is engaged in other activities as well 326 327 328 SDS has seen some support from the Slovene Catholic Church 26 International affiliations edit The party is supported by and closely affiliated with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban Fidesz 65 329 184 188 153 190 330 331 SDS s committed backing of Fidesz has reportedly been the decisive factor in preventing Fidesz s expulsion from the European People s Party resulting in a more lenient suspension 332 In a letter to the EPP leader Jansa warned of an inevitable split in the EPP if the vote to expel Fidesz were to take place 333 The 3rd Jansa government began reorienting Slovenia s foreign alliances away from core EU countries and towards the Visegrad Group of countries with Jansa calling the countries our friends in the region 334 335 336 SDS politicians have participated in the International Visitor Leadership Program 337 and with the International Republican Institute 338 Affiliated publications edit SDS is also affiliated with several current and past publications including its de facto party publication Demokracija 339 and tabloid Skandal24 340 both owned by Nova Obzorja English New Horizons publishing company which is in turn jointly owned by SDS and a Hungarian publishing company with close ties to Hungary s ruling party Fidesz 339 65 The publishing company has profited from providing literature to and advising the SDS parliamentary group SDS MPs activities for which parliamentary groups receive state funds and has also benefited financially from doing business with government agencies which were particularly bountiful while SDS was in government 341 Nova24TV a media conglomerate consisting of a television channel and online news portal was established by SDS MPs and members and party sympathisers and later also received financial injections from Hungarian Fidesz affiliated companies 342 65 Additionally the SDS friendly political web portal Politikis is also owned and managed by a close SDS associate 68 343 344 Slovenski tednik and Ekspres free newspapers distributed in the run up to the 2008 parliamentary election were also later found to have been directly linked to SDS and its electoral efforts 68 71 345 As with Slovenski tednik and Ekspres Skandal24 announced it will cease print publication the day after the 2018 parliamentary election only continuing as an online publication 346 In late 2017 an array of over a dozen local regional web news portals with a common template was also set up with editors of all linked to SDS based on publicly available information 347 348 The websites mostly contained informative content publishing local news with occasional articles that promoted SDS candidates and narrative agenda subtly mixed in 348 The sites may have been set up primarily as a political propaganda effort in anticipation of the 2018 Slovenian local elections 349 Supporters and affiliates editThe party enjoys strong support in some Slovene conservative and classical liberal intellectual circles Public figures who have publicly voiced support for SDS or affiliated themselves with the party include economist Ljubo Sirc joined the party in 2010 350 philosopher Ivan Urbancic 351 352 353 historians Vasko Simoniti 354 355 and Alenka Puhar 356 357 358 writer and essayist Drago Jancar 359 360 theologian and philosopher Janez Juhant 361 362 and poet Tone Kuntner 363 Public supporters of the party also include sportsmen Miran Pavlin 364 365 and Katja Koren 366 367 pop singer Marta Zore 368 designer and cartoonist Miki Muster 369 and actor Roman Koncar 370 In 2008 SDS was found to have falsely attributed supporter status to many prominent Slovenes on its webpage The party sent a request to comment on the ruling government for its party newspaper to numerous notable public figures Though they were never asked whether they support the party or informed they will be listed as supporters SDS nevertheless listed them as such 371 Former supporters and affiliates edit Many prominent members have abandoned SDS due to the radicalisation of the party s ideology and disagreements over leadership style Some also established new political parties Most former members politically transitioned towards the centre with a minority outflanking SDS on the far right 183 Former public supporters include sportsman Miran Pavlin 364 365 Former supporters or affiliated individuals that have since come out as critics of the party include one of the fathers of the current Slovenian Constitution Peter Jambrek 372 373 374 375 the former chairman of Rally for the Republic 376 and Civic List party leader 377 Gregor Virant 378 183 and liberal economist Joze P Damijan 25 379 380 381 382 former Minister of Foreign Affairs Dimitrij Rupel 183 former Minister of Internal Affairs Dragutin Mate 383 and Minister of Education Ziga Turk 183 former MEP Romana Jordan Cizelj 183 former SDS MPs Andrej Cus 183 and Ivo Hvalica 384 183 and mother of the party Vera Ban 385 Miha Brejc became persona non grata after his son in law Gregor Virant distanced himself from Jansa and established the Civic List 386 Controversies and criticism editIn March 2021 the association of state prosecutors of Slovenia addressed a letter to the Council of Europe to voice their concerns about government pressure on prosecutors including by PM Jansa and SDS affiliated media 387 The third Jansa government refused to confirm the appointment of delegated prosecutors to the EU public prosecutors office that is to scrutinise potential misuse of EU funds both nominees had previously made prosecutorial decisions that were politically disfavourable to SDS with one having helped bring graft charges against Jansa 388 as well as refusing to confirm 14 prosecutors nominated by the judiciary leading to understaffing of the state prosecutorship PM Jansa also pressured the chief state prosecutor to pursue criminal charges against anti government protesters 24 who used a slogan that Jansa interpreted as a death threat to him and his supporters admonishing him in a missive that He will be directly responsible for any potential victim of the organised death threats 389 In June 2021 the top officials of four independent state oversight institutions issued a joint statement warning of persistent political pressure impeding their work 390 In 2021 articles published in The New York Times and in Der Standard described SDS as waging a culture war by trying to shift the country s museums in a more conservative and patriotic direction by appointing like minded people in leadership positions within the institutions 391 392 Freedom of the press edit SDS holds that Slovenian news media is biased and favours the left 393 394 Shortly after assuming the role of PM for the third time SDS leader Janez Jansa published an essay entitled War with the media in which he expounded his views on countering an oppositional news media concluding that the battle against the monopoly of lies cannot be won without a fight 395 396 SDS and their allies have cultivated an ecosystem of party aligned media outlets 397 that include a TV channel 398 news websites including a number of regional news websites 399 398 400 401 402 magazines 401 a tabloid 403 and a press agency 404 There was also an effort to set up a radio station 405 Some of the party s media endavours were strategically undertaken just prior to upcoming elections 403 402 401 regional news websites began operating prior to local elections for example 399 SDS affiliated outlets have been accused of false reporting and fake news 406 407 408 409 of publishing hateful and defamatory content 410 411 412 413 414 415 and of publishing racist 416 417 418 412 411 xenophobic 412 413 418 homophobic 412 413 411 and antisemitic content 419 420 411 Some SDS affiliated media projects have received financial backing from businesses affiliated with the party s political ally Hungarian PM Viktor Orban 421 Jansa has also adopted a pugnacious approach to media relations aggressively responding to almost every critical foreign press article on the political situation in Slovenia under his leadership 397 SDS has been criticised for their adversarial approach to media relations which not only chilled media freedom in the country but also created a climate where personal attacks harassment and threats are commonplace for journalists that have landed in the party s crosshairs 394 422 In a letter to top EU officials various media freedom organisations also warned that PM Jansa could use his European presidency position to attack journalists across the EU and normalise such behaviour among EU functionaries 423 First Jansa cabinetDuring Jansa s first government the party was accused of gaining influence over multiple public and private outlets and pulling advertising from state owned companies from outlets that reported critically about the government 424 To bring the country s largest newspaper under its control Jansa personally arranged a corrupt deal with the owner of the newspaper in which state assets were traded in exchange for editorial control over the newspaper 424 72 73 Third Jansa cabinetShortly after Jansa s third government took office a loyalist who had been previously appointed editor in chief of the country s largest newspaper during Jansa s first government reportedly in a secret corrupt deal between Jansa and the newspaper s owner 424 72 73 was appointed to head SiOL a media subsidiary of a state owned telecom despite receiving the approval of only 2 members of the 42 member editorial board 425 66 In fall of 2020 the state telecom commenced the sale of TSMedia which owns SiOL In May 2021 the board of directors of the telecom abruptly halted the sale after a Hungarian business with ties to Hungary s ruling party Fidesz which is closely allied with SDS was outbid 2 million to 5 million by another bidder 426 In May 2020 the government replaced 7 board members of the public broadcaster RTV Slovenia shifting the political balance of power of the board in favour of the government and foreshadowing a push to replace the leadership of the institution 427 In October 2020 board members close to SDS and the government began an attempt to replace the then general director of the institution before the end of his term citing poor financial management and attacks on government representatives Commenting on the replacement push the director said the attempt was motivated by a desire to purge RTV of journalists critical of the government 428 The vote to replace the director was held in November and failed by 1 vote 429 With the end of the regular term of the previous director approaching a new general director was elected in January 2021 to take office in April 430 While SDS failed to field a loyal candidate 431 votes of board members close to the government were decisive in picking the new head 432 Shortly after a new RTV director was chosen PM Jansa commented on a clip of RTV footage with hopefully the new broom will fix such false reporting 433 leading to fears that the new director will be beholden to the government after its board members supported his nomination 434 During the summer of 2020 the government proposed new media laws that would increase the government s influence over the state owned press agency Slovenian Press Agency STA and redirect some funds from the public broadcaster to an SDS affiliated TV channel 394 435 436 The proposed legislation failed to gain traction after facing objections from all coalition partners 437 After STA refused to provide a government agency with business information and explanations about editorial decisions STA argued the government agency lacked legal authority to demand such information the government in an unprecedented move halted financing the news agency saying STA had failed to meet its contractual obligations The loss of state financing some half of its total revenue imperiled STA s continued existence 394 All coalition partners called for the resumption of STA financing 438 In early 2021 the government proposed draft legislation that would move STA into a centrally managed pension wealth fund granting the government greater sway over the news agency 439 In March 2021 PM Jansa called on the STA director to resign before the end of his term calling him a tool of the far left who should be held responsible for his unlawful actions Jansa also said that STA has been selling lies as truth under his leadership 440 The government also called on the STA board of directors to dismiss the director and drafted a report accusing the director of dereliction of duty and wrongdoing in his official role The government then requested the Interior Ministry to look into whether the findings of the report warrant a criminal investigation of the director 441 Police investigators subsequently questioned a STA board member 442 and representatives of STA 443 and the Dnevnik newspaper due to an advertisement contract with STA with the latter stating that the investigators asked for information that constituted business secrets which Dnevnik refused to furnish 442 In May 2021 after a criminal complaint was lodged by the government police launched an investigation of Mladina for allegedly publishing classified information The weekly published the contents of an internal government document which was released to the public within a fortnight The magazine responded by claiming the publication of the document was in the public interest and thus legal and that the government illegitimately restricted access to the document and said the probe was intimidation 444 PM Jansa furtively 445 met with the owner of POP TV s parent company the Czechia based PPF group in late 2020 445 423 According to people present at the meeting with knowledge of the discussion Jansa spent most of the meeting complained about POP TV s political coverage A deal was reportedly struck with the owners of POP TV the most influential national TV broadcaster which also operates the most frequently visited web news portal in the country granting lucrative government infrastructure contracts and stakes in state owned enterprises in exchange for favourable coverage 445 After the meeting the parent company begun to closely monitor POP TV s political reporting to ensure coverage is sufficiently favourable to the SDS led government requiring news editors to translate transcripts into Czech and send them to headquarters in Prague 445 423 Employees of the media company confirmed mounting editorial pressure in anonymous interviews 445 SDS was reportedly also engineering a sale of the country s largest newspaper Delo to PPF from its domestic owner to also reign in its critical coverage using lucrative state contracts and benefits as enticements punishments 446 In May 2021 the Ministry of Culture which is responsible for distributing a fixed amount of financial aid to media organisations denied funding requests from multiple mainstream media organisations that had consistently received funding in the past due to ostensibly unbalanced coverage while newly apportioning the funds to multiple conservative and pro government media organisations multiple of which had ties to government parties nearly all requests from conservative and pro government media were granted The criteria for distributing the funds had not changed 447 The committee responsible for distributing the funds was mostly composed of individuals with ties to SDS 447 448 The minister of culture described the shift in funding as a step towards a more balanced media environment 449 SDS s aggressiveness towards national and international news media and journalists has caused concern and drawn reprimands from EU politicians and institutions as Jansa is poised to take over the leadership of the rotating EU Council presidency during the second half of 2021 450 397 451 452 In March 2021 the US State Department said it was monitoring the state of the news media in Slovenia 453 454 A deterioration in press freedoms in the country under the new government was subsequently noted in the State Department s international Human Rights report for 2020 published later the same month media freedom was described as one of the key human rights concerns in Slovenia 455 The issue of media freedom in Slovenia came under discussion of the European Parliament and its Democracy Rule of Law and Fundamental Rights Monitoring Group DRFMG The first discussion was held on March 5 under the auspices of DRFMG PM Jansa and Culture Minister Vasko Simoniti were invited to participate but declined The issue was also discussed by the EP during a plenary session some days later DRFMG again discussed the issue on March 26 with the invitation to join again extended to the Slovene PM and Culture Minister Jansa initially joined discussion but demanded a video be shown to the committee Jansa then abruptly left the videoconference after a heated exchange with the committee chair that denied his request Jansa later wrote on Twitter that he was censored by the committee 456 A Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights report published in June 2021 found a deterioration of press freedom in Slovenia and called on the Slovene government to remedy the situation PM Jansa responding to the report by tweet called the Commissioner a part of fakenews network Well paid by our money 457 Astroturfing and satellite parties edit SDS reportedly operates a network of fake social media accounts used to amplify its message and attack opponents 458 459 460 461 462 463 464 In February 2021 an SDS MP was revealed to operate a fake Twitter account 463 458 SDS has been reported to operate a multimedia centre from within its party headquarters from where party operatives engage in social media battles with political opponents and promote the party online The party s online activities intensify prior to elections A disgruntled former SDS MP publicly corroborated the existence of the multimedia centre after leaving the party 465 466 claiming he personally used to participate in the party s media operations 464 There have also been claims that all SDS political candidates are required to set up a Twitter account 464 In 2019 a former SDS politician published a screenshot of private messages from Jansa after a public falling out between the two In the messages Jansa asked her to organise astroturfed protests in front of the parliament during a parliamentary deliberation about a referendum on immigration saying protests are effective if the action comes from below and looks like a spontaneous uprising 467 SDS has been accused of orchestrating the creation of at least five satellite parties 400 468 469 470 471 472 in attempts to sure up a larger swath of the electorate and secure loyal coalition partners and undermine competing parties 471 472 Ties to far right groups edit SDS has been criticised for alleged links to a neo Nazi extremist group the Slovene branch of Blood amp Honour 153 473 The journalist who uncovered the links Anuska Delic was charged with leaking confidential information 473 153 The state intelligence agency SOVA headed by an SDS appointee at the time of the indictment 474 inadvertently confirmed allegations made by Delic by stating that the information revealed in the reports was consistent with findings of an ongoing investigation into the activities of the violent extremist group 475 476 SOVA argued that the information revealed in the reports could not have been obtained by any other means than by gaining access to information collected during the agency s covert investigations and that the publication disrupted its efforts to monitor the group by alerting B amp H of the monitoring efforts 477 478 Delic alleged the charges were politically motivated 479 480 Some Blood amp Honour members were allegedly also members of SDS 481 482 and formally met with SDS MP Branko Grims 481 483 The group the members of which allegedly received training by members of the Slovenian armed forces on an army training area borrowed army weaponry a rocket launcher attempted to purchase handguns and were in direct correspondence with Anders Breivik by both mail and e mail with multiple B amp H members receiving his manifesto before Breivik s killing spree 483 484 was allegedly intimately implicated in orchestrating the violent riots which took place amid the 2012 13 Slovenian protests 483 484 The organised group of violent agitators that disrupted a major protest in Ljubljana was found to have been trained hired and compensated possibly by a political party according to a police investigation 485 486 More recently SDS has also fostered ties with Generation Identity Slovenia the Slovenian chapter of the far right Identitarian movement organisations 487 488 In August 2018 the party s publishing company New Horizons 341 anonymously published the Slovene Identitarians alt right book Manifesto for the Homeland 489 490 The book was also promoted by SDS affiliated media organisations and individuals including SDS leader Janez Jansa 490 491 492 with SDS MP Zan Mahnic even going so far as to post on Twitter a photo of the book taken from his parliamentary seat with the floor of the parliamentary chamber in the background 493 SDS also organised a joint panel discussion on migrations with Generation Identity 494 and Generation Identity was advertised on an SDS affiliated TV channel 494 495 The leader of the Austrian Identitarians Martin Sellner publicly thanked Jansa for his support on Twitter Sellner was at the time being investigated by Austrian authorities and ostracised by the ruling conservative Freedom Party of Austria for his financial ties with the Christchurch terrorist 496 During the 2020 Slovenian anti government protests against the Third Jansa government a pro government counter protester group the Yellow Wests 497 was favourably covered in SDS affiliated media 498 499 500 with the articles in which the Yellow Wests called on the public to join them shared by PM Jansa on Twitter 501 502 503 8 of the 30 some original Yellow Wests including their spokesman were found to have links to neo Nazism 504 In 2021 the group forcefully disrupted an anti government rally 505 in the vicinity of a state ceremony attended by multiple foreign prime ministers 506 Riot police removed the provocators to avoid a massive brawl 505 Political self dealing accusations edit The party has been accused of political self dealing and nepotism appointing relatives allies and friends to government and other positions Many close relatives of prominent SDS members have found employment in the Slovenian and European parliaments high ranking public sector positions and state owned companies some despite not meeting the official job requirements 507 61 508 509 510 511 512 513 514 515 25 SDS has been accused of political firings and replacements in and selective financing of many institutions under the public sphere and creating an environment where politisation of the public workplace was permissible and pervasive while in power 516 511 Cult of personality edit SDS leader Janez Jansa has continuously served as party head since 1993 without a single other contender for the post 331 Party members are extremely loyal to Jansa 204 it has been noted that the party appears to resemble a cult 517 384 518 with numerous past members claiming that Jansa leads the party in an authoritarian manner and that no dissent is tolerated 519 520 521 522 523 385 383 SDS MEP Romana Jordan Cizelj was reportedly the only one within the party leadership to openly voice her doubts about Jansa s continued leadership of the party whilst serving a prison sentence for corruption Jordan Cizelj was subsequently not allowed to run for re election as MEP on the SDS ticket as punishment for her disloyalty to Jansa 385 Campaign financing impropriety allegations edit In the run up to the 2018 Slovenian parliamentary election SDS attempted to receive a loan of 450 000 from an individual residing in Bosnia and Herzegovina 524 to fund its electoral campaign The party came into contact with the individual via Nova obzorja publishing company partially owned by SDS SDS also put up its share in Nova obzorja as collateral 525 The sum borrowed exceeded limits set by campaign finance laws however and SDS was obliged to return the borrowed funds A police and financial court investigation was also triggered after the terms of the loan became public 526 An investigation into the lender was also launched based on suspicions of money laundering tax avoidance destruction and falsification of business documents and overseeing dummy companies 527 528 The individual was allegedly a part of a criminal organisation managing dummy companies that received funds of undisclosed origins including the funds later loaned to SDS 528 529 Less than a week before the 2018 parliamentary election took place it was revealed that media publishing companies closely affiliated and partially owned by SDS received some 800 000 from two Hungarian nationals or rather their companies both with close ties to Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban months before the election bringing the total amount SDS affiliated media companies received from Hungarian entities to over 2 2M The SDS affiliated media companies that received the funds in turn purchased campaign adds for SDS Nova obzorja publishing company also attempted to loan 60 000 to the party The same Hungarian individuals also provided funds for political allies in Macedonia It is furthermore also known that the loan SDS attempted to obtain from a Bosnian citizen some months earlier had a Hungarian connection 65 153 304 530 531 532 330 195 SDS controlled media companies have reportedly also served as a conduit for Hungarian financing of media in North Macedonia to prop up Orban s political allies there Of the at least 4M in Hungarian moneys that were reportedly originally funneled into SDS affiliated media between mid 2018 and early 2020 over 2 5M was then channeled to Macedonian news media entities favourable to the right wing VMRO DPMNE party 533 Discriminatory remarks edit After the 2011 parliamentary elections which saw the victory of Ljubljana mayor Zoran Jankovic who is of Serbian descent and his party 534 535 a contribution published on the official SDS webpage by a Tomaz Majer caused considerable public outrage 536 537 538 539 Majer states that Jankovic was elected by well disciplined new citizens living in high rise neighbourhoods tracksuit clad voters in Slovenia a common stereotype of immigres from Southern republics citation needed with foreign accents arriving at polling places in groups holding notes with instructions on whom to vote for These new citizens were allegedly mobilised by being admonished their citizenship will be revoked if the right is elected 540 535 Majer further states that one of his acquaintances who is of Bosnian descent was even offered monetary reward to vote for Jankovic Majer also claims that the roughly 1 3 of Jankovic voters of Slovenian descent were ordered to vote for PS by Milan Kucan and Janez Stanovnik 541 Several media organisations attempted to identify the author but were unsuccessful 535 542 543 It has been speculated that the real author of the text was in fact Janez Jansa based on similar known past statements specifically his 1993 commentary on the poor electoral performance of SDS during the 1992 elections 535 In the wake of the 2011 election Jansa and several other SDS MPs and candidates expressed similar but somewhat toned down nationalistic sentiments while commenting on the election and its winner 535 The public reaction culminated in a March of the Tracksuits a rally where participants attended clothed in tracksuits to protest against division and intolerance 538 539 SDS MP Branko Grims speaking to a gathering of a patriotic ultranationalist group in early 2018 said Now is the era of Trump He is the greatest thorn in the foot of the globalists who control the US mechanisms with Soros at the helm Soros is the symbol of this But there s also the Rothschilds and many other wealthiest families of financial speculators 544 SDS MP Marijan Pojbic in a 2017 Statehood Day address on Facebook called for No more mayors that aren t real Slovenes and even fewer national politicians who aren t real Slovenes by birth 545 In 2020 SDS politician Zan Mahnic a former MP then serving as national security state secretary shared a tweet of an image of white skinned women with different hair colours accompanied with the comment This is all the diversity Europe needs The original author of the tweet was a user using the screen name franca EtnoNacionalist Mahnic was subsequently criticised for promoting racism 546 In 2021 PM Jansa shared a tweet saying that the amount death suffering repression desolation and societal backwardness caused by The Communist Manifesto is second only to the Quran The tweet was condemned by the Slovenian Muslim community and the Turkish national broadcaster Jansa defended sharing the tweet by noting that his Twitter profile bio says re tweets are not endorsements 547 Parliamentary representation editElectoral results editNational Assembly edit Election Leader Votes Seats Government1990 Joze Pucnik 79 951 7 39 7 6 80 nbsp 6 Coalition1992 39 675 3 34 8 4 90 nbsp 2 Coalition1996 Janez Jansa 172 470 16 13 3 16 90 nbsp 12 Opposition2000 170 228 15 81 2 14 90 nbsp 2 Opposition2004 281 710 29 08 1 29 90 nbsp 15 Coalition2008 307 735 29 26 2 28 90 nbsp 1 Opposition2011 288 719 26 19 2 26 90 nbsp 2 Coalition 2012 13Opposition 2013 142014 181 052 20 71 2 21 90 nbsp 5 Opposition2018 222 042 24 92 1 25 90 nbsp 4 Opposition 2018 20Coalition 2020 222022 279 897 23 48 2 27 90 nbsp 2 OppositionEuropean Parliament edit Election Votes Seats 2004 76 945 17 6 3 2 72009 123 563 26 7 1 3 8 nbsp 12014 99 643 24 8 1 3 8 nbsp 2019 a 126 534 26 2 1 2 8 nbsp 1 In coalition with Slovenian People s Party Presidential edit Election Candidate 1st round 2nd round ResultVotes Votes 1992 France Tomsic 7 849 0 63 Lost1997 a Jozef Bernik 98 996 9 50 Lost2007 b Lojze Peterle 283 412 28 73 318 288 31 97 Lost2012 c Milan Zver 198 337 24 25 Lost2017 Romana Tomc 102 925 13 68 Lost2022 Anze Logar 296 000 33 95 414 029 46 11 Lost In coalition with Slovene Christian Democrats In coalition with New Slovenia and Slovenian People s Party In coalition with New SloveniaParty leaders editPresidents of the Social Democratic Party and Slovenian Democratic Party France Tomsic 1989 Joze Pucnik 1989 1993 Janez Jansa 1993 currentReferences edit Slovenska Demokratska Mladina sdm si Retrieved 3 February 2022 Planet Siol SDS je z 30 000 clani gromozanska stranka proti ostalim Virantovcev je le za jurja Politikis in Slovenian 16 May 2013 Retrieved 30 June 2016 a b Toplisek Alen 2019 The populist radical left in Europe Between populism and socialism Giorgos Katsambekis Alexandros Kioupkiolis London p 7 ISBN 978 1 351 72048 9 OCLC 1090060657 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Democratic transition in Slovenia value transformation education and media Sabrina P Ramet Danica Fink Hafner 1 ed College Station Texas A amp M University Press 2006 p 104 ISBN 978 1 60344 584 9 OCLC 715188546 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Slovenian General Election 3 June 2018 European Movement Ireland 3 June 2018 Retrieved 5 February 2022 Another Euro Member Heads for Turmoil After Nationalist Win Bloomberg com 3 June 2018 via www bloomberg com Slovenian journalists operate in increasingly toxic atmosphere International Press Institute 26 March 2020 Retrieved 5 February 2022 Slovenian nationalist party set for power after winning election the Guardian 4 June 2018 Retrieved 5 February 2022 a b Klaus Wahl 2020 The Radical Right Biopsychosocial Roots and International Variations Springer Nature p 201 ISBN 978 3 030 25131 4 a b c d Anti Immigrant Party Set to Make Gains in Slovenia Vote 1 June 2018 Archived from the original on 12 June 2018 via NYTimes com Novak Marja 22 May 2018 Anti immigrant stance helps Slovenia s SDS party to poll lead Reuters a b c d Hlousek Vit Kopecek Lubomir 2010 Origin Ideology and Transformation of Political Parties East Central and Western Europe Compared Ashgate p 26 ISBN 9780754678403 a b Lewis Paul G 2000 Political Parties in Post Communist Eastern Europe Routledge p 167 ISBN 9780415201810 O stranki Odnosi z javnostmi SLOVENSKA DEMOKRATSKA STRANKA SDS in Slovenian Retrieved 4 June 2018 SDS Vec svobode clovekovih pravic in solidarnosti Grem Volit in Slovenian Retrieved 4 June 2018 urednistvo 16 February 2022 Najvecja politicna stranka v drzavi SDS praznuje 33 let e Maribor in Slovenian Retrieved 6 January 2023 Slovenian nationalist party set for power after winning election TheGuardian com 4 June 2018 Nordsieck Wolfram 2018 Slovenia Parties and Elections in Europe Retrieved 20 March 2019 Terry Chris 19 May 2014 Slovenian Democratic Party SDS The Democratic Society Archived from the original on 12 June 2018 Retrieved 6 May 2020 Partidos Archivo idc cdi 22 September 2017 Archived from the original on 22 September 2017 Retrieved 4 June 2018 Members www idu org Retrieved 4 June 2018 a b EPP s illiberal rebels lay out political vision POLITICO 8 July 2020 Retrieved 13 July 2021 a b c d Coakley Amanda 30 June 2021 In Slovenia a Trumpian Populist Assumes a Key European Post Foreign Policy Retrieved 13 July 2021 a b c d e f Igor Guardiancich 2012 Pension Reforms in Central Eastern and Southeastern Europe From Post Socialist Transition to the Global Financial Crisis Routledge p 194 ISBN 978 1 136 22595 6 a b c Reforming Europe the role of the centre right Arvanitopoulos Kōnstantinos Centre for European Studies Brussels Belgium Institouto Demokratias Kōnstantinos Karamanles Berlin Springer Verlag 2009 ISBN 9783642005602 OCLC 659560461 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b Umrl je prvi predsednik SDS France Tomsic www delo si in Slovenian 25 March 2010 Retrieved 25 January 2019 a b c d Pred 20 leti je bila ustanovljena Slovenska demokraticna zveza siol net in Slovenian 11 January 2009 Retrieved 25 January 2019 a b France Tomsic www slovenija2001 gov si Retrieved 25 January 2019 a b Umrl je France Tomsic RTVSLO si in Slovenian Retrieved 25 January 2019 Umrl France Tomsic www 24ur com 25 March 2010 Retrieved 25 January 2019 Politicni disident ki je postal kljucni akter osamosvojitve RTVSLO si in Slovenian Retrieved 25 January 2019 Drnovsek je leta 1992 med zive vrnil Janeza Janso siol net in Slovenian 13 June 2018 Retrieved 25 January 2019 Apokalipsa politicne krize Mladina si Retrieved 25 January 2019 Pretekle vlade www vlada si Retrieved 25 January 2019 Potapljanje vladajoce stranke Mladina si Retrieved 25 January 2019 a b c d e f g Kratka zgodovina stranke SDS www delo si in Slovenian 4 December 2011 Retrieved 25 January 2019 Obelezujemo peto obletnico smrti Jozeta Pucnika Dnevnik Retrieved 25 January 2019 Predsednik vlade Janez Jansa Portal GOV SI in Slovenian Retrieved 1 May 2020 a b c d e Taras Ray May 2001 The Radical Right in Central and Eastern Europe since 1989 Sabrina P Ramet The Journal of Politics 63 2 672 673 doi 10 1086 jop 63 2 2691788 ISSN 0022 3816 Johnstone Diana 2002 Fools crusade Yugoslavia NATO and Western delusions New York Monthly Review Press ISBN 1 58367 084 X OCLC 51259805 a b Yugoslavia and the profits of doom EUobserver 2 December 2011 Retrieved 1 May 2020 Ex PM Jansa To Be Reelected as SDS President www sloveniatimes com Retrieved 1 May 2020 Slovenia Two journalists threatened for saying politicians were involved in arms trafficking Refworld United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Retrieved 1 May 2020 STA Ex Agent Accuses Jansa of Running Parallel Arms Trading in 1990s english sta si Retrieved 1 May 2020 STA Alleged Arms Trade Ringleaders Deny Accusations english sta si Retrieved 1 May 2020 STA Dve desetletji od afere Depala vas www sta si Retrieved 25 January 2019 To so najodmevnejA e afere slovenskih obveA Aevalcev siol net in Slovenian Retrieved 25 January 2019 Politicni sopotniki ki jih je Janez Jansa odgnal Ego vecji od srca Dnevnik Retrieved 1 May 2020 Desant na ministrstvo Mladina si Retrieved 7 April 2019 Hitre zamenjave v Cerarjevi vladi Pada ze peti minister RTVSLO si in Slovenian Retrieved 25 January 2019 24ur com 1000 evrov pokojnine je predvolilna laz www2 24ur com Retrieved 25 January 2019 Peter Jambrek o tem da je SDS stranka frustriranih nizjih slojev Dnevnik 25 Cctober 2011 Alfio Cerami 2006 Social Policy in Central and Eastern Europe The Emergence of a New European Welfare Regime LIT Verlag Munster p 29 ISBN 978 3 8258 9699 7 Vit Hlousek Lubomir Kopecek 2013 Origin Ideology and Transformation of Political Parties East Central and Western Europe Compared Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 177 ISBN 978 1 4094 9977 0 a b Rizman Rudolf M 1999 Radical Right Politics in Slovenia The radical right in Central and Eastern Europe since 1989 Penn State Press pp 155 162 ISBN 0271043792 retrieved 14 November 2011 Hall Ian Perrault Magali 3 April 2000 The Re Austrianisation of Central Europe Central Europe Review 2 13 archived from the original on 12 January 2019 retrieved 14 November 2011 Rizman Rudolf M 2006 Uncertain path Democratic transition and consolidation in Slovenia Texas A amp M University Press p 74 ISBN 9781585444236 retrieved 14 November 2011 Republic of Slovenia Elections for Deputies to the National Assembly 2004 www dvk rs si Archived from the original on 8 June 2018 Retrieved 3 June 2018 Pregled mandata 2004 2005 Prvi interaktivni multimedijski portal MMC RTV Slovenija Retrieved 3 June 2018 a b c d e f g J J Ne hvala Mladina si Retrieved 3 June 2018 Katoliska drzava drzavna cerkev Mladina si Retrieved 5 June 2018 Specialna vojna Mladina si Retrieved 3 June 2018 Urednistvo Komisiji za nadzor Sove omejen nadzor v tekocih zadevah in Slovenian Retrieved 3 June 2018 a b c d e f Safe in Hungary Viktor Orban Pushes His Message Across Europe The New York Times 4 June 2018 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 5 June 2018 a b c d e f g h Bilefsky Dan 8 January 2008 Slovene leader accused of media censorship The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 1 May 2020 a b The right wing populists doing well across Europe from Marine Le Pen to Viktor Orban The Independent Retrieved 8 June 2018 a b c d e f Jansev medijski projekt kot zadnje volilno upanje SDS Dnevnik Retrieved 3 June 2018 Politicni prsti v oglasevalskem kolacu Mladina si Retrieved 7 April 2019 Kaj prinasa novi zakon Prvi interaktivni multimedijski portal MMC RTV Slovenija Retrieved 3 June 2018 a b Kako je bilo v Jansevi vladi www 24ur com in Slovenian Retrieved 3 June 2018 a b c Ne pozivajte Janse k odstopu Dnevnik Retrieved 7 March 2021 a b c Bosko Srot podrobneje razkril trgovanje z Delom Dnevnik Retrieved 7 March 2021 Jancic na celu Delovega urednistva RTVSLO si in Slovenian Retrieved 1 May 2020 Grgic Maja 8 July 2008 Srot Jansa grozi Delo ali aretacija old delo si in Slovenian Retrieved 7 March 2021 Peticija zoper cenzuro in politicne pritiske na novinarje v Sloveniji Mladina si Retrieved 3 June 2018 Slovenski novinarji zoper cenzuro Dnevnik Retrieved 3 June 2018 Mednarodni novinarski institut poziva k preiskavi politicnih pritiskov na slovenske medije Dnevnik Retrieved 3 June 2018 Labodji spev novinarjev Dnevnik Retrieved 16 May 2020 Sporen odpoklic dopisnikov Cenzura na Delu Mladina si Retrieved 16 May 2020 Joze Tanko SDS Nekatere medije nadzira Borut Pahor Dnevnik Retrieved 3 June 2018 a b c d e f Austerity measures cause conflict www eurofound europa eu Retrieved 2 June 2018 a b Novak Marja Slovenia parliament confirms Jansa as prime minister U S Retrieved 3 June 2018 a b Dosezki ministrstva za finance po Bajuku Davcna reforma uvedba evra predsedovanje EU privatizacija NKBM in znizanje javne porabe Dnevnik Retrieved 3 June 2018 a b c Inflacija edini slab kazalec RTVSLO si in Slovenian Retrieved 22 March 2019 a b Skok letne inflacije na 6 9 odstotka RTVSLO si in Slovenian Retrieved 22 March 2019 Inflacija vezana na cene hrane RTVSLO si in Slovenian Retrieved 22 March 2019 a b Letna stopnja inflacije v Sloveniji 7 odstotna siol net in Slovenian Retrieved 22 March 2019 Visje cene visja inflacija www 24ur com Retrieved 22 March 2019 Urednistvo 14 February 2008 DZ Vzrok za inflacijo na strani ponudbe www delo si in Slovenian Retrieved 22 March 2019 a b Ostri odzivi na izjavo premiera Janeza Janse o strucah v smetnjakih Dnevnik Retrieved 22 March 2019 Jansa odgovarjal poslancem RTVSLO si in Slovenian Retrieved 22 March 2019 Drzavni zbor RS Leto 2008 Drzavna volilna komisija Archived from the original on 19 January 2019 Retrieved 4 June 2018 STA SDS ustanovila strokovni svet Sta si 23 December 2008 Archived from the original on 14 July 2014 Retrieved 10 July 2014 Volitve v Evropski parlament Leto 2009 Drzavna volilna komisija Archived from the original on 28 May 2019 Retrieved 4 June 2018 Franc Puksic iz SDS a v SLS Prvi interaktivni multimedijski portal MMC RTV Slovenija Retrieved 4 June 2018 Positive Slovenia Surprise Winner of Election www sloveniatimes com in Slovenian Archived from the original on 28 January 2019 Retrieved 2 June 2018 a b c d Novak Marja Slovenia parliament confirms Jansa as prime minister U S Retrieved 2 June 2018 a b c d e Slovenia Government and society Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 3 June 2018 Profile Slovenia s Finance Minister Janez Sustersic Reuters Retrieved 3 June 2018 Novak Marja Slovenia adopts reform laws but referendums possible U S Retrieved 2 June 2018 There is no Choice www sloveniatimes com in Slovenian 7 May 2012 Archived from the original on 12 June 2018 Retrieved 2 June 2018 a b Slovenia expects EU assessment mission in April finmin Reuters Retrieved 2 June 2018 Recession hit Slovenia adopts austerity measures tribunedigital chicagotribune Retrieved 2 June 2018 Poll Three Quarters of Slovenians Say Pension Cuts Unjustified www sloveniatimes com in Slovenian 9 July 2012 Archived from the original on 12 June 2018 Retrieved 2 June 2018 National Assembly Starts Debate on Austerity Bills www sloveniatimes com in Slovenian Archived from the original on 12 June 2018 Retrieved 2 June 2018 a b Novak Marja Slovenian austerity drive threatened by referendum call U S Retrieved 2 June 2018 Referendum on Austerity Act www sloveniatimes com in Slovenian Archived from the original on 12 June 2018 Retrieved 2 June 2018 a b Struggling Slovenia to appoint new PM to rescue economy Reuters Retrieved 2 June 2018 a b c Novak Marja Protests in Slovenia continue despite government s fall U S Retrieved 2 June 2018 Novak Marja Fresh Slovenian protests amid bailout fears U S Retrieved 3 June 2018 Evans Pritchard Ambrose 28 March 2013 Slovenia faces contagion from Cyprus as banking crisis deepens Daily Telegraph ISSN 0307 1235 Retrieved 3 June 2018 Kdo je pokopal Slovenijo Mladina si Retrieved 4 June 2018 Radosavljevic Zoran Slovenia as star wanes anger on streets U S Retrieved 2 June 2018 Novak Marja Violent mass protest continue in Slovenia U S Retrieved 2 June 2018 Thousands protest against austerity in Slovenia Deutsche Welle 18 November 2012 Retrieved 2 June 2018 Novak Marja Slovenia police clash with protesters ahead of vote U S Retrieved 2 June 2018 Anti austerity Slovenia protesters clash with police CBC Retrieved 2 June 2018 Slovenia police arrest 141 in violent anti austerity protests Reuters Retrieved 2 June 2018 Watchdog Finds Jansa Jankovic in Violation of Anti Graft Law www sloveniatimes com in Slovenian Archived from the original on 22 June 2018 Retrieved 2 June 2018 a b Novak Marja Slovenia gripped by strike government on the ropes U S Retrieved 2 June 2018 a b Investigation Arms deals and bribes The downfall of Slovenia s former PM Retrieved 2 June 2018 An Intrusion of the Members of SDS into Sova In Slovene Vdor kadrov SDS v Sovo Mladina 18 January 2013 a b Novak Marja Slovenia protest adds pressure to crumbling government U S Retrieved 2 June 2018 Protests in Slovenia continue despite government s fall Reuters 9 March 2013 Retrieved 7 May 2020 Anti graft protest adds pressure to Slovenian prime minister Reuters 11 January 2013 Retrieved 7 May 2020 Ninamedia Arhiv anket www ninamedia si Retrieved 22 June 2018 Pecauer Marko Anketa Dela Stranke z vse manjso podporo in Slovenian Retrieved 22 June 2018 Pecauer Marko Anketa Dela Velikanska podpora protikorupcijski komisiji in Slovenian Retrieved 22 June 2018 Za Jansev odhod Mladina si Retrieved 22 June 2018 SLS ce Jansa do februarja ne odstopi gremo iz koalicije tudi mi 14 January 2013 Novak Marja Slovenian coalition party asks premier to resign U S Retrieved 2 June 2018 a b Alenka Bratusek New PM designate www sloveniatimes com in Slovenian Archived from the original on 22 June 2018 Retrieved 2 June 2018 Slovenian court confirms jail sentence for ex PM Jansa Reuters Retrieved 4 June 2018 Slovenia s fragile recovery The Economist 3 May 2014 Retrieved 4 June 2018 After 26 Years Jansa in Prison Again www sloveniatimes com in Slovenian Archived from the original on 18 February 2019 Retrieved 4 June 2018 EU volitve 2014 18 Delo si Retrieved 10 July 2014 European parliament elections 2014 Volitve gov si 25 May 2014 Retrieved 10 July 2014 European parliament elections 2014 Volitve gov si 25 May 2014 Retrieved 10 July 2014 Republic of Slovenia early elections for deputies to the national assembly 2014 volitve gov si Retrieved 4 June 2018 Slovenia With New Government www sloveniatimes com in Slovenian Archived from the original on 1 March 2019 Retrieved 4 June 2018 Jansa ni smel iz zapora saj ni pojasnil kaj bo pocel Prvi interaktivni multimedijski portal MMC RTV Slovenija Retrieved 4 June 2018 Jancic Peter Jansa za zdaj izpuscen iz zapora in Slovenian Retrieved 4 June 2018 Ustavno sodisce razveljavilo dveletno zaporno kazen Janezu Jansi Dnevnik Retrieved 4 June 2018 Slovenian bribery trial against ex PM Jansa expires Reuters Retrieved 4 June 2018 Insulted and Defeated SDS Party Irrationally Smearing Their Own Country www sloveniatimes com in Slovenian Archived from the original on 1 March 2019 Retrieved 4 June 2018 a b SDS poziva Pahorja naj ponovno razpise volitve foto in Slovenian Retrieved 4 June 2018 a b SDS tozi drzavo Volitve 2014 so bile ukradene in Slovenian Retrieved 4 June 2018 STA SDS Patria damages trial starting english sta si Retrieved 4 June 2018 Sodisce zavrnilo odskodninsko tozbo SDS proti drzavi Siol net in Slovenian 23 May 2018 Retrieved 3 March 2019 a b c d e MacDowall Andrew 1 June 2018 Drain the swamp rightwing leader pulls ahead in Slovenia s polls The Guardian Retrieved 2 June 2018 a b c d e f Slovenian survivor targets victory a la Orban Politico 1 June 2018 Retrieved 2 June 2018 VIDEO in FOTO Vec tisoc ljudi na shodu proti politiki sovrastva Casnik Vecer d o o in Slovenian Retrieved 7 June 2018 Protest v Ljubljani Sejanje strahu sovraznosti in lazi vodi v totalitarizem foto in Slovenian Retrieved 7 June 2018 Posvetovanje s prevaro Mladina si Retrieved 10 June 2018 Dilema izsiljene izbire Ste za bozicnico IN MEDIA RES in Slovenian 28 May 2018 Retrieved 10 June 2018 Byrne Andrew 3 October 2017 Hungary steps up anti Soros rhetoric with national consultation Financial Times Archived from the original on 10 December 2022 Retrieved 10 June 2018 Izidi glasovanja za celotno Slovenijo volitve gov si in Slovenian 3 June 2018 Archived from the original on 16 May 2023 Retrieved 30 June 2023 a b Stranke na levici zanikajo dogovor a izkljucujejo koalicijo z Janso video siol net in Slovenian Retrieved 6 May 2020 Mlakar Luka 25 May 2018 Tudi ce se Jansa umakne Sarec ne bi sel v koalicijo s SDS Siol net in Slovenian Retrieved 5 February 2019 Sarec po srecanju s Cerarjem Obstaja volja da v koalicijo z SDS om ne gremo RTVSLO si in Slovenian 7 June 2018 Retrieved 5 February 2019 Zajc Drago 23 June 2018 Leva desna ali mavricna koalicija Nekatere so presibke druge naporne Delo in Slovenian Retrieved 5 February 2019 STA SDS head Jansa pays visit to Hungarian PM Orban english sta si Retrieved 17 June 2018 Novak Marja Slovenia s president to give mandate to anti immigrant party to U S Retrieved 17 June 2018 Comedian gets new role prime minister of Slovenia NBC News 18 August 2018 Retrieved 9 March 2019 SDS brez preboja Za neuspehe v glavnem krivi mediji www vecer com in Slovenian 5 February 2019 Retrieved 6 February 2019 Slovenian PM Sarec resigns early election likely Reuters 27 January 2020 Retrieved 18 March 2020 Four Slovenian parties agree on a future government coalition Reuters 25 February 2020 Retrieved 6 May 2020 Koalicija proti nestrpnosti Mladina si Retrieved 18 March 2020 Krebelj Jana SDS SMC NSi in Desus bodo nadaljevale pogovore o oblikovanju koalicije Pocivalsek pripravljen tudi na koalicijo z Janso Mladina si Retrieved 18 March 2020 Tonin se s Sarcem ne bo vec pogajal Mladina si Retrieved 18 March 2020 Cerar izstopil iz SMC ja Pocivalsek Iti moramo naprej Slovenia president names center right Janez Jansa as PM candidate Reuters 26 February 2020 Retrieved 18 March 2020 Vecer Kaj prinasa koalicijska pogodba za dve leti Veliko tople vode a tudi hladna prha www vecer com in Slovenian 29 February 2020 Retrieved 18 March 2020 Vecer error404 www vecer com Retrieved 18 March 2020 Slovenia s Jansa defeated by opposition liberal Freedom Movement euronews 24 April 2022 Slovenian lawmakers approve liberal green leader as new PM The Independent 25 May 2022 a b Matej Makarovic Matevz Tomsic 2009 Left and Right in Slovenian Political Life and Public Discourse In Constantine Arvanitopoulos ed Reforming Europe The Role of the Centre Right Springer p 264 ISBN 9783642005602 Bakke 2010 p 244 Danica Fink Hafner 2006 Slovenia Between Bipolarity and Broad Coalition Building In Susanne Jungerstam Mulders ed Post communist EU Member States Parties and Party Systems Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 218 ISBN 978 0 7546 4712 6 a b c d e f g h i Slovenia political briefing Changes at the far right of the political spectrum China CEE Institute 3 May 2019 Retrieved 2 October 2019 a b MacDowall Andrew 1 June 2018 Drain the swamp rightwing leader pulls ahead in Slovenia s polls The Guardian Gabriella Lazaridis Giovanna Campani 2017 Introduction In Gabriella Lazaridis Giovanna Campani eds Understanding the Populist Shift Othering in a Europe in Crisis Taylor amp Francis p 10 ISBN 978 1 317 32606 9 Slovenia s term raises specter of EU s threat from within AP NEWS 4 July 2021 Retrieved 15 July 2021 DW Freedom of Speech laureate Blaz Zgaga attacked for critical remarks Deutsche Welle 6 May 2020 Retrieved 10 May 2020 a b Explained Slovenia s election and Orban s populist influence euronews 1 June 2018 Retrieved 2 June 2018 Slovenia Elections Tilt Another European Country to the Right The New York Times 3 June 2018 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 4 June 2018 a b Novak Marja Anti immigrant stance helps Slovenia s SDS party to poll lead U S Retrieved 2 June 2018 Orban ally Janez Jansa expected to top Slovenia s election Deutsche Welle 2 June 2018 Retrieved 13 March 2023 a b Markes Janez Najprej Slovenija Kaj pa potem in Slovenian Retrieved 5 June 2018 Umek Andrej Ali v Sloveniji obstaja globoka drzava in Slovenian Retrieved 4 June 2018 Globoka drzava Mladina si Retrieved 4 June 2018 a b Orban ally Janez Jansa expected to top Slovenia s election Deutsche Welle 2 June 2018 Retrieved 5 June 2018 STA Jansa says CoE Commissioner part of fake news network english sta si Retrieved 28 September 2021 Janez Jansa Za vsak nov predpis naj se dva ukine www sds si in Slovenian Retrieved 2 June 2018 Lam Bourree 30 January 2017 Trump s Two for One Regulation Executive Order The Atlantic Retrieved 2 June 2018 a b c Slovenian nationalist party set for power after winning election The Guardian 4 June 2018 Retrieved 5 June 2018 Jansa Najprej Slovenija potem drugi Prvi interaktivni multimedijski portal MMC RTV Slovenija Retrieved 7 June 2018 a b c d e Elections 2018 Party Profiles SDS the Janez Jansa Party Feature Retrieved 3 July 2018 Higgins Andrew 16 June 2021 Wielding Twitter Europe s Marshal Twito Takes Aim at the Media The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 13 July 2021 a b Posvet z volivci Zavrnitev sodelovanja je bilo neprimerno www sds si in Slovenian Retrieved 24 June 2021 a b c Slovenian Democratic Party www demsoc org 19 May 2014 Archived from the original on 12 June 2018 Retrieved 4 June 2018 Novak Marja Slovenia rejects same sex marriages in a referendum U S Retrieved 5 June 2018 Slovenians Deliver Major Setback to Same Sex Marriage in Referendum The New York Times 21 December 2015 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 5 June 2018 Imposing imaginary values risks EU collapse Slovenian PM claims the Guardian 4 July 2021 Retrieved 13 July 2021 Tudi SDS za domoljubno vzgojo od vrtca do srednje sole in Slovenian Retrieved 7 June 2018 STA SDS proposal for full funding of private schools rejected english sta si Retrieved 7 June 2018 Jansa Spet je treba uvesti obvezni vojaski rok zurnal24 si in Slovenian Retrieved 12 January 2020 V SDS predlagamo ponovno uvedbo nabornistva v obliki sluzenja 6 mesecnega vojaskega roka www sds si in Slovenian Retrieved 18 March 2020 SDS bi 25 000 domoljubov zdruzil v nacionalni gardi Prvi interaktivni multimedijski portal MMC RTV Slovenija Retrieved 7 June 2018 ZL nacionalno gardo vidi kot desnicarsko paravojsko NSi idejo podpira Prvi interaktivni multimedijski portal MMC RTV Slovenija Retrieved 7 June 2018 Program ZATE Za pravicno sojenje www sds si in Slovenian Retrieved 10 June 2018 Prime Minister Janez Jansa Climate change is a challenge for the wider society and every individual www nekdanji pv gov si Retrieved 7 August 2019 Prime Minister Janez Jansa The legislative package on energy and climate change is one of the most important legislative packages of the beginning of the 21st century www nekdanji pv gov si Retrieved 7 August 2019 Dr Romana Jordan Cizelj o podnebnih spremembah www sds si in Slovenian Retrieved 2 October 2019 a b Video Poslanec Grims odgovarja ekosocialistom Ekoloski davki se ne porabljajo namensko temvec gredo v zepe levicarjev Nova24TV in Slovenian 29 December 2018 Retrieved 7 August 2019 a b c Grims trdi eno znanstveniki se z njim ne strinjajo siol net in Slovenian Retrieved 7 August 2019 a b Svet24 si Branko Grims Globalno segrevanje ne obstaja To je larifari Svet24 si Vsa resnica na enem mestu in Slovenian Retrieved 7 August 2019 a b Video Grims razkrinkal levicarsko pranje mozganov s podnebnimi spremembami na racun katerih lahko nevladniki zasluzijo tudi prek 20 tisoc evrov mesecno Nova24TV in Slovenian 25 March 2019 Retrieved 7 August 2019 Od kod se je vzel panter s katerim je Sisko zamenjal Triglav www 24ur com Retrieved 7 August 2019 Branko Grims Govorjenje o segrevanju zemlje je velika laz www 24ur com Retrieved 7 August 2019 Janez Jansa To je globoka drzava To ni politicna tvorba To je mafija www demokracija si in Slovenian Retrieved 27 November 2019 About SDS Programme www sds si Retrieved 10 June 2018 Za SDS vecinski volilni sistem resitev vseh tezav Dnevnik Retrieved 10 June 2018 Urednistvo 28 December 2015 SDS proti predlogu za otezitev dostopa do orozja www domovina je in Slovenian Retrieved 7 June 2018 STA SDS zaradi predloga za otezitev dostopa do orozja za izredno sejo odbora DZ www sta si in Slovenian Retrieved 7 June 2018 Evroposlanci sprejeli strozjo zakonodajo o orozju Prvi interaktivni multimedijski portal MMC RTV Slovenija Retrieved 7 June 2018 Ljudska obramba Mladina si Retrieved 7 June 2018 Zakon o orozju nova fronta politicnega spopada www delo si in Slovenian Retrieved 24 June 2021 Pus Marko 25 October 2023 Jansa The Situation Is Serious Arm Yourselves Legally Nova24TV English Retrieved 10 November 2023 Legalizacija marihuane Prohibicija nikoli ne deluje RTVSLO si in Slovenian Retrieved 28 September 2021 Predlog zakona o pomoci pri prostovoljnem koncanju zivljenja pobudniki vlozili v DZ Dnevnik 2023 Retrieved 10 November 2023 Kot himno bomo se peli 7 kitico Presernove Zdravljice Prvi interaktivni multimedijski portal MMC RTV Slovenija Retrieved 21 June 2018 a b Retroaktivnost v predlogu SDS a o nezastarljivosti umora neustavna Prvi interaktivni multimedijski portal MMC RTV Slovenija Retrieved 21 June 2018 a b SDS znova neuspesna s predlogom zakona o drzavnih simbolih in Slovenian Retrieved 21 June 2018 Rdeca zvezda in himna ostajata glasbene kvote ne bodo zvisane Prvi interaktivni multimedijski portal MMC RTV Slovenija Retrieved 21 June 2018 a b Prepoved rdece zvezde Mladina si Retrieved 21 June 2018 Rdeca zvezda je spet razdvajala foto Dnevnik Retrieved 21 June 2018 Foto Dan ko je sijala rdeca zvezda in Slovenian Retrieved 21 June 2018 Nosil bom rdeco zvezdo s Svetlano Makarovic na celu ponovno na Kongresnem trgu Vstopna Zdruzena levica Demokraticna stranka dela in Slovenian Retrieved 21 June 2018 Pod rdeco zvezdo rojena Levica ne bo vecna opozicija Dnevnik Retrieved 21 June 2018 Program www sds si in Slovenian Retrieved 12 January 2020 Slovenian Democratic Party SDS condemns unreasonable support of leftist Slovenian political forces to the Iranian regime www sds si Retrieved 12 January 2020 a b Pred sedezem slovenske vlade plapola izraelska zastava zurnal24 si in Slovenian Retrieved 29 May 2021 govslovenia 14 May 2021 As a sign of solidarity with Israel Tweet Archived from the original on 20 June 2021 Retrieved 29 June 2023 via Twitter Izraelska zastava na procelju vladnega poslopja www 24ur com Retrieved 29 May 2021 USTAVITE LEVICO Mladina si Retrieved 3 August 2021 a b c A political situation in Slovenia SDS Communication office PDF STA Slovenian political metaphors and metonymy a guide english sta si Retrieved 4 June 2018 a b c Have you heard of Kucan s clan a mafia like group from the League of Communists whose aim was to economically control Slovenia after its independence and assure the survival of their children Nova24TV in Slovenian 19 December 2017 Retrieved 5 June 2018 a b Rizman Rudi 2006 Uncertain path democratic transition and consolidation in Slovenia 1st ed College Station Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 978 1 60344 543 6 OCLC 826658018 a b Cultural Policy in Slovenia Council of Europe 1 January 1998 ISBN 978 92 871 3681 7 a b Dawisha Karen Parrott Bruce 13 June 1997 Politics Power and the Struggle for Democracy in South East Europe Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 59733 3 a b Nekateri So Se Zmeraj V Ilegali Dnevnik Retrieved 10 March 2021 a b Letter of Prime Minister Janez Jansa to the President of the European Comission sic Ursula von der Leyen Portal gov si Retrieved 10 March 2021 a b Tanja Fajon Dokument SDS ki svari pred drzavljansko vojno je absurden in nevaren Dnevnik Retrieved 29 May 2021 ZA OBRAMBO USTAVNIH TEMELJEV SLOVENSKE DRZAVE Kongresna resolucija 2021 osnutekJR PDF SDS Levici spet dela reklamo N1 in Slovenian 3 June 2021 Retrieved 24 June 2021 Igor Zorcic zahtevane seje o programu Levice ne bo sklical www delo si in Slovenian Retrieved 24 June 2021 Jansa grozi z drzavljansko vojno www delo si in Slovenian Retrieved 10 November 2023 Facebook www facebook com Retrieved 10 November 2023 a b LK 13 July 2023 Janez Jansa The Revival Of The Ideological Conflict And Cultural Fight It Is Time To Face Reality Demokracija Retrieved 11 November 2023 Dawisha Karen Parrott Bruce 13 June 1997 Politics Power and the Struggle for Democracy in South East Europe Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521597333 Baumgartl Bernd Favell Adrian 2 October 1995 New Xenophobia in Europe Martinus Nijhoff Publishers ISBN 9041108653 Ramet Sabrina P 1 November 2010 Radical Right in Central and Eastern Europe Since 1989 Penn State Press ISBN 978 0271043791 Nadaljnje delitve naroda na rdece in crne Mladina si Retrieved 4 June 2018 STA Demokracija smells corruption in bad bank dismissals english sta si Retrieved 5 June 2018 STA Weekly Parties might have been bribed in Iran money laundering english sta si Retrieved 5 June 2018 STA Reporter takes a swing at Cerar english sta si Retrieved 4 June 2018 Jerajeva Bratuskova se ves cas posvetuje s strici iz ozadja Revija Reporter in Slovenian Retrieved 4 June 2018 a b Strici iz ozadja Mladina si Retrieved 4 June 2018 STA Demokracija identifies little uncle behind Sarec english sta si Retrieved 4 June 2018 Svetovni mediji o Pahorjevem politicnem hat tricku v senci ljudske vstaje Prvi interaktivni multimedijski portal MMC RTV Slovenija Retrieved 4 June 2018 Svet iz ozadja ali politicna paranoja Dnevnik Retrieved 4 June 2018 Ne skrbite strici iz ozadja skrbijo za vas in Slovenian Retrieved 4 June 2018 a b Jansa to Fight to the End Says Conviction Political www sloveniatimes com in Slovenian Archived from the original on 18 June 2018 Retrieved 4 June 2018 a b Milan Kucan Mladina si Retrieved 4 June 2018 Kucanu razpada njegov Forum 21 kosarico mu je ze dala tudi Pergarjeva www politikis si in Slovenian 14 March 2012 Retrieved 4 June 2018 Stranka SDS v tujino pisala o napadu socialisticne komisije na Janso KPK Gre za novo diskreditacijo Dnevnik Retrieved 28 September 2021 Kucan je spoznal da Sarec ne more zmagati zdaj vse orozje polaga v Ljudmilo Novak ki naj bi razklala desnico Nova24TV in Slovenian 21 August 2017 Retrieved 4 June 2018 Milan Kucan Marjan Sarec in Jaka Racman dr Vinko Gorenak www vinkogorenak net in Slovenian Archived from the original on 3 July 2018 Retrieved 4 June 2018 Jansa Sent to Prison He is Convinced About Political Plot www sloveniatimes com in Slovenian Archived from the original on 3 July 2018 Retrieved 4 June 2018 Jansa ni priznal krivde zaradi zaljivega tvita o novinarkah RTVS Casnik Vecer d o o in Slovenian Retrieved 4 June 2018 STA More condemnation of Jansa s defamatory tweet english sta si Retrieved 4 June 2018 STA Insulting tweet labelled as attack on media english sta si Retrieved 4 June 2018 Slovenia right wing politician gets 3 month suspended jail www msn com Retrieved 25 November 2018 Von der Leynova ob zakljucku na Bledu Danes so dovoljene sanje jutri je nov dan www 24ur com Retrieved 15 July 2021 Brussels Playbook Liberals on the offensive Taking on China Trust level low Politico 7 July 2021 Retrieved 15 July 2021 O nas www forum21 si Archived from the original on 23 May 2018 Retrieved 4 June 2018 Kdo vozi forum 21 Mladina si Retrieved 4 June 2018 SDS Kadroval bo Forum 21 in Slovenian Retrieved 4 June 2018 link, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.