Czech government faces no-confidence vote in Parliament over a dispute with the president
The no-confidence vote follows President Pavel blocking a controversial minister nominee with offensive posts, sparking protests and political tensions in the Czech coalition government.
- The new Czech coalition government faced a no-confidence vote over a dispute with the president regarding a minister appointment.
- The president accused the foreign minister of blackmailing him for refusing to appoint a minister due to racist and sexist social media posts.
- Tens of thousands of Czechs rallied in support of the president, while the government has the majority to survive the no-confidence vote.
19 Articles
19 Articles
Czech government faces no-confidence vote in Parliament over a dispute with the president
The Czech Republic's coalition government of populist Prime Minister Andrej Babiš faces a no-confidence vote over a dispute with President Petr Pavel.
Czech government faces no-confidence vote over a dispute with the president
The new Czech Republic coalition government of populist Prime Minister Andrej Babiš on Tuesday faced a parliamentary no-confidence vote over the handling of a dispute with the country’s president.
Suspicious threatening SMS, mass protests and a controversial minister: why it is so turbulent in Czech politics – and what the right-wing motorist party has to do with it.
Unknown even three years ago, Filip Turek is now at the heart of a tug of war between the country's pro-Ukrainian president, Petr Pavel, and the nationalist government of billionaire Andrej Babis. A motion of no confidence was submitted to Parliament on Tuesday.
Hard numbers: Large protests in Czechia, UAE-linked firm has large stake in the president’s company, & More
80,000: The number of people estimated to be in the streets of Czechia on Sunday to show their support for President Petr Pavel after he blocked the nomination of an environmental minister who performed the Nazi salute and posted Nazi memorabilia. The drama is emblematic of the deepening polarization between the pro-European Union president and eurosceptic Prime Minister Andrej Babiš.$500 million: The amount that a firm tied to the UAE – with th…
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 50% of the sources are Center
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium














