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Slovenia set for coalition talks after tight election
Neither the liberal Freedom Movement nor the Slovenian Democratic Party secured a majority; smaller parties could decide the government with GS at 29 seats and SDS at 28, officials said.
On March 23, Slovenia's political parties looked set for urgent coalition talks on Monday after no clear winner emerged, a result that could sway the Alpine country's domestic and foreign agenda.
Prime Minister Robert Golob and Janez Jansa's parties are stuck short of a majority, as neither secured the 46 seats needed in the 90-seat parliament, making smaller parties crossing 4% kingmakers.
With 99.85% of ballots counted, the Freedom Movement holds 29 seats and the Slovenian Democratic Party 28, with coalitions projected at 40 MPs for GS and 43 seats for SDS.
Golob said 'For all these measures, we need more than just a weak majority' and will invite 'all democratic parties' for coalition talks, aiming to implement the GS programme.
Analysts warn the close result could produce instability, with Miha Kovac saying a new government is likely unstable, while Jansa alleged a 50,000-vote discrepancy without evidence.