Ljubljana (Slovenia):Liberal candidate Natasa Pirc Musar appears poised to win a presidential election runoff in Slovenia on Sunday, which would make her the small, central European country's first female head of state. All opinion polls suggest that the 54-year-old human rights advocate and lawyer has a wide lead going into the runoff against centre-right former Foreign Minister Anze Logar.
Since none of the seven contenders who competed in the first round managed to gather more than 50 per cent of the ballots and claim outright victory, Logar and Pirc Musar went forward to a runoff. While Logar led after the first round of voters, analysts in Slovenia have predicted the tables will be turned in runoff as centrist and liberal voters rally behind Pirc Musar.
The winner will succeed President Borut Pahor, a centrist politician who sought to bridge Slovenia's left-right political divide during his decade in office. Having served two five-year terms, Pahor was ineligible to seek a third. While the presidency is largely ceremonial in Slovenia, the head of state still is seen as a person of authority in the Alpine country of 2 million people.
Presidents nominate prime ministers and members of the constitutional court, who are then elected in parliament, and appoints members of the anti-corruption commission. As a prominent lawyer, Pirc Musar had represented former US first lady Melania Trump over copyright and other matters in her native Slovenia. Musar has been targeted by opponents mostly for her husband's sprawling business empire.
If she wins, she would become the first woman to serve as president since Slovenia became independent amid the breakup of Yugoslavia in 1991. Known as an LGBTQ rights advocate, Pirc Musar said she expected a battle of values in the runoff and that she is looking forward it. Only a very naive person or an idealist can say that this election is not a battle between liberal and more conservative values, Pirc Musar told Slovenia's STA news agency.