Korčok edges Pellegrini as Slovak presidency race heads to run-off

Slovakia's presidential candidate Ivan Korcok speaks to media after casting his vote at a polling station in the first round of the Presidential election. Luk·ö Grinaj/TASR/dpa

Parliamentary speaker Peter Pellegrini and former foreign minister Ivan Korčok looked set to face off in a second round of voting for the Slovak presidency, according to preliminary results of the first round of voting published by election authorities on Saturday evening.

According to Slovakia's Statistical Office, with the majority of votes counted, Korčok was leading Pellegrini by over 41% to over 37%. According to these preliminary results, voter turnout reached around 50%.

With neither candidate looking set to receive more than 50% of the vote, the two top candidates were poised to face off in a run-off election on April 6.

Some 4.4 million Slovak voters were called on to elect a new head of state on Saturday, though a run-off had been widely predicted in advance of the election in the deeply divided country.

Voting was supposed to end at 10 pm (2100 GMT), but ended half an hour later for technical reasons. The final result expected to be announced by Sunday afternoon.

There were no women in the field of nine candidates standing in the election. The incumbent president, Zuzana Čaputová, did not run for a second five-year term despite her continued popularity.

Social Democrat Pellegrini, who is part of the government coalition, and liberal former foreign minister Korčok were the two clear favourites according to opinion polls before the election.

Korčok promises to be a counterweight to the left-wing nationalist government under Prime Minister Robert Fico.

Pellegrini is calling on Slovakians to overcome the country's crippling political divide. He wants to maintain a good relationship with the government as well as the opposition.

Slovak politics and society are currently deeply divided, and the climate between the government and opposition has been tainted by mutual accusations.

There is a tense debate about the country's stance on the war in Ukraine, but also about the rule of law and democracy. The country has seen repeated mass protests against the government.

Slovakia's former President Andrej Kiska (L) and his wife Martina cast their votes at a polling station in the first round of the Presidential election. Michal Svìtok/TASR/dpa
Residents of a facility for the elderly people cast their votes during the first round of the Presidential Elections. Henrich Mišoviè/TASR/dpa

© Deutsche Presse-Agentur GmbH