Republic of North Macedonia
North Macedonia | EuropeCurrent Operations
OSCE Mission to Skopje
(OSCE Long-Term Missions)
Authorization date: 08/92
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For two years, Bulgaria has blocked North Macedonia's bid to open accession talks with the EU because of a historical row. But with new governments in Skopje and Sofia, there is hope that compromise can be reached.
Governing Social Democrats choose deputy Finance Minister Dimitar Kovacevski to replace Zoran Zaev as head of party – and, most probably, as head of government – in Sunday’s internal party elections.
North Macedonian lawmakers will vote on November 11 on a motion of no confidence in the Social Democrat-led government.
The parliamentary majority behind the Social Democrat-led government is small but remains firm, all the government’s partner parties insisted on Monday after meeting Prime Minister Zoran Zaev, who has announced his resignation following the defeat of his party at Sunday’s local elections.
The European Parliament on Thursday (25 March) will vote on the issue, as part of North Macedonia's stalled accession talks to the European Union. Bulgaria last year harpooned North Macedonia's path to accession. Sofia is upset over issues tied to language and history, in moves widely panned by other member states.
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Bulgaria blocked discussions among EU ministers on North Macedonia’s bid to start negotiations to join the bloc in November. The veto also prevented Albania from starting accession talks, as in terms of EU enlargement, the EU treats Skopje and Tirana as a package.
[…] The vote on August 30 just ahead of a midnight deadline returns Zoran Zaev to the post of prime minister after his party narrowly won a victory over right-wing rivals in July.
Pro-Western leftist leader Zoran Zaev seems set for another term as North Macedonian prime minister after securing the backing of DUI, a party representing ethnic Albanians on Tuesday. Under the terms of the deal, however, he is to stand down at the end of the upcoming term and have an Albanian run the government for 100 days ahead of the new election, which is expected in 2024.
The former partners in the last coalition government in North Macedonia, the Social Democrats, SDSM, of Zoran Zaev, and the Democratic Union for Integration, DUI, led by Ali Ahmeti, are engaged in substantial talks on a new government, amid speculation that talks might be stuck over the DUI’s insistence on an ethnic Albanian prime minister.
Talks on forming a new government in North Macedonia are expected to begin on Tuesday when the constitutive session of the new parliament is held. The session follows the July 15 early general elections in which the Social Democrats, SDSM, led by Zoran Zaev, won a narrow victory over their rivals in the right-wing VMRO DPMNE party, creating uncertainty over who will be able to assemble a majority in the chamber.