

Ideologically, the ruling coalition remains true to its foundation, which is demonstrated in the Government’s refusal to support the European Parliament Resolution on European Conscience and Totalitarianism in the National Assembly.Interactions between proteins and surfactants are both of fundamental interest and relevant for applications in food, cosmetics and detergency. Besides international institutions, low trust in the Government is perceived by the public opinion pooling as well. Privatization of state enterprises - one of the Slovenia’s commitments to the European Union - has been slowed down and sought to be prevented by the interest old networks. With such trends, even execution is possible, a possibility, which has already been predicted by Milan Kučan, former President of the Slovenian Communist Party and later President of the Republic of Slovenia.Īfter one year of the Miro Cerar’s Government there are no changes for the better. The market of political ideas is disabled, fair competition between political parties is prevented and instead constructs and discredits are prevailing. The Constitutional Court later annulled this decision.Īll this indicates that part of the Slovenian political culture, which is based on lies and deceit, is reinforcing. After Mr Janša was unjustly imprisoned, the parliamentary majority in the Slovenian Parliament deprived him of his parliamentary mandate.The Supreme Court later annulled this report as it unlawfully interfered with the constitutional rights of Mr Janša. Report of the Commission for Prevention of Corruption about the wealth state of the President of the SDS Janša had huge political consequences and led to the fall of Janša’s Government.The Constitutional Court later annulled the judgment. Just before the 2008 parliamentary elections the Patria affair was set up, which culminated right before the 2014 general elections, when the Slovenian opposition leader Janez Janša was convicted and imprisoned.Dominant media coupled with the methods known only in authoritarian regimes prevented fair and democratic political competition.

Slovenian Democratic Party has informed the international community several times about the lack of the rule of law, of the fact that Slovenia is ruled by the networks, which still derive strength from the previous communist regime and that the judiciary is highly biased and politically motivated.Įven before the end of a successful term of the Government led by Janez Janša (2004-2008), for which the OECD noted a high level of citizen’s trust, the attacks against Janez Janša and the SDS started to escalate. The OECD survey points to the phenomenon we are witnessing in Slovenia: the confidence in the governments, which have mainly consisted of the left-wing political parties decreases each year, but nevertheless these parties are given the mandate to run the country. Slovenian Government is therefore trusted by only 18 % of respondents, which is the worst performance among OECD countries. Citizen’s confidence in Miro Cerar’s Government fell by 30 percentage points compared with the trust from 2007, when Janez Janša led the Government. Recently published OECD survey “Government at a Glance 2015” shows that the county with the biggest drop in the level of trust in the Government is Slovenia.

