Not even a week has passed since the beginning of the year and already the first news is coming from abroad, which is great and important for us in the Czech Republic. The new Chancellor of Austria will be the head of the FPÖ (which is the their version of the AfD). He should be appointed by a government mandate later today.
Among other things, this means that if key opposition leader Andrej Babiš is the next prime minister, a logical alliance with Hungary, Slovakia and Austria will emerge, and Babiš will be under pressure to move the country in an Orbán-like direction even if he doesn’t want to. It will be much easier to face pressure from Brussels, should he perhaps decide to sabotage the migration pact, ignore the Green Deal’s demand or finally put Czech TV in order.
Note that while the Austrian events are conditioned by popular support (in the September elections, the FPÖ won 29%), in the end, the important things happened inside the ruling elite. Just months ago, it looked like a government without the Freedmen, dependent on the Greens. The Globalists gave the impression that they had enough power. But then something changed. It’s a question of economic strength, relationships, ability to form alliances, etc.
In this constellation, it is quite conceivable that the Czech Constitutional Court would be reluctant to do something like annul the Romanian elections. We do not know how big a shift in power has taken place, but there has certainly been one, and certainly in a healthy direction.