Lithuania holds parliamentary vote as pandemic hits jobs
Liudas Dapkus | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 4 years AGO
VILNIUS, Lithuania (AP) — Lithuanians voted Sunday in a parliamentary runoff where the winner will have to tackle a growing health crisis and high unemployment due to the coronavirus pandemic.
The election was widely expected to bring a change of leadership for the southernmost Baltic nation, which has been governed by a center-left coalition for four years. In the first round of voting on Oct. 11, three center-right opposition parties finished with a combined lead.
After polls closed at 1800 GMT, Lithuania’s Central Electoral Commission said initial voter turnout stood at 39.7% which was markedly lower than the 47.2% turnout in the first round.
Lithuania reported 603 new confirmed coronavirus cases on Sunday, the highest daily figure since the start of the pandemic, and its worsening outbreak could have affected voter turnout. Overall, it has seen now just over 10,000 confirmed cases and 134 virus-related deaths.
Results of the election were expected early Monday.
In Sunday's second round, 68 of the 141 seats in Lithuania’s legislative assembly, the Seimas, were up for grabs. The other seats were allotted after the first round, which saw the conservative Homeland Union party winning 23 seats, or 24.8% of the vote, while the ruling Farmers and Greens party only grabbed 16 seats, or 17.5%.
“If the conservatives are successful on Sunday, they would very likely try to form a new ruling coalition with other two center-right partners — the Freedom Party and the Liberal movement,” Vilnius University political scientist Tomas Janeliunas told The Associated Press. “Yet this would be a rather fragile majority.”
Some 54 Homeland Union candidates made it into Sunday's runoff, while the Farmers and Greens have 32 contenders. Together, the Freedom Party and the Liberal movement have 21 candidates. Two other center-left parties crossed the 5% support threshold into parliament and could join the Farmers and Greens in a new coalition but they have few candidates in the runoff.
More than 7% of Lithuania’s 2.5 million voters already cast early ballots for the runoff, according to election authorities who set up special drive-in polling stations because of the pandemic. Voters this year must wear a face mask and bring their own pen.
“We vote for change," Jonas Gudelis, a retired engineer, said after voting in Vilnius, the Lithuanian capital. “We're tired of regulations, prohibitions and other nonsense that this government has fed us for the entire four years but failed to deal with the virus properly."
Others said incoming lawmakers would have a difficult time balancing between the country's economic development and restrictive measures designed to combat the COVID-19 outbreak.
“Whoever wins this one will be facing tough times. They will have to choose between public health and the health of the economy," said Julius Kazickas, a medical student from Kaunas, Lithuania's second-largest city. "I gave my voice to those who seem to be more focused on the economy.”
Lithuania, a member of the European Union and NATO, has kept strong democratic traditions and sustainable economic growth since declaring independence from the Soviet Union in 1990. It has also played a major diplomatic role as the protests in Belarus, its southern neighbor, unfold against that nation’s authoritarian leader.
The country fared comparatively well during the first wave of the pandemic, but like elsewhere in Europe this fall, the nation of 2.8 million has reported worrying infection spikes in recent weeks.
After weeks of hesitation, the Lithuanian government imposed a quarantine in 12 of 60 districts that starts on Monday. Opposition lawmakers have criticized the government for not doing enough to stabilize the latest outbreak.
The economic impact of the pandemic has hit Lithuania hard: it’s unemployment rate was over 14% in September compared to 9% in February. The outgoing parliament drafted a 2021 budget with a 4-billion euro ($4.7 billion) deficit.
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This version has been corrected to correct reference in fourth paragraph to Lithuania, not Finland.
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Mindaugas Kulbis contributed to this report.