Weakened Czech leader faces no-confidence vote

Prague MapPrague - Prime Minister Mirek Topolanek's government faced a parliamentary confidence motion Wednesday, just as the Czech Republic prepares to take over the EU presidency in January.

The left-leaning opposition sought the vote on ousting the government after Topolanek's Civic Democrats, in power since January 2007, were weakened by a defeat in regional elections Saturday.

Political tension in the Central European nation is running high over the government's 2009 budget and before Senate run-off elections starting Friday that could bring more losses for the premier.

In the confidence vote expected later Wednesday, the main opposition Social Democrats needed 101 votes in the 200-seat lower house to topple Topolanek's governing coalition.

With 96 votes seen as certain, the Social Democrats were hoping for support from rebellious coalition lawmakers and independents who have backed Topolanek in the past.

Three previous parliamentary motions to oust the government have failed.

Topolanek, one of the region's leading US allies and EU critics, was confident on Sunday that the rebels would not overthrow the government shortly before the Senate run-off.

"I can't imagine anyone who would knock down his own government before an election," he said.

Analysts were sceptical that the opposition effort would succeed.

"I think the government will make it," said political scientist Jiri Pehe, the head of Prague's branch of New York University. "But it will be so weakened that it will be a walking corpse."

The Czech Republic is scheduled to take over the EU's six-month presidency on January 1.

The government's tight majority in parliament's lower house was already impaired Tuesday.

Three rebellious coalition lawmakers, elected for Topolanek's party, then helped the opposition to stall the country's 2009 budget.

The voting resulted in an unprecedented stalemate as the lower house neither passed budget's spending limits and anticipated revenues nor asked the cabinet to rework them.

Amid high tensions on Wednesday, the lower house finally sent the government proposal to the next approval phase.

Regardless of the no-confidence vote's result, Topolanek's position as a leader of his party is shaky. Opponents within his party, led by Prague mayor Pavel Bem, may challenge him for the post at a party congress in December. (dpa)

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