Current Affairs Public Affairs told to accept restitution deal or leave government
Cracks in the three-party governing coalition appeared again this week, as the junior Public Affairs party resisted approval of a church property restitution deal. For the senior Civic Democratic and TOP 09 parties, the deal is a major achievement that has been years in the making. When Public Affairs, which questions aspects of the agreement, attempted to put conditions on its support, the response was clear: approve the deal or leave the government.
Public Affairs has often positioned itself as the dissident party in the
governing coalition, even siding with the parliamentary opposition on
occasion. In previous instances, though, the stakes were not as high as
with the current issue of church property restitution, which has been under
negotiation for the last two decades. Civic Democrat Zbyněk Stanjura told
Czech Television on Monday why his party has no intention of budging on a
done deal.
“This agreement was concluded by all three coalition parties, as well as 17 churches and religious organisations. Twenty different sides therefore came to an agreement that they confirmed with their signatures, and what we are saying is that we are going to respect that agreement both in the government and in Parliament.”
Zbyněk Stanjura
As per the government’s agreement, churches that lost property under
communism would receive 56 percent of it back and get 59 billion crowns in
compensation for the rest, payable over a period of 20 or more years. With
the Finance Ministry warning of 30 billion more crowns in budget cuts to
come this year alone, Public Affairs now wants to cover this sum by
integrating ministries – namely those for the environment and regional
development, while at the same time reportedly eying a change in the
captaincy of the Interior Ministry that they previously ran. That idea
apparently ran straight into a wall at a surprisingly quick meeting of
coalition leaders on Monday, as Public Affairs chairman Radek John
described.
“They gave us an ultimatum, saying that if we do not give our unconditional support for the church restitution and stop talking about saving money, then the government will fall.”
Radek John
This makes for a high-stakes call for Public Affairs, which has polled at
between 2 and 4% since being wracked by corruption scandals last year – a
position that would leave it no chance of a parliamentary mandate in
hypothetical early elections. What’s more, should the junior party decide
to stick to its guns on this issue, Civic Democrats and TOP 09 could likely
manage a minority government without them. Public Affairs, it seems,
therefore, has precious little to gain by swimming against the current.
Nonetheless, the party’s leadership on Tuesday morning proved
disinterested in quietly backing down, stalling five votes to five on
whether to support the agreement. They will meet again in the evening
before Wednesday’s cabinet vote on the agreement.






