
Melania Trump’s lawyer tipped to win Slovenian Presidential race
The Hindu
Slovenia is voting in a presidential election runoff that could elect the small European Union’s country first female head of state
Slovenians were voting in a presidential runoff on November 13 that could elect the small European Union’s country's first female head of state, as well as representing a test for the country's new liberal government.
Liberal candidate Natasa Pirc Musar was leading in the pre-election polls against conservative Anze Logar, although she trailed the former foreign minister in the first round of voting two weeks ago.
Since none of the seven contenders who competed in the first round managed to gather more than 50% of the ballots and claim outright victory, Mr. Logar and Pirc Musar went forward to a runoff. Analysts in Slovenia have predicted centrist and liberal voters would rally behind Pirc Musar.
Casting her vote in a village on the outskirts of Ljubljana, the capital, Pirc Musar urged people to go to the polls and said she would be home with family until the results are announced, “perhaps reading a book.”
The winner will succeed President Borut Pahor, a centrist politician who sought to bridge Slovenia’s deep left-right political divide during his decade in office. Having served two five-year terms, Pahor was ineligible to seek a third.
While the presidency is largely ceremonial in Slovenia, the head of state still is seen as a person of authority in the Alpine country of 2 million people. Presidents nominate prime ministers and members of the constitutional court, who are then elected in parliament, and appoints members of the anti-corruption commission.
As a prominent lawyer and rights advocate, Pirc Musar had represented former U.S. first lady Melania Trump over copyright and other cases in her native Slovenia. Ms. Musar has been targeted by opponents mostly for her husband’s sprawling business empire and alleged tax evasion matters.

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