Ján Slota
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ján Slota (September 14, 1953 in Lietavská Lúčka) is the co-founder and President of the Slovak National Party (SNS).[1] He is also a long-term mayor of the town of Žilina.[citation needed]
Slota became involved in politics after 1989 when the Communist party fell from power in Czechoslovakia in the Velvet Revolution. In 1990 he co-founded SNS and was elected as a member of the Federal Assembly. Later, he was elected into the National Council of the Slovak Republic. From 1994-1999 he served as the leader of SNS. After an internal crisis in the SNS in 2001, he left the party and set up his own party, the Real Slovak National Party . As a result of this split, none of the nationalist parties received the required 5% minimum of votes in the 2002 election. In 2003, the nationalist parties merged again, after heavy quarrels, with Slota as chairman.[citation needed]
Slota has served as the mayor of Žilina since 1990, overseeing the modernization of the city. He was reelected in 1994 and 1998 (see http://www.slota.sk/zivotopis.html).
In the 2006 parliamentary election, Slota became an MP and his SNS joined the ruling coalition with Robert Fico´s Direction - Social Democracy party and Vladimír Mečiar´s People's Party - Movement for a Democratic Slovakia. As a part of the coalition agreement, Slota didn't obtain any government position.[citation needed]
His opponents accuse him of arrogance and nationalism. However, Slota says he is protecting Slovaks, especially those living in southern Slovakia.[citation needed]
He has repeatedly criticized the Party of the Hungarian Coalition, the party of the Hungarians in Slovakia and Hungarians as a nation. He also strongly criticizes Roma and homosexuals, although Slota says he is only against alleged homosexual propaganda. In a speech given in 1999 at a HZDS rally on 5 March 1999, Slota said, "Do we Slovaks want [the Hungarians] to return... and teach us the Lord's Prayer in Hungarian? No way! We will jump into our tanks, and we will go and flatten Budapest... We will fight, fight for our land, we will fight for every square meter. We won't give even a square centimeter to those Hungarian assholes." The The Slovak Spectator reported on 9 April 1998 that Slota said the best policy for Romani is "a long whip in a small yard."[1]
[edit] External links
- (Slovak) Official site
- U.S. Congressman Tom Lantos about SNS
[edit] References
- ^ a b Hungarian Human Rights Foundation New Slovak Government Embraces Ultra-Nationalists, Excludes Hungarian Coalition Party
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: |