#alternate alternate BBC Homepage * Skip to content * Accessibility Help * Your account * Home * News * Sport * Reel * Worklife * Travel * Future * Culture * MenuMore Search * Home * News * Sport * Reel * Worklife * Travel * Future * Culture * Music * TV * Weather * Sounds (BUTTON) Close menu BBC News Menu * Home * Coronavirus * Climate * Video * World * UK * Business * Tech * Science * Stories * Entertainment & Arts More * Health * World News TV * In Pictures * Reality Check * Newsbeat * Long Reads * World * Africa * Asia * Australia * Europe * Latin America * Middle East * US & Canada Czech elections: Billionaire PM asks voters for more time at top By Rob Cameron BBC News, Prague Published 7 October 2021 (BUTTON) Share (BUTTON) close Share page (BUTTON) Copy link About sharing Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babis poses for a photograph with fans during his campaign cruise with supporters on a ship at Brno Reservoir on October 01, 2021 Image source, Getty Images Image caption, Andrej Babis (centre) is facing two opposition coalitions and is competing with the far right The people of the Czech Republic go to the polls this weekend, as billionaire-turned-politician Andrej Babis seeks another four years in office. Mr Babis, leader of the populist ANO party, faces a tough challenge from the centre-right opposition and also has the far right nipping at his heels. And his fate is intertwined with the health of ailing President Milos Zeman. A few weeks ago, Mr Babis took to Twitter. He had something on his mind: Bikes instead of cars? I don't want that! Do you? The tweets came thick and fast. Tax rises? I don't want that! Do you? A few seconds later. They want to let Brussels decide everything. I don't want that! Do you? And there was more. They would punish the honest and hard-working. I don't want that! Do you? And on and on, in an almost Trumpian stream of consciousness. The target was clear; the opposition Pirate Party and others the prime ministers dismisses as "neo-Marxists" and "eco-terrorists". If Mr Babis's voters were left in any doubt, shortly afterwards there was a video, showing a rabid horde of millennials waving placards reading "Refugees Welcome!", "Tax People's Flats!" and "Lower Pensions!". The slogan: "I don't want that. Do you?" Czech people in quarantine or isolation due to COVID-19 disease caused by the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus can vote across country in drive-in polling stations in advance of the parliamentary elections Image source, EPA Image caption, Czech voters having to isolate because of Covid are allowed to vote at drive-in polling stations The strategy appears to be to scare the living daylights out of ANO's older, less educated voter base and make sure they're mobilised for the two-day election on Friday and Saturday. Unlike Donald Trump, it's doubtful Andrej Babis actually types any of this stuff himself. ANO's campaign relies heavily on a professional, well-oiled marketing machine, with PR gurus tweaking every tweet and Facebook post. Fighting on two fronts So far it's served him well, but will it be enough this time around? Mr Babis, who now adopts a clenched-fist, pugilistic pose on campaign billboards, is fighting this election on two fronts. On one flank are two opposition coalitions. Spolu (Together) is a group of three conservative and Christian Democrat parties. PirStan is a coalition between the Pirates - who already control the capital Prague - and Stan, a grassroots movement formed by local mayors and independents. Petr Fiala, leader of the Civic Democratic Party and the Together coalition candidate for Czech prime minister, greets supporters during an election campaign rally in Usti nad Labem, Czech Republic, October 5, 2021. Image source, Reuters Image caption, Petr Fiala (rigth) is the Together coalition's candidate for prime minister But he's also competing with the far right. Tomio Okamura and his SPD party are looking to capitalise on fear of migrants, economic insecurity and anti-vax sentiment. Poster for Czech far right Image caption, The far-right SPD is calling for a referendum on pulling out of the European Union They have lofty ambitions for a place at the top table when the post-election negotiations begin. Their price for entering government: a referendum on leaving the EU. 'It wasn't pretty' "The Czech Republic is at a crossroads, between old and new, east and west if you like," said Ludek Stanek, a commentator and stand-up comedian. "The general concern is that we will be pushed more into the Russian sphere. And that's something you don't want because I remember the Russian occupation, and it wasn't pretty. It wasn't fun," he added. Some believe Mr Babis is so isolated and his coalition potential so reduced that a government with the far right will be his only path to staying in power. But surely this Nato and EU member is too tightly locked into Western structures for any political arrangement to change that? Ludek Stanek's placard reads: "Anywhere but here" Image caption, Ludek Stanek's placard reads: "Anywhere but here" "You're from Britain!" said Ludek Stanek. "You were locked into the European Union and within five years you were out!" Pandora's box All this was already fraught before Mr Babis was named in the huge Pandora Papers leak, which revealed he had used offshore companies in the British Virgin Islands to acquire property worth $22m on the French Riviera. PANDORA PAPERS: Secret wealth of leaders exposed He counters that the transactions were totally legal, the money was fully taxed, and anyway they took place in 2009, years before he entered politics. He's threatened to sue the Pirate Party's dreadlocked leader for calling the transaction "money-laundering". But the Pandora leaks are far from Mr Babis's biggest problem. His political future lies in the hands of ailing President Milos Zeman. Mr Zeman, who has already said he will vote for ANO, says he will nominate the leader of the largest party to form a new government. This will almost certainly be Mr Babis. The president describes the opposition coalitions as a "fraud" on the electorate. Czech president Milos Zeman delivers a speech during the commemoration of COVID-19 pandemic Image source, Getty Images Image caption, Rumours that the ailing president is seriously ill have been denied But Mr Zeman is not well. The 77-year-old president, a heavy smoker and former heavy drinker, suffers from Type 2 diabetes and uses a wheelchair. He was recently hospitalised for eight days with no official explanation. After two days of silence his spokesman responded with a cryptic tweet quoting the Bible. The president's office later announced Mr Zeman was suffering from exhaustion and dehydration. But there were new rumours this week, officially rebutted, that his condition was more serious. His chancellor was even forced to deny in a radio interview that he was dead. No, he said, he was looking forward to casting his vote on Friday and playing an active role in post-election negotiations. If for whatever reason he is unable to, there could be even more uncertainty. 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