SKOPJE, North Macedonia — North Macedonia's center-right leader secured parliamentary approval to lead a new coalition government in a vote late Sunday.
Hristijan Mickoski, 46, faces significant challenges in his four-year term in office — above all to advance the small Balkan NATO member's lengthy efforts to join the 27-nation European Union.
At the same time, his VMRO-DPMNE party's nationalist bent is antagonizing neighboring members of the affluent bloc, in stark contrast to the previous center-left government it defeated i n May's national elections.
A total 77 lawmakers in the 120-seat house voted in favor of the new government, and 22 voted against. The remaining 21 lawmakers were absent during the ballot.
Mickoski's VMRO-DPMNE-led coalition gained 43% of the vote on May 8, winning 58 seats — three short of a governing majority. Mickoski then struck a deal to form a government with an ethnic Albanian and a leftist party, which together have 20 seats.
Mickoski, a former professor of engineering, has pledged to continue his center-left predecessors' efforts to shepherd North Macedonia into the EU.
However, VMRO-DPMNE's questioning of key agreements with neighboring Bulgaria and Greece — both which can block North Macedonia's accession — could put the brakes on the EU project, said political analyst Petar Arsovski.
''(VMRO-DPMNE) basically demands a reinterpretation of both the (deal with Greece) and the agreement with Bulgaria,'' he told The Associated Press.