SKOPJE, North Macedonia — North Macedonia's parliament began a two-day debate leading up to a vote on the new government proposed by a center-right party that won May's national elections.
Heading the proposed government is Hristijan Mickoski, a 46-year-old former engineering professor who has pledged to continue his center-left predecessors' efforts to shepherd the small Balkan NATO member into the European Union.
Speaking in parliament Saturday, Mickoski said the new cabinet would maintain efforts to bring the country in line with EU standards.
"Support continues for Ukraine to defend its national integrity and sovereignty,'' in the war against Russia, he added, and pledged to build good relations with North Macedonia's neighbors.
But Mickoski's more nationalist tone could alienate neighboring Bulgaria and Greece, both EU members with the power to hinder his country's accession to the 27-nation bloc.
Mickoski is expected to win Sunday's vote easily, having secured the support of 78 lawmakers in the 120-seat house.
His VMRO-DPMNE party heads a coalition that gained just over 43% of the vote in the May 8 elections, winning 58 seats — three short of a governing majority. Mickoski struck a coalition deal with the ethnic Albanian Vredi, or Worth, party and the small leftist ZNAM, securing a comfortable majority.
Under the agreement, VMRO-DPMNE will have 15 ministerial positions, while Vredi and ZNAM will get six and two, respectively.