2010 Czech parliamentary election explained

Country:Czech Republic
Type:parliamentary
Previous Election:2006 Czech parliamentary election
Previous Year:2006
Next Election:2013 Czech parliamentary election
Next Year:2013
Seats For Election:All 200 seats in the Chamber of Deputies
Majority Seats:101
Election Date:28–29 May 2010
Turnout:62.55% (1.87pp)
Image1:Jiří Paroubek.JPG
Leader1:Jiří Paroubek
Party1:Czech Social Democratic Party
Last Election1:32.32%, 74 seats
Seats1:56
Seat Change1: 18
Popular Vote1:1,155,267
Percentage1:22.09%
Swing1:10.23pp
Leader2:Petr Nečas
Party2:Civic Democratic Party (Czech Republic)
Last Election2:35.38%, 81 seats
Seats2:53
Seat Change2: 28
Popular Vote2:1,057,792
Percentage2:20.22%
Swing2:15.16pp
Image3:Karel Schwarzenberg on June 2, 2011.jpg
Leader3:Karel Schwarzenberg
Party3:TOP 09
Last Election3:Did not exist
Seats3:41
Seat Change3:New
Popular Vote3:873,833
Percentage3:16.71%
Swing3:New
Image4:Vojtěch Filip 2013 (cropped).JPG
Leader4:Vojtěch Filip
Party4:Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia
Last Election4:12.81%, 26 seats
Seats4:26
Popular Vote4:589,765
Percentage4:11.27%
Swing4:1.54pp
Image5:Radek John 2.jpg
Leader5:Radek John
Party5:Public Affairs (political party)
Last Election5:Did not exist
Seats5:24
Seat Change5:New
Popular Vote5:569,127
Percentage5:10.88%
Swing5:New
Prime Minister
Posttitle:Prime Minister after election
Before Election:Jan Fischer
Before Party:Independent politician
After Election:Petr Nečas
After Party:Civic Democratic Party (Czech Republic)

Parliamentary elections were held in the Czech Republic on 28–29 May 2010 to elect the 200 members of the Chamber of Deputies.[1] The elections had been expected to take place sometime before the end of 2009, but was postponed due to legal challenges.[2] Before the election, the country had been governed by a caretaker administration headed by Jan Fischer.[3] The Czech Social Democratic Party (ČSSD) was the front-runner of the election and its leader Jiří Paroubek was the favourite to become the new Prime Minister.[4] [5] [6]

ČSSD came first in the election, although they suffered significant losses in seats and the popular vote.[7] The conservative Civic Democratic Party (ODS) and TOP 09 followed in second and third, with the Communist Party finishing fourth. ČSSD leader Jiří Paroubek resigned after the election, conceding that a conservative coalition government appeared likely due to the rise in support for two new right-wing parties: TOP 09 and Public Affairs (VV). In June, a centre-right coalition of ODS, TOP 09, and VV was formed, with Petr Nečas becoming the prime minister.

Background

On 24 March 2009, after four previous failed attempts, the opposition ČSSD succeeded in passing a no confidence vote against the government of Prime Minister Mirek Topolánek (ODS) in the lower house of the Czech parliament. The measure passed with 101 votes to 96, with several members of Topolánek's own party voting with the opposition.[8]

On 28 March 2009, ČSSD leader Jiří Paroubek and Topolánek agreed to hold early elections in October 2009.[9] They later agreed to form an interim government of experts (before the end of the Czech EU presidency), with half of the government nominated by ČSSD and half by two parties of the incumbent government (ODS and The Greens; the third party KDU–ČSL did not participate), and that early elections would be held on 16–17 October 2009.[10] On 5 April 2009, Paroubek and Topolánek agreed on Jan Fischer, the head of the national statistical office, as the interim Prime Minister, to take over on 8 May 2009, and stated that elections would be held by 15 October 2009, most likely on 9–10 October 2009.[2]

The newly founded party Tradition Responsibility Prosperity 09 (TOP 09), which had split off from the KDU–ČSL, also contested the election. Some polls showed the party to be in fourth place, closely behind the Communist Party.[11]

The election date was initially scheduled for 1 July 2009,[12] but ex-ČSSD Independent MP Miloš Melčák filed a complaint with the Constitutional Court, on the grounds that he had a right to sit in parliament for a full term, and the election was postponed while the court examined the legality of the law setting the election date.[13] A hearing was scheduled for 10 September 2009; if the court ruled against the complaint at that hearing, elections would be held as planned, but politicians agreed that they would rather change the constitution to simplify the procedure of calling early elections, and using the new provisions, the election would be held with a delay of at most one month,[14] [15] regardless of the court's decision, most likely on 6–7 November.[16] [17] However, the Constitutional Court viewed the constitutional amendment calling for one-off early elections as a retroactive decision in violation of the existing constitutional procedures regulating early elections, and struck down the act on the grounds that it violated the procedure for constitutional amendments, the right to vote, and the inalienable principle of a law-abiding state.[18] As the Court ruled the election date invalid, the laws (a constitutional amendment and a law shortening election deadlines) were passed on 11 September as planned.[19] President Klaus signed the laws on 12 September, and parliament planned to dissolve itself on 15 September.[20] Melčák stated, however, that he would likely file another complaint if this plan went ahead.[21]

In a surprise move, ČSSD announced on 15 September that it would not vote in favour of dissolution, as the new law was likely to be challenged by Melčák again, and this would again call the legality of the election into question; they were now in favour of elections in mid-2010, on the initially scheduled dates.[22] ČSSD had 71 seats and needed ten more MPs to support their position to delay the election, but it was considered likely that they would succeed in blocking the election.[23] [24] The Christian and Democratic Union (KDU-ČSL) also withdrew their support for early elections, meaning the election would be held in May 2010.[25]

Following controversial comments about the Catholic Church, Jews and homosexuals, ODS chairman Topolánek withdrew from the election and resigned as party leader on 26 March 2010.[26] He was replaced by Petr Nečas.[27]

Contesting political parties and candidates

PartyIdeologyLeader2006 result
Civic Democratic Party (ODS)Conservatism, Economic liberalism, EuroscepticismPetr Nečas35.4%
Czech Social Democratic Party (ČSSD)Social democracy, Pro-EuropeanismJiří Paroubek32.3%
Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia (KSČM)
Party of Democratic Socialism
Communism, EuroscepticismVojtěch Filip12.8%
TOP 09
Mayors and Independents

Mayors for Liberec Region
Liberal conservatism, Pro-EuropeanismKarel Schwarzenbergnew
Public Affairs (VV)
SNK European Democrats
Conservative liberalism, PopulismRadek Johndidn't contest
Christian and Democratic Union - Czechoslovak People's Party (KDU-ČSL)Christian democracy, Social conservatism, Pro-EuropeanismCyril Svoboda7.2%
Green Party (Zelení)
Party for the Open Society
Green politics, Pro-EuropeanismOndřej Liška6.3%
Party of Civic Rights (SPO)Social democracyMiloš Zemannew
Sovereignty – Party of Common SenseNationalism, EuroscepticismJana Bobošíková0.5%
Workers' Party of Social Justice (DSSS)Neo-Nazism, Ultranationalism, Anti-globalism, EuroscepticismTomáš Vandas0.2%
Czech Pirate Party (Piráti)Pirate politics, Direct and Participatory democracy, Open state, Liberalism[28] Ivan Bartošnew
Party of Free Citizens (Svobodní)
Law and Justice
Classical liberalism, Right-libertarianism, Libertarian conservatism, EuroscepticismPetr Machnew
Coalition for Republic – Republican Party of Czechoslovakia (SPR–RSČ)National conservatism, Anti-immigration, Czechoslovak unionism, EuroscepticismMiroslav Sládek0.2%

Campaign

Issues that featured heavily in the campaign included the Greek government-debt crisis, the global financial crisis, the possibility of national bankruptcy, and corruption.

Civic Democratic Party (ODS)

ODS launched its campaign on 16 March 2010,[29] with reducing unemployment as the main focus. The party stated it would support shorter working periods and employment of graduates and seniors.[30] The party used mannequins of fictional characters Václav Dobrák and Marie Slušná as campaign mascots and the campaign slogans "ODS is the solution" and "It won't happen without your vote."[31]

When their main rival ČSSD used blue ambulances in their campaign to attack ODS, the party reacted by parking a demolished orange ambulance outside the Chamber of Deputies to depict how healthcare would look if ČSSD led the government.[32]

The previous leader of ODS, former Prime Minister Mirek Topolánek, was replaced as leader by Petr Nečas on 26 March 2010, considered a more acceptable and popular candidate than Topolánek.[33] [34] ČSSD leader Jiří Paroubek stated that he could cooperate with Nečas in some circumstances. Nečas rejected Paroubek's comments and stated that ODS would not form a Grand coalition with ČSSD after the election.[35] [36] ODS started focusing on economics and public finances in April 2010, promising to reduce public debt to avoid bankruptcy, and using the example of Greece to warn against ČSSD.[37] The party also used negative campaigning against ČSSD, focused primarily on Paroubek.[38] [39]

The Civic Democrats conducted an active campaign on the internet, communicating with potential voters on Facebook, Twitter and YouTube. The party held an online "virtual demonstration" against ČSSD.[40] On 30 April 2010, ODS released an election advert entitled "Your vote", commemorating the trial of Milada Horáková and the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia, and warning against Social Democrats and Communists. The clip urged Jiří Paroubek to resign as ČSSD leader, a response to Paroubek's appeal to some ODS politicians to quit politics.[41]

Nečas held campaign events in multiple towns across the Czech Republic, meeting potential voters.[42] ODS also featured Nečas heavily in its billboard campaign, launched in May 2010,[43] which presented him as a candidate of "responsible politics".[40]

Nečas attacked ČSSD over the election debate, criticising the fact that Paroubek had agreed to just three debates, and accusing him of avoiding a confrontation with him.[44] The first head-to-head debate between Nečas and Paroubek was held on 12 April 2018, resulting in no clear winner, according to analysts.[45] [46] A second debate was held on 23 May 2010,[47] also with no clear winner.[48] The last debate was held on 26 May 2010, with journalists judging Nečas to have been better prepared and more confident than Paroubek,[49] and the victor of the debate.[50]

The party published campaign newspapers with the title Jasně ("Of Course"), introducing their policies and candidates.[51]

ODS launched the final phase of its campaign, called "120 Hours for Victory", on 23 May 2010. Nečas said that ODS had to "stop Jiří Paroubek and the Communists". 120 Hours for Victory included performances by Czech singers such as Eva Pilarová, Helena Zeťová, Ivan Mládek, Tereza Kerndlová and Jitka Zelenková, attended by hundreds of party supporters. The party invited foreign politicians who came to the event to support ODS. The party was endorsed by British Prime Minister David Cameron and Slovak politician Iveta Radičová who both attended the event.[52]

Czech Social Democratic Party (ČSSD)

ČSSD was led into the election by former Prime Minister Jiří Paroubek. The party was considered the front-runner in the election and Paroubek was believed to be most likely to form the new government.[53] The party's campaign slogans were "A better future for ordinary people" and "Change and Hope".[31]

ČSSD launched their campaign on 22 April 2010.[54] Paroubek stated that the party planned to restore economic growth.[55] The party held large rallies in Czech towns, which ceased in May 2010 when ČSSD MP Bohuslav Sobotka was physically attacked by an opponent of the party. ČSSD politicians decided to meet voters at factories and schools instead.[56] The party also put a lot of effort into a telephone campaign, in which ČSSD politicians phoned people to ask which party they were planning to vote for and ask them about their ideas.[57]

ČSSD made heavy use of negative campaigning directed as ODS and TOP 09, with half of their campaign billboards attacking those two parties. Slogans used on billboards included "Let's stop ODS and TOP 09 on 28 May" or "If you don't vote, you will pay by getting dismissed without cause."[58] The party published campaign newspapers called Health Newspapers, attacking the healthcare plans of the two right-wing parties.[51]

ČSSD concluded its campaign with the slogan "Work and Prosperity", and handed out 100,000 doughnuts at events for party supporters. ČSSD campaign manager Jaroslav Tvrdík stated that the party wanted to "make it more pleasant for people to wake up, and remind them why is voting important".[59] [60]

Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia (KSČM)

The Communist Party, led by Vojtěch Filip, ran a campaign focused on young voters, and held meetings with potential voters in town squares around the country, culminating in a huge rally on Náměstí Republiky, Prague.[61] Younger party activists also attended meetings to attract young voters. The party's campaign used the slogan "With the People, For the People" and also featured celebrities who supported the party, such as singers Martin Maxa and Jana Kociánová.[31]

TOP 09

TOP 09 was founded by Miroslav Kalousek in June 2009. Karel Schwarzenberg was elected leader of the new party, and they entered a partnership with Mayors and Independents.[62] [63] TOP 09 decided to target conservative voters and began raising funds for their campaign,[64] [65] which was launched on 27 April 2010. Schwarzenberg promised a fight against corruption, healthcare reform, and moral renewal of the country.[66] The party also attacked Public Affairs.[67] The campaign, which was inspired by Barack Obama's 2008 presidential campaign, featured billboards using the slogan "more than you think".[31]

Public Affairs (VV)

Public Affairs were led by author and journalist Radek John. The party launched its campaign on 20 April 2010, with John stating that he believed the party would receive more than 10% of votes. The party promised an end to "political dinosaurs" and promised to fight against corruption.[68]

Christian and Democratic Union – Czechoslovak People's Party (KDU–ČSL)

KDU–ČSL, led by Cyril Svoboda, launched its campaign on 8 April 2010.[69] [70] The party had a shortage of campaign funding, and focused on a personal campaign, with party leaders visiting workplaces, social institutions and retirement homes.[71] KDU-ČSL used the slogans "KDU-ČSL, the better in us" and "A good day is when ..."[31]

Green Party (SZ)

The Green Party, led by Ondřej Liška,[72] [73] launched its campaign on 27 April 2010,[74] which featured prominent supporters of the party such as former President Václav Havel, Lenka Dusilová, and Meda Mládková.[75]

The Greens focused heavily on communicating directly with citizens and their internet campaign. Liška stated that the Greens wanted to be different from the big parties and be "modest and sincere".[76] The Greens considered TOP 09 and Public Affairs to be their main rivals. Their campaign focused on the environment and support for a healthy lifestyle, while also telling voters that their economic programme was good for the Czech Republic.[77] [78]

The party concluded its campaign by releasing three video adverts in which party supporters tried to convince people to vote for them.[59]

Party of Civic Rights (SPOZ)

Party of Civic Rights was led by former Prime Minister Miloš Zeman, who stated that party's aim was to enter the Chamber of Deputies.[79] Zeman used a bus called "Zemák" for his campaign.[80]

Sovereignty – Party of Common Sense (Suverenita)

Sovereignty launched its campaign in January 2010, which focused heavily on leader Jana Bobošíková. The party used a campaign bus called Bobobus.[81] [82]

Independent initiatives

Defenestration 2010

Defenestration 2010 was an independent initiative organised by František Janouch and Lenka Procházková, urging voters to use their preferential votes to help elect lesser known politicians, as they were "less likely to be involved in corruption".[83]

Replace Politicians

Replace Politicians was an independent initiative supported by celebrities such as Dan Bárta, Aneta Langerová, Radek Banga, Viktor Preiss and David Koller, calling for voters to support smaller parties. The initiative held events and concerts, and the band Nightwork released a video clip to support the initiative.[84]

Campaign finances

Party Money Spent Campaign Worth
213,000,000 Kč[85] 192,885,423 Kč[86]
184,124,000 Kč 333,084,552 Kč
108,047,075 Kč 57,715,754 Kč
60,376,994 Kč 29,032,691 Kč
53,628,000 Kč 25,287,285 Kč
50,000,000 Kč 3,795,362 Kč
12,737,573 Kč 1,658,820 Kč
10,200,000 Kč 6,648,556 Kč
7,000,000 Kč 10,655,395 Kč
1,100,000 Kč
230,000 Kč

Television debates

The leaders of the two largest parties, Petr Nečas and Jiří Paroubek, appeared in four head-to-head debates. The first debate was organised by Česká televize in April 2010. The second was organised by Prima televize, and was a calm debate without personal attacks. The third debate was more aggressive and featured a number of personal attacks. The final debate was organised by Česká televize and was based on the format of debates organised by the BBC in the United Kingdom.[87]

2010 Czech parliamentary election debates
DateOrganisers<---->
ODSČSSDKSČMTOP 09VVKDU–ČSLSZSPOZ
12 AprilČeská televize
23 MayPrima televize
25 May[88] Český rozhlas
26 MayČeský rozhlas
27 MayČeská televize
Viewed as "the winner of debate"
DebatePollODSČSSDKSČMTOP 09VVKDU–ČSLSZSPO
23 May
Prima televize
Ipsos Tambor[89] Nečas
57%
Paroubek
43%

Opinion polls

See main article: Opinion polling for the 2010 Czech parliamentary election.

DatePolling FirmČSSDODSTOP 09KSČMVVKDU-ČSLSZSPOZOthers
<--colour taken from the official ČSSD logo.--><--colour taken from the official ODS website.--><--colour taken from the official KSČM website.--><--colour taken from the official KDU-ČSL logo.--><--colour taken from the official Zelení website.-->
28-29 May 2010Election22.120.216.711.310.94.42.44.37.7
Exit pollSC&C20.020.017.011.011.05.03.04.09.0
7–12 May 2010Factum Invenio26.322.910.913.112.65.52.52.63.6
3–10 May 2010CVVM30.519.014.013.011.53.54.52.02.0
Sanep29.922.310.112.99.84.72.85.52.0
2 Apr - 1 May 2010Median26.219.010.713.37.67.53.56.85.3
23–28 April 2010Factum Invenio27.521.711.113.911.05.22.93.23.5
13–28 April 2010Médea Research30.418.713.710.012.04.44.93.72.2
7–13 April 2010Sanep29.020.113.413.08.55.63.65.21.6
5–12 April 2010CVVM30.022.511.513.09.04.04.03.03.0
1–10 April 2010STEM27.818.69.39.98.14.93.23.115.2
3 - 9 Apr 2010Factum Invenio29.522.311.613.98.95.52.62.73.0
2 Mar - 30 Apr 2010Median27.021.27.516.84.37.44.811.0
1 - 8 Mar 2010CVVM32.025.510.012.07.04.54.53.01.5
27 Feb - 8 Mar 2010STEM27.920.07.711.36.24.83.83.614.7
26 Feb - 3 Mar 2010Factum Invenio27.423.011.814.47.86.24.74.7
7–13 April 2010Sanep29.020.113.413.08.55.63.65.21.6
2 - 3 Jun 20062006 Election32.335.312.87.26.36.1

Results

The centre-left ČSSD won the most votes, with 22.1%.[3] The conservative ODS and TOP 09 followed with 20.2% and 16.7% respectively. The Communist Party came fourth with 11.3%, ahead of the centre-right VV which received 10.9%.[90] It was the first time that the Communists had finished lower than third in a Czech election.[91] TOP 09 and VV won seats in Parliament for the first time.[92] The Christian Democrats (4.4%), the Party of Civic Rights (4.3%), the Green Party (2.4%), and Sovereignty (3.7%), failed to gain the 5% necessary to enter parliament.[93] [94] Voter turnout was 62.6% nationally,[95] highest in Prague-West District (71.69%) and lowest in Sokolov District (50.89%). The results were a setback for the Czech Republic's largest parties, ČSSD and ODS.[96] President Václav Klaus said that the results would cause a "fundamental weakening" of the two parties.[97]

By region

Plzeň Region

Aftermath

After the election results were announced, Jiří Paroubek resigned as ČSSD leader, citing disappointment with the outcome,[98] and saying that "it seems that people have chosen the direction the republic should go in and it is a different direction than the one ČSSD were offering".[99] ČSSD had led comfortably in polling before the election, and its 22% share of the vote was a significant drop from the party's 32% in the 2006 election.[100] Paroubek conceded that a conservative coalition government was likely.[101]

KDU-ČSL failed to enter the parliament for the first time in the party's history. Party leader Cyril Svoboda admitted disappointment, and took responsibility for the result,[102] resigning as leader on 6 June 2010. Michaela Šojdrová became acting leader.[103]

The Green Party also dropped out of the Chamber of Deputies. Party leader Ondřej Liška resigned and announced a snap leadership election.[104]

Government formation

ODS, TOP 09 and VV had all committed to government spending cuts, raising the prospect of the formation of a fiscally conservative cabinet.[93] The leaders of the three parties held coalition talks shortly after the results were published.[105] ODS leader Petr Nečas said that the three parties had a "common will" to form a government,[97] [106] stating that their financial plans would work together to help the country avoid a crisis similar to the one affecting Greece at the time. Negotiations between the three parties about the formation of a new government started on 2 June 2010,[107] and the parties signed a proclamation to continue negotiations.[108]

After extensive talks regarding the terms of the coalition, Nečas was appointed Prime Minister on 28 June 2010.[109] Public Affairs held a referendum among party members to decide whether to join the new government. The result was announced on 12 July 2018, with 2,912 members voting in favour and 815 against.[110] The coalition agreement was signed on the same day.[111]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Czechs to go to polls in general elections on last weekend of May . . Ian . Willoughby . 5 February 2010 . 7 February 2010.
  2. News: Update 2-Czech leaders agree on cabinet, early election . . 5 April 2009.
  3. News: Left Wins Czech Vote, but Right Makes Gains. Bilefsky. Dan. 29 May 2010. The New York Times . 29 May 2010.
  4. Web site: Sázkové kanceláře mají jasno: premiérem bude Jiří Paroubek . Lidovky.cz . 18 August 2018 . cs . 24 May 2010.
  5. Web site: Jak nevyhrál Paroubek a kdo po volbách řekl: Máte, co jste chtěli! . Expres.cz . 18 August 2018 . 20 October 2017.
  6. Web site: Měsíc do voleb: přišel pan Čistý, ale Buldozer si udržuje náskok . iDNES.cz . 18 August 2018 . 28 April 2010.
  7. News: Czech Republic voters move to right in general election . BBC News . 30 May 2010.
  8. News: Czech MPs oust government in vote . BBC News . 24 March 2009.
  9. News: Czech Party Leaders Agree To Early Polls in October . . 28 March 2009 . Reuters.
  10. Web site: Access Denied | Prague Monitor . 2009-04-01 . dead . https://archive.today/20120713172501/http://praguemonitor.com/2009/04/01/czech-coalition-agrees-opposition-cssd-interim-govt . 13 July 2012 . dmy-all .
  11. Web site: Support Eroding for Czech Social Democrats . . 31 August 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090901145816/http://www.angus-reid.com/polls/view/34127/support_eroding_for_czech_social_democrats . 1 September 2009 . dmy .
  12. News: Czech president calls election for October 9–10 . Reuters India . 1 July 2009.
  13. News: Czech Constitutional Court postpones decree on early elections . ČeskéNoviny.cz . 1 September 2009.
  14. News: Czechs Try to Get Snap Election Back on Track . The Wall Street Journal . 3 September 2009 . Sean . Carney . A4.
  15. News: Czech leaders agree to secure quick election . http://webarchive.loc.gov/all/20090903001501/http://www.forbes.com/feeds/afx/2009/09/02/afx6841910.html . dead . 3 September 2009 . Jana . Mlcochova . Forbes . . 2 September 2009 . 26 August 2017 .
  16. News: Czech lawmakers agree to amend Constitution . 9 September 2009 . Aktuálně.cz.
  17. News: Czech PM: Election likely in Nov, Oct possible . 3 September 2009 . Reuters.
  18. News: Dokument: Stručné zdůvodnění ÚS ke kauze volby . aktualne.cz . cs. 10 September 2009. 27 September 2010.
  19. News: Verfassungsreform in Prag im Eilzugstempo . . 12 September 2009 . de.
  20. News: Klaus signs both laws leading to Czech early elections . ČeskéNoviny.cz . 12 September 2009 . Czech News Agency.
  21. News: Weg für Neuwahlen geebnet . https://archive.today/20120717175501/http://derstandard.at/fs/1252037091096/Verfassungs-Novelle-bringt-Neuwahltermin . dead . 17 July 2012 . 13 September 2009 . . de.
  22. News: Czech Social Democrats say not to back early election move . World Bulletin . 15 September 2009 . . https://web.archive.org/web/20110807164617/http://www.worldbulletin.net/index.php?aType=haberArchive&ArticleID=47238 . 7 August 2011.
  23. News: Czech Chamber to hardly dissolve itself without CSSD's support . 15 September 2009 . ČeskéNoviny.cz . Czech News Agency.
  24. News: Czech Republic's snap November poll cast in doubt . https://archive.today/20120905132450/http://www.monstersandcritics.com/news/europe/news/article_1501215.php/Czech-Republic-s-snap-November-poll-cast-in-doubt . dead . 5 September 2012 . Monsters and Critics . 15 September 2009 . .
  25. News: Czech Republic's snap November poll likely scrapped (1st Lead) . https://archive.today/20120905215349/http://www.monstersandcritics.com/news/europe/news/article_1501239.php/Czech-Republic-s-snap-November-poll-likely-scrapped-1st-Lead . dead . 5 September 2012 . Monsters and Critics . 15 September 2009 . .
  26. News: Czech ex-premier Topolanek pulls out of election race . 25 March 2010 . Earth Times . 26 March 2010 . . 14 September 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120914191431/http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/315870,czech-ex-premier-topolanek-pulls-out-of-election-race.html . dead .
  27. News: Necas replaces Topolanek as ODS election leader . 25 March 2010 . ČeskéNoviny.cz . . 26 March 2010.
  28. Web site: Policy Program of the Czech Pirate Party. Pirati.CZ. 22 October 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20161220180304/https://www.pirati.cz/en/program/start. 20 December 2016. dead.
  29. Web site: ODS chce dohnat sociální demokraty. Zítra zahájí kampaň . Lidovky.cz . 11 August 2018 . cs . 15 March 2010.
  30. Web site: ODS spustila kampaň s Václavem Dobrákem a Marií Slušnou . Lidovky.cz . 11 August 2018 . cs . 17 March 2010.
  31. Web site: Kampaň k volbám do Poslanecké sněmovny 2010 . IPM . 11 August 2018 . cs.
  32. Web site: ODS zahájila protiútok zdemolovanou oranžovou sanitkou . Lidovky.cz . 11 August 2018 . cs . 18 March 2010.
  33. Web site: "Efekt Nečas" zatím ODS nepomohl, její ztráta na ČSSD trvá . iDNES.cz . 11 August 2018 . 14 April 2010.
  34. Web site: Topolánek padl. Nečas je připraven být po volbách premiérem . Lidovky.cz . 11 August 2018 . cs . 25 March 2010.
  35. Web site: Nečas: Jsem zásadním odpůrcem velké koalice s ČSSD . Lidovky.cz . 11 August 2018 . cs . 28 March 2010.
  36. Web site: Nečas odmítl Paroubkův diktát, jak udělat z ODS politického partnera . iDNES.cz . 11 August 2018 . 26 March 2010.
  37. Web site: Snížíme dluhy a odvrátíme státní bankrot, přesvědčuje voliče ODS . iDNES.cz . 11 August 2018 . 15 April 2010.
  38. Web site: ODS přepálila negativní kampaň. Obvinila ČSSD z čistky, která nebyla . iDNES.cz . 11 August 2018 . 18 April 2010.
  39. Web site: Česká televize. ODS zahájila negativní kampaň, opírá se hlavně do Paroubka . ČT24. 11 August 2018 . cs.
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