Macedonia's president, PM in power struggle over changing country's name
President refuses to sign off on name change, but parliament, referendum could make that moot
Macedonia's conservative president on Tuesday refused to sign off on a deal with neighbouring Greece for his country to change its name to North Macedonia, a move that would delay — but probably not derail — the deal ratified by Macedonia's parliament last week.
Under the constitution, President Gjorge Ivanov can no longer block the legislation if lawmakers meet again and approve it for a second time.
Parliament Speaker Talat Xhafer told The Associated Press that lawmakers will probably repeat the vote next week.
The deal with Greece was agreed on earlier this month, and is meant to resolve a decades-old dispute dating back to shortly after Macedonia declared independence from Yugoslavia in 1991. Greece argued the name Macedonia implied territorial aspirations on its own northern province of the same name, birthplace of the ancient warrior king Alexander the Great, and on ancient Greek heritage.
The agreed solution will require several more steps, including a referendum this autumn in Macedonia, before it can be fully implemented. Hardliners on both sides of the border oppose the agreement, saying it confers too many advantages on the other side.
The conservative main opposition party, VMRO-DPMNE, boycotted the parliament session ratifying the agreement.
In a statement Tuesday, Ivanov argued that the agreement is unconstitutional.
"I do not accept ideas or suggestions that would jeopardize the Macedonian national identity, the particularity of the Macedonian nation, the Macedonian language and the Macedonian model of coexistence," Ivanov explained.
Referendum in the fall
He added that the deal "brings the Republic of Macedonia into a position of subordination and dependence on another country, that is, Greece."
In Greece, a lawmaker from the small right-wing Independent Greeks party, the junior coalition partner in Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras's government, resigned Tuesday to protest the deal. That cuts Tsipras's majority to 152 of 300 seats in parliament. The Independent Greeks has said they won't back the deal when the Greek parliament meets to ratify it.
In Macedonia, the agreed settlement has caused a major rift between Ivanov and left-wing Prime Minister Zoran Zaev, who has staked his political future on the deal going through — a first step that would allow his country to start accession talks with the European Union and NATO.
Zaev has indicated that he will try to use parliament's power to remove the president from office, which would force presidential elections within months. According to Macedonia's constitution, a two-thirds majority of 81 votes in parliament is needed for that. Zaev would have trouble raising that majority.
Normally, Ivanov's second and last term in office would expire in April 2019.
Macedonians will be called on in the autumn to vote on the name-change deal in a referendum. If that backs the agreement, lawmakers would have to amend the constitution to formalize the name change, and the deal must then be ratified by Greece's parliament to come into effect.
Zaev said in an interview with local television late Monday that he would resign if the referendum rejects the deal.
"Yes, I will leave if the referendum fails, but I am sure it will succeed," he said. "The people have ... no other alternative."