Slovenia flagPolitics & Government Guide · Slovenia

Politics & Government Guide in Slovenia

Political system, governance structure, stability indicators, and democratic institutions

Slovenia is a parliamentary democratic republic where Prime Minister Robert Golob's Freedom Movement narrowly won the March 2026 parliamentary election with 29 seats against 28 for the opposition SDS. The government coalition's future remains uncertain amid close results and fragmented parliament. The country maintains strong democratic institutions with recent reforms in public sector wages.

Political Stability

Good

Corruption Index

Moderate

Democracy Index

Good

Government Type

Parliamentary democratic republic

Legal System

Civil law system

Head of State

President Nataša Pirc Musar(since 2022)

Head of Government

Prime Minister Robert Golob(Freedom Movement)since 2022

Political Indicators

Political Stability
0.85Rank #28

Scale: 0-1

Stable

World Bank (2024)

Corruption Index
56Rank #41

Scale: 0-100

Transparency International (2024)

Press Freedom
72.5Rank #32

Scale: 0-100

Reporters Without Borders (2024)

Democracy Index
8.07Rank #22

Scale: 0-10

Full Democracy

Economist Intelligence Unit (2024)

Legislature

Type:bicameral
Upper House:National Council (40 seats)
Lower House:National Assembly (90 seats)

Major Political Parties

Freedom Movement(Svoboda)

Centre-left

29 seats
Slovenian Democratic Party(SDS)

Centre-right

28 seats
Social Democrats(SD)

Centre-left

6 seats

Voting Rights

All adult citizens of the Republic of Slovenia have the right to vote for representatives of the people in general, multi-party and free elections. EU citizens can vote in local and European elections. Full voting rights after citizenship.

Recent Developments

  • Parliamentary elections held on 2026-03-22 resulted in a narrow victory for the Freedom Movement with 29 seats
  • Public sector wage reform law entered into force on 2025-01-01, addressing wage disparities and inflation adjustments
  • Formation of new government coalition remains uncertain following the 2026 election due to slim margins
Voting Age18
SuffrageUniversal
Constitution1991
Municipalities212