Valentinas Mazuronis EN
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The ruling Social Democrats continue to top Lithuania's popularity rankings, but other parties are catching up, according to the latest opinion poll published by the Delfi news website.
MEP Valentinas Mazuronis, the chairman of Lithuania's Labour Party, has confirmed he will not be leading his party in October's general elections. That, according to a political analyst, shows that he prioritizes a cushy seat in the European Parliament over volatility of national politics. To read t...
If Lithuania’s elections reflected the followers that leading politicians have on Facebook who would win election to Lithuania’s parliament?
Most observers reckon that, after the Seimas elections, the nucleus of the ruling coalition will be made up of Social Democrats and Liberals, with Ramūnas Karbauskas’s Peasant and Green party and other independent parties contributing to the coalition as well.
Lithuania's ruling parties have agreed on a three-year plan for incrementally raising teachers' wages as unions continue to strike.
Lithuania's ruling coalition says its parties have agreed that the social model liberalizing the labor market should be approved as soon as possible. The issue was discussed at the ruling coalition's political council on Tuesday.
The leadership of Lithuania's Labour Party met to smooth over reported disagreements in its ranks after the parliament speaker's statements gave rise to speculations about her possible withdrawal.
With the Court of Appeals' decision to overturn prison sentences for the Labour Party's fraudulent bookkeeping, talk has returned to the possibility of the party making a real comeback. The court's decision was favourable for the Labour Party, but I doubt they can seriously aim for a victory in the ...
The Labour Party and Order and Justice, two members of Lithuania's current ruling coalition, are parties whose political fortunes are headed for decline, according to analysts.
Labour Party leader, MEP Valentinas Mazuronis said he has no intention of withdrawing from the party leader‘s position until after parliamentary elections.
Labour party will not ask Seimas speaker Loreta Graužinienė to step down despite widespread disapproval (1)
With less than a year left until the Seimas (parliament) elections, the Labour Party is not planning to ask Loreta Graužinienė to leave the Seimas speaker‘s position. However, not only the opposition, but some MPs from the ruling coalition are dissatisfied with the politician.