On 11 October 2011, the
National Council of the Slovak Republic, the parliament of Slovakia, voted on whether to approve the expansion of the
European Financial Stability Fund. As Slovakia was the last eurozone country to vote on the measure, prime minister
Iveta Radičová of the
Slovak Democratic and Christian Union – Democratic Party (SDKÚ) made it a
vote of confidence. The motion was called on the grounds, according to the
Freedom and Solidarity (SaS) party, that Slovakia, the second poorest eurozone country, should not bail out richer countries such as Greece in the interest of bank re-capitalisation. The motion then failed by 21 votes after SaS and
Direction – Social Democracy (Smer–SD) abstained. Smer-SD then came to an agreement with the governing coalition to support the measure in what party chairman and former prime minister
Robert Fico called "the most important document of this period." He also explained the first round rejection of the measure as "saying 'no' to a rightist government, but we're saying 'yes' to the rescue fund." As per the agreement between the two parties, foreign minister
Mikuláš Dzurinda (SDKÚ) said that, in return for Smer's support, a
snap election would be called: "We decided that as the first point of [Thursday's] parliamentary session, we will work on a proposal to shorten the voting period, with the goal of organising an election on 10 March. Immediately after [13 October or 14 October] we will debate proposals related to the EFSF." On 13 October, following pressure from the European Union, which was in turn warned by the United States and China to get its finances in order, the motion was passed by a vote of 114–30 with 3 abstentions. ==Participating parties==