Requirements for candidacy Under Slovenian Election Law, candidates for president require support of either: • 10 members of the National Assembly, • one or more political parties and either 3 members of the National Assembly or 3,000 voters, • or 5,000 voters. Each political party can support only one candidate. In the election, the president is elected with a majority of the vote. If no candidate receives more than half of votes, the top two candidates meet in the second round of election.
Leading candidates The first official candidate was
Lojze Peterle, a
conservative member of the
European Parliament and first democratically elected Prime Minister of Slovenia (1990–1992), who announced his candidacy in November 2006. He was endorsed by the three government center-right parties,
New Slovenia (NSi),
Slovenian Democratic Party (SDS), and
Slovenian People's Party (SLS). Drnovšek's announcement that he would not run for president again led to expectations that the
Social Democrats (SD) would nominate their leader
Borut Pahor and indeed Pahor confirmed that he was ready to run for the office. The Social Democrats had become the most popular party in opinion polls and were considered the likely winners at the next general election in 2008; opinion polls indicated that Pahor would easily win the presidential election. However, after months of mixed signals, Pahor finally announced that he would instead concentrate on the general election and would not run for the mostly ceremonial office of the president. The Social Democrats then nominated
Danilo Türk, a former Slovenian ambassador and high official in the
United Nations, who at the time was a professor at the
University of Ljubljana's Faculty of Law. Türk's candidacy was also endorsed by
Zares and the pensioners' party
DeSUS. Türk also gained support from
Active Slovenia (AS) and the
Party of Ecological Movements (SEG), two parties not represented in the National Assembly.
Liberal Democracy of Slovenia (LDS), which had earlier discussed the candidacy with Danilo Türk, subsequently nominated
Mitja Gaspari, the former Governor of the Bank of Slovenia. Gaspari had earlier had discussions with the Social Democrats about the candidacy. The
Slovenian National Party (SNS) nominated its leader,
Zmago Jelinčič. Jelinčič had already run for the office at the
2002 election, finishing third with 8.51% of the votes. Early polls indicated that Peterle, who had been campaigning for months and had cultivated the image of a "man of the people", would win the election in a runoff against Türk or possibly Gaspari. Image:2011 Lojze Peterle.JPG|Lojze Peterle, independent candidate, supported by NSi, SDS and SLS Image:Danilo Türk (20070108 EP-154599B) (cropped).jpg|Danilo Türk, independent candidate, supported by SD, DeSUS, Zares, AS and SEG Image:Mitja Gaspari 2011 cropped.jpg|Mitja Gaspari, independent candidate, supported by LDS Image:JelincicZmago.jpg|Zmago Jelinčič, candidate of SNS
Other candidates Other candidates, none of whom were expected to win a significant share of votes, were
Darko Krajnc of the formerly parliamentarian
Youth Party of Slovenia, the disabled rights activist
Elena Pečarič, and
Monika Piberl, supported by the
Women's Voice of Slovenia party. Pečarič was supported by non-aligned
Majda Širca, independent
Slavko Gaber and
Roberto Battelli, representative of the Italian minority in Slovenia. Krajnc and Piberl were supported by non-parliamentary political parties so they only needed to collect 3,000 support votes. Several other candidates publicly announced their intention to run for the office. Jože Andrejaš, Jožef Horvat, Matej Sedmak, Marjan Beranič, Marko Kožar and Pavel Premrl failed to gather sufficient public support or later decided to withdraw from the race. Artur Štern, after leading a
spoof campaign, announced that he was in fact performing a
hidden camera experiment. The footage was used by
Franci Kek and
Vojko Anzeljc in a film
Gola resnica, airing in early 2009 and addressing objectivity of media, problems with election legislation and reactions from Slovenes. ==First round campaign==