Czechs rally in country's largest anti-government protest since 2019


Demonstrators take part in an anti-government protest rally in Prague, Czech Republic, March 21, 2026. REUTERS/Eva Korinkova

PRAGUE, March 21 (Reuters) - ⁠Tens of thousands of Czechs rallied on Saturday in the country's ⁠biggest anti-government demonstration since 2019, protesting against defense spending cuts under ‌Prime Minister Andrej Babis and over fears his administration will target public media.

Protesters started arriving hours before the rally began at Letna plain overlooking the historic center, where many waved Czech ​and European Union flags. Organizers estimated the turnout ⁠at around 250,000 people.

"I'm here ⁠because I care about my country's future," said 22-year-old Tomas Chaloupka. "It upsets me ⁠that ‌the current government is trying to manipulate the free and independent media, and freedom and democracy are paramount."

Babis and his populist ANO ⁠party returned to power in December after four years in ​opposition, leading a ‌government with right-wing and far-right parties.

Protest organisers Milion Chvilek (Million Moments for Democracy) ⁠have warned ​the country could head the way of Slovakia or Hungary, central European neighbours that have clashed with the European Union executive over rule-of-law issues.

"We don't want to be ⁠Hungary," teacher Hana Malanikova said. "We don't want to ​follow the Slovak Republic's path. So it's time to wake up."

Critics have also raised concerns over the new government's shifts in policy, and a similar protest in ⁠February in support of President Petr Pavel, who has clashed with Babis' government over ministerial nominations and defence spending, drew up to 90,000 people.

Opponents of Babis' government have also highlighted a cut in defence spending in the budget, ​along with plans to change financing for public television, ⁠which they warn would hurt its independence, and tightening disclosure rules for non-governmental ​organisations.

Babis, who built a business empire in the ‌food, chemical and agricultural sectors, was prime ​minister in 2017-2021. Milion Chvilek organised similar protests in 2019 that drew over 200,000 people.

(Writing by Michael Kahn, Editing by Rod Nickel)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In World

EU anti-racism chief says discrimination deeply embedded across Europe
Former FBI chief Mueller has died, according to MSNOW report
Ghanaian, Nigerian securities rescue 44 people from fake recruitment agencies
UK says its bases on Cyprus will not be used in offensive operations, Cypriot spokesperson says
Feature: Ethiopia sees expanding e-bike market amid rising fuel price
Feature: Life returns to Khartoum homes on Eid Al-Fitr despite war constraints
Exclusive-Bahrain cites Patriot interception in March 9 Iranian drone incident
More than 20 countries pledge support for safe navigation in the Strait of Hormuz
Exclusive-Bahrain says Patriot missile system involved in March 9 blast over residential area
As New Mexico investigates, questions are raised about Epstein's links to the powerful

Others Also Read