Czech constitutional court orders government to let president attend NATO summit


Czech President Petr Pavel visits NATO enhanced Forward Presence brigade Latvia in Adazi military base, Latvia March 11, 2026. REUTERS/Ints Kalnins

PRAGUE, June 24 (Reuters) - The Czech ⁠Constitutional Court ordered the government on Wednesday to allow President Petr Pavel to ⁠attend the NATO summit in Turkey next month, issuing an injunction in response ‌to a request from the head of state.

The government, led by the populist ANO party of Prime Minister Andrej Babis, had said on Monday it would break with tradition and not let the president lead the ​Czech delegation. Pavel has had rocky relations with Babis' government.

While ⁠the government sets and conducts Czech ⁠foreign policy, the Czech constitution also stipulates that the president represents the country abroad. Pavel ⁠argued ‌that by not including him in the delegation, his powers were being impeded.

Announcing the ruling at a televised briefing, Judge Pavel Samal said the government and ⁠foreign ministry must inform NATO and organisers of the July ​7-8 summit in Ankara "without delay" ‌that the president will be part of the Czech delegation.

Babis said on X ⁠that he respected ​the court's decision.

Pavel, who is strongly pro-NATO and pro-EU, was formerly the top commander of the Czech army and also led NATO's military committee in 2015 to 2018. He has sometimes clashed with ⁠Babis, who is a fan of U.S. President Donald ​Trump and whose government includes far-right and Eurosceptic parties.

The decision means that the government must accredit Pavel for the summit by Friday's deadline, the court said.

The injunction is a provisional measure ⁠to ensure Pavel does not miss the July summit and does not prejudge a final decision in the case, expected at a later date, on the limits of presidential authority.

Foreign Minister Petr Macinka, who heads the right-wing Motorists party, said earlier this year he would ​make Pavel's life difficult after the president refused to appoint ⁠his party's initial nominee as foreign minister.

While presidents have led Czech delegations at almost all NATO ​summits, Babis has argued that the government needs space ‌to explain to allies its policies, including not ​meeting a NATO target for spending at least 2% of national output on defence.

(Reporting by Jan Lopatka and Jason HovetEditing by Gareth Jones and Bill Berkrot)

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