PENPIX: Key figures in Macedonia's June 1 election
(Reuters) - Macedonians vote on Sunday for a government that will be asked to get the country's NATO bid back on track, start accession talks with the European Union and calm tensions after weeks of violence between ethnic Albanian parties.
Here are brief portraits of the main figures in the June 1 parliamentary election:
* NIKOLA GRUEVSKI, 37, VMRO-DPMNE
Orientation: Technocrat, populist, conservative
Biography: Gruevski and his team of young, foreign-educated technocrats took power from the Social Democrats following an election in 2006.
A former finance minister, Gruevski succeeded former nationalist leader Ljubco Georgievski, who was in office during a 2001 Albanian insurgency. Seen as hard-working and committed to reform, Gruevski is one of the country's most popular politicians.
Promises: Not to change the name of the country under Greek pressure, push on with reforms to secure EU talks, revitalize the economy and banish corruption.
Quote: "Others promise, we achieve. In two years we achieved more than the others did in 17 years."
Slogan: 'Macedonia knows! The rebirth continues.'
Latest poll figures: 26.1 percent
* RADMILA SEKERINSKA, 35, Social-Democratic Union
Orientation: Centre-left, moderate liberal, pro-Western
Biography: Sekerinska took over after the party lost the 2006 election. Despite her credentials in leading Macedonia's efforts to get EU candidate status, she is struggling to come out from under the shadow of President Branko Crvenkovski, one of the party's founders.
Promises: A date for starting accession talks by year-end, and an invitation to join NATO; attract foreign investment, create jobs, improve healthcare and education.
Quote: "I rarely give promises. But I can promise you that within six months we will have a date for negotiations with the EU and an invitation to join NATO."
Slogan: "The sun is coming" Continued...
Taliban may wait out Washington's "endgame"
Washington's hint of an Afghanistan endgame in saying U.S. troops won't still be there in 2017 might help win over a war-weary public, but there is no guarantee a notoriously patient Taliban won't just wait the Americans out. Full Article | Full Coverage



