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On the last day, when it was possible to register as participants in the political campaign with the Central Election Commission (CEC), it became clear that the Labor Party was nominating A.Guoga in the Trakai-Vievis constituency.
In the answers 15 minutes He did not rule out being able to keep a list of the Labor Party.
There are more and more rumors that MEP Viktor Uspaskich will not do that, because if he enters the Seimas, he would lose the mandate of his MEP.
“I don’t want that position, but if the party decides, the responsibility
I’d take ” 15 minutes He asked if he would keep the Labor Party list, A.Guoga said.
And what about Australian citizenship? Last year, A.Guoga explained that he had not renounced citizenship in this country and that he did not intend to relinquish it.
“Currently, I have both Lithuanian and Australian citizenship. As you know, Lithuanian citizens who are also non-EU citizens have full rights to stand for the EP elections. The same provisions applied to me in 2014. I do not plan any changes in the near future, “he told the ELTA news agency last May.
15 minutes When asked this week if he had renounced Australian citizenship, and if not, if he would have prevented him from running as a candidate, Guoga replied succinctly: “Yes. It will not interfere. “
The Seimas Elections Law states that a citizen of the Republic of Lithuania who is not bound by an oath or promise with a foreign state may be elected a member of the Seimas.
A.Guoga says that he goes to Seimas with the idea: everything for Lithuania.
“I want to be useful, so I decided to participate in the Seimas elections of the Republic of Lithuania. I have always emphasized that focusing on the problems and concerns of the common man is my top priority. A program close to me. Impressed by a rejuvenating team I thank Viktor for his trust and invitation to participate in the elections, “he said in the responses for 15 minutes.
The businessman, previously a member of the Liberal Movement and later a candidate with Nagli Puteikis, says that he has liberal opinions and that this will not change.
“The agenda of the centralist right is beneficial for Lithuania and its people. We need to understand that the parties, committees or other political movements are no longer the motionless monoliths that we used to see thirty years or more ago. I am firmly convinced that the Lithuanian people are very capable
choose who can best represent their interests, which team they trust the most and tend to trust it at the helm of the state, ”he says.
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