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Oct 29, 2025

Incoming Czech Coalition Signals Tighter Stance on EU Migration Policies

Incoming Czech Coalition Signals Tighter Stance on EU Migration Policies
Czechia’s domestic politics took a decisive turn toward migration-sceptic policies on 29 October when election-winner Andrej Babiš confirmed that his ANO movement will sign a coalition agreement on 3 November with the Motorists Party and the far-right Freedom and Direct Democracy (SPD). The three-party bloc will command a working majority of 108 seats in the 200-member Chamber of Deputies and is expected to form a government by mid-December.

Although the coalition programme is still being drafted, senior negotiators from ANO and SPD have already flagged a rollback of several EU-level migration and asylum initiatives championed by the outgoing government. In televised comments, SPD leader Tomio Okamura said the new cabinet would “reject mandatory relocation quotas and push Brussels to give member states full control over who crosses their borders.” ANO officials have also hinted at watering down Czech support for the EU Pact on Migration and Asylum, while the Motorists Party is demanding tougher roadside checks on vehicles suspected of carrying irregular migrants along the D1 and D2 corridors from Slovakia and Austria.

For companies that depend on cross-border talent and frequent business travel, the political shift could create a less predictable environment. Previous ANO-led administrations froze most work-permit quotas for non-EU nationals in 2020–21 and tightened background-check rules for intracompany transferees. Immigration lawyers in Prague say clients should brace for longer processing times if the new government reinstates similar restrictions. Multinationals may also face reputational and logistical headaches if Czechia distances itself from future EU-wide talent-mobility schemes such as the digital work-status wallet proposed for 2026.

At the same time, observers note that any radical departure from common EU rules would require unanimous backing in the Council of the EU—an unlikely prospect given resistance from Germany, France and the European Commission. Nonetheless, even a rhetorical hardening could influence day-to-day decisions by Czech consulates, border police and labour offices, potentially translating into stricter document scrutiny, fewer discretionary waivers and more on-site compliance inspections.

Practical takeaway: HR and global-mobility teams with personnel inbound to Czechia should monitor draft legislation closely between now and the expected cabinet appointment in December, maintain generous lead times for visa and permit filings, and prepare talking points for assignees who may encounter questions about the evolving political climate at Czech borders or embassies abroad.
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