Slovakian Libertarian Last Opponent of Bank Bailout?

Richard Sulik, the father of Slovakia’s flat tax reform, gets his copy of Losing Ground autographed by Charles Murray at Cato's May 2010 conference in Bratislava.
European leaders, for instance, did not count on one Richard Sulik, a dapper 43-year-old who is the speaker of parliament in this quaint capital nestled in the foothills of the Carpathian Mountains. Sulik’s Freedom and Solidarity Party calls the plan an unfair bailout of profligate Greeks and fat-cat German and French bankers that poor Slovaks can’t afford.
The Financial Times calls Sulik “one of the last of central Europe’s true believers in economic liberalism.” The Wall Street Journal describes him as the father of Slovakia’s flat-rate tax and a “free-market libertarian” and says that his party
won 22 seats in the Slovak 150-member parliament, making it the legislature’s third-largest party. It got there after campaigning for low taxes, a lean government, legalization of soft drugs, marihuana in particular, allowing same-sex civil unions and abolishing fees levied on all owners of television sets to finance the public broadcaster STV.
Posted on October 10, 2011 Posted to Cato@Liberty
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