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Prague Voters Gain Early Online Access to 2026 Candidate Positions

Voters in Prague districts will receive earlier online access to candidate positions on tram fares, housing permits and waste fees ahead of the October elections.

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By Prague Policy Desk · Published 8 July 2026, 1:55

2 min read

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Prague Voters Gain Early Online Access to 2026 Candidate Positions
Photo: Photo via Freepik

The Prague City Assembly approved new disclosure rules on 3 July requiring all candidates for the October municipal elections to post full policy platforms on the city website by 15 August. The measure applies to races for the 65-seat council and affects every registered voter in the city’s 22 districts.

Why the change arrives now

Municipal elections occur every four years, with the last held in 2022. City records list 1.3 million residents eligible to vote. Local officials say the earlier deadline responds to repeated requests from district offices for clearer information before postal voting opens in September.

Residents in Vinohrady will see candidate statements on rent-control proposals that could alter their building-permit applications. In Smíchov, commuters can check positions on the planned extension of tram line 10 before deciding whether to back candidates who support or oppose the 420-million-crown project listed in the 2025 capital budget.

Direct effects on daily costs and services

The legislation requires candidates to state their stance on the 2027 waste-collection fee schedule and on the proposed increase in monthly public-transport passes from 550 to 620 crowns. Families in Žižkov who rely on the municipal kindergarten waiting list can compare how each candidate plans to allocate the 180-million-crown education line item in next year’s operating budget.

Policy analysts note that the single online portal replaces the previous system in which platforms appeared only in printed leaflets distributed unevenly across neighbourhoods. The change is projected to reach the 38 percent of households that use the city’s e-government portal for other services.

City hall will begin uploading the statements on 18 August. District election commissions will verify compliance before ballots are printed on 10 September. No additional funding was added to the current year’s 92-billion-crown budget for the new portal.

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Published by The Daily Prague

Covering policy in Prague. This article was generated by AI from the linked sources and was not reviewed by a human editor before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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