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Libor Vondráček
Czech politician and lawyer (born 1994) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Libor Vondráček (born 29 July 1994) is a Czech politician and lawyer. He has been a member of the Chamber of Deputies since October 2025 and the leader of the Svobodní party since October 2019.[1] Previously, he served as a member of the party's republican committee from 2017. Since November 2025, he has been the chairman of the Senate's Permanent Commission for the Constitution of the Czech Republic and parliamentary procedures, as well as the vice-chairman of the Constitutional-Legal Committee and the Committee for European Affairs of the Chamber of Deputies.[2]
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Early life and education
Vondráček was born in Pelhřimov. He graduated from the Faculty of Law at Masaryk University, earning a master's degree (Mgr.) in Law and Legal Science.[citation needed]
During his studies, he focused on constitutional law, culminating in the submission of his thesis "Majority-forming elements in the proportional representation election formula on the example of elections in the Czech Republic" under the supervision of the author of election laws, Jan Filip.[3] With this work, he was nominated the following year for the F. L. Riegr Award competition, which he won, becoming the winner of the fifth edition awarding works that develop parliamentarism.[citation needed]
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Political career
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Vondráček joined the Svobodní in 2012. In 2017, he was elected a member of the Republican Committee. In the elections to the Chamber of Deputies in 2017, which ended unsuccessfully for the Svobodní (gaining only 1.56% of votes), he received the most preferential votes on the 5th place of the regional candidate list.[4]
In 2018, he initiated a candidacy in municipal elections under the name "Hradec srdcem a rozumem + Svobodní", which ended in 2nd place and gained 4 mandates. However, due to panachage, he was unsuccessful, overtaken by 2 experienced candidates, and is currently only the first substitute.[5]
In the elections to the European Parliament in May 2019, he ran as a member of the Svobodní on the 6th place of the list of the entity named "Svobodní, Liberland and Radostné Česko - ODEJDEME BEZ PLACENÍ", but was not elected.[6] In the regional elections in 2020, he was the leader of the Svobodní list in the South Bohemian Region, but was unsuccessful (the party did not enter the assembly).[7]
In January 2021, he convened a demonstration against government measures. The speakers motivated participants to civil disobedience by violating government orders. The police reported the convener to the administrative body for exceeding the permitted number of participants.[8]
In the elections to the Chamber of Deputies in 2021, he was the leader of the political formation "Trikolóra, Svobodní, Soukromníci" in the South Bohemian Region,[9] but was unsuccessful, as the grouping did not exceed the 5% threshold required for entry into the Chamber of Deputies.
In the elections to the European Parliament in 2024, he was the leader of the Svobodní candidate list.[10] However, the party gained only 1.76% of votes, and he was not elected.[11] In October 2024, he defended the position of party chairman.[12]
In the elections to the Chamber of Deputies in 2025, from the position of a Svobodní member, he was the leader of the joint candidate list of SPD, Trikolora, Svobodní, and PRO in the South Bohemian Region.[13] He succeeded in obtaining the mandate of a deputy and, together with Markéta Šichtařová, became one of the two Svobodní deputies in the Chamber of Deputies.[14]
Vondráček considers himself a conservative libertarian and counts himself among the advocates of a small state with low taxes.[15]
He criticizes the European Union for its democratic deficit and suppression of personal freedoms. Vondráček claims that the European Union creates space for corruption and clientelism through subsidies and excessive bureaucracy. Based on his studies, he considers the reform of the EU politically and legally unrealizable. Because the EU contradicts his idea of a state that does not provide advantages to the chosen ones, he proposes withdrawal from the European Union and acceptance of the offer to join the EFTA.[15]
Argumentatively, Vondráček follows the former MEP for the Svobodní Jiří Payne. He admits that, besides the withdrawal of individual states, the only alternative for a future peaceful arrangement in Europe is the deletion of Article 10a from the Constitution, which would lead to a reduction in the legal force of regulations and directives below the level of Czech laws.[16]
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Personal life
Vondráček has been married since 2024. In July 2025, his son was born, and he lives in Jindřichův Hradec.
He is involved in competitive mariáš, since 2011 he has been the administrator of the South Bohemian Mariáš League website, which he has also led since 2018.[17] This league ranks among the regional competitions recognizing the authority of the Czech Mariáš Association.
Between 2017 and 2019, he also worked as a moderator for the regional station Rádio Česká Kanada.[18]
References
External links
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