With 99.85% of votes counted, the gap between the two leading parties stood at just 8,000 votes out of more than 1,000,000 cast, with Golob’s camp on 29 seats, one ahead of Janša’s party. Mail-in ballots are still to be counted, though they are not expected to dramatically alter the overall picture. Golob acknowledged that coalition talks would be difficult, while Janša repeated his earlier claim of irregularities in early voting and complaints over how some electoral commissions handled the process. The result suggests Slovenia may once again be heading toward a center-left coalition similar to the one formed after the previous election.