Lithuania’s Prime Minister, Gintautas Paluckas, announced his resignation on Thursday following growing public and political pressure over alleged conflicts of interest involving business dealings linked to his family.
The controversy centers on a €200,000 subsidized loan granted to Garnis, a company co-owned by Paluckas, by the national development bank during his tenure as head of government. The situation escalated when it emerged that Dankora, a company run by his sister-in-law, partially used EU funds to purchase goods from Garnis.
As further details emerged—including reports of questionable transactions involving a former company owned by Paluckas and a disputed property deal—one member party of the ruling three-party coalition issued an ultimatum, threatening to exit the government unless the prime minister stepped down.
Though Paluckas, a leader of the centre-left Social Democrat Party, has denied any wrongdoing, he tendered his resignation, which was promptly accepted by President Gitanas Nausėda. The president welcomed the decision, stating, “I think he made the only right decision. I welcome his decision.”
The fallout comes at a particularly sensitive time for Lithuania, the largest of the Baltic states, as it navigates heightened regional security concerns. Just days before the resignation, a Russian-made decoy drone reportedly crossed into Lithuanian airspace from Belarus and was detected near the capital, Vilnius.
Paluckas’ government had recently committed to significantly boosting national defense, with a pledge to spend 5–6% of GDP annually on military budgets between 2026 and 2030—well above NATO’s recommended threshold and the targets set by former U.S. President Donald Trump.
Lithuania occupies a critical geopolitical position in Eastern Europe. The Suwalki corridor—a narrow 100km stretch of land on Lithuania’s southern border with Poland—lies between Russia’s Kaliningrad exclave and Belarus, making it a key vulnerability in NATO’s eastern flank. Military experts have long warned that this corridor could become a flashpoint in any potential conflict between NATO and Russia.
The Lithuanian ethics commission has opened an investigation into the Garnis loan, while financial crime investigators raided the Dankora offices on Thursday. Political observers are now watching closely as the Social Democrats begin talks to form a new governing coalition and appoint a replacement for Paluckas.
The resignation adds further uncertainty to Lithuania’s political landscape at a time when national unity and regional stability are seen as essential to confronting external threats.
