Slovenians are voting in early elections expected to bring conservatives back to power on a pledge to deal with the nation's mounting debt, high unemployment and the threat of renewed recession.
The parliamentary vote was called in September, after the Alpine state's minority center-left government was ousted in a no-confidence vote. That vote came amid poor economic recovery forecasts and disagreements between Prime Minister Borut Pahor's Social Democrats and junior coalition partners.
Pre-election surveys have predicted that the Slovenian Democratic Party of former prime minister Janez Jansa could win a full third of Sunday's votes in the country of 2 million. But analysts say he likely will need support from smaller parties to form a majority in the 90-seat parliament.
Mr. Jansa was prime minister of the former Yugoslav republic from 2004 to 2008. He has promised to cut the country's huge public debt, which has risen to about 45 percent of its gross domestic product, and to address unemployment hovering at 12 percent.
Europe's debt crisis in the 17-nation eurozone, which includes Slovenia, already has led to a change in government in Portugal, Greece, Italy and Spain.
Voting ends at 1800 UTC, and exit polls and first partial results are expected late Sunday.