Lithuania’s parliament on Tuesday voted in favour of a government manifesto presented by Social Democrat Mindaugas Sinkevicius, clearing ​the way for him to become prime minister and ‌for his proposed cabinet to take office.

NATO and European Union member Lithuania, which borders both Russia and Belarus, is the top defence spender in ​NATO as a share of the country’s economy, devoting ​an estimated 5.33% of its gross domestic product (GDP) to ⁠the military this year.

Sinkevicius’ government manifesto pledged to keep ​the spending above 5% of GDP and to seek a continued U.S. ​troops presence in the Baltic nation as a key deterrent against Russia, while continuing to support Ukraine.

“It would be a mistake to believe that ​Russian military threat is subsiding due to the large losses ​it is now taking”, Sinkevicius told parliament on Tuesday, referring to Moscow’s ongoing ‌war ⁠against Ukraine.

He replaces Social Democrat Inga Ruginiene, prime minister since last year, who is moving aside for the party leader to take over amid recent turmoil in her coalition government.

The new centre-left three ​party coalition, which ​includes the ⁠For Lithuania and Farmers and Green Union parties, commands a small majority in parliament.

Populist party Nemunas ​Dawn, whose leader faces charges of incitement to hatred ​against Jews ⁠and belittling the Holocaust, is no longer part of the government.

In parliament, 72 of the 141 members backed the new government ⁠platform ​while 29 voted against it and four ​abstained. The remaining members were absent.

The next election in Lithuania is scheduled for ​October 2028.