Cabinet of Eduard Heger

[3] The Cabinet lost a no-confidence vote on 15 December 2022 and ruled until it was succeeded by a caretaker government composed of non-party experts led by Ľudovít Ódor on 15 May 2023.

[4][5] Following the breaking of her veto, President Zuzana Čaputová asked the Supreme Court to examine the bill's compliance with the law and to render it ineffective, stating the reasons she had previously articulated.

[8] On 11 August, OĽaNO announced that the party leadership along with their parliamentary caucus decided that Matovič would remain Minister of Finance even after the ultimatum by SaS ended.

SaS consistently refused to retract its ultimatum, but Richard Sulík clarified that if OĽaNO suggested he step down as a price for Matovič's resignation, he would be willing to do so.

[11] However, the ten-point proposal by OĽaNO was rejected by SaS and Sulík announced that he had already made the President aware of his resignation as Minister of Economy earlier that day.

Matovič went to the Presidential Palace, signed his resignation and handed it to the President's Chief of Staff who then passed it onto his assistant in order to make a copy.

[19] Following the vote of no-confidence, President Čaputová formally dismissed the Cabinet of Eduard Heger, and appointed it as interim government with restricted powers.

These included expenditure limits, cancellation of concession fees to fund the state TV and radio as well as a lowered 10% tax on hospitality and sports venues services.

[23] Upon being removed from the office, Matovič shared multiple posts using his Facebook profile centered around LGBT issues to attack the Slovak mainstream news media.

[30] On 15 May 2023, President Čaputová announced that she would appoint a caretaker government that would rule until a new cabinet is formed following the early election on 30 September 2023, consisting of non-party experts led by Ľudovít Ódor.