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Turek was born on 15 October 1985 in Prague.[citation needed] He received his bachelor degree in commercial law from the now-defunct College of Applied Law (Vysoká škola aplikovaného práva).[1]
From 2015 to 2017, Turek was a competitive racing driver, participating in 27 races.[2] The nature of Turek's racing successes has been the subject of debate. Data journalists Kateřina Mahdalová and Michal Škop reported that his wins were in categories where he either raced alone or with one or two opponents, including one amateur and one child, often racing in weaker cars, and Turek usually finished in one of the last or in last place.[2]
In 2015, Turek self-published Paraziti v nás (lit.'Parasites inside Us'),[3] written by his mother, Eleni Turková, a book about alternative healing methods.[3] During the COVID-19 pandemic, one of his companies, Zapper-Club s.r.o., of which he was one of two executives until February 2022 and the sole partner until August 2023,[4] marketed uncertified "antivirus" home remedies to seniors and others. The Czech Agriculture and Food Inspection Authority issued a warning against the company.[5] However, Turek himself denies any role in these activities.[6][better source needed]
From 2022, Turek began commenting on politics on VOX TV's online program Po žních k Turkovi as well as Xaver Live's Přisně tajné. His positions included support for a minimal state, questioning of liberal values, and opposition to the euro, the European Green Deal, and the proposed ban on the production of cars with internal combustion engines.[7]
In the 2024 European Parliament election, he ran as a non-affiliated candidate for populist party Přísaha, as the lead candidate for the Přísaha and Motorists alliance.[8] He was elected as an MEP with 152,196 preferential votes, the second-highest vote total of any candidate.[9]
In February 2025, Turek was reported to have met with representatives of the Iranian government, for undisclosed reasons.[10]
During the 2024 European election campaign, several old photos of Turek were circulated online, including one where he wore a golden helmet with a symbol used by the former Greek neo-Nazi party Golden Dawn, one where he appeared to give a Nazi salute from a car, and one featuring a candlestick with a swastika. In a discussion on CNN Prima News, Turek stated that he was a collector and that he also had a knife used by SS soldiers, but he denied being a Nazi sympathizer. The Czech police opened an investigation into his gestures,[12] which was concluded in November 2024.[13]
Journalists have also uncovered further old photos of Turek, in which he was wearing a white racing helmet with a symbol used by the aerial-warfare branch of the WehrmachtLuftwaffe and a fighter wing of the Luftwaffe called Jagdgeschwader 27.[14][2] Screenshots of his Facebook comments between 2013 and 2018 have been published, in which he referred to Adolf Hitler as a "golden daddy" and wrote that he always fills up with 88 litres of fuel—a veiled reference to the Nazi salute.[15]
Turek is a collector of classic cars, especially the British brands Jaguar, Aston Martin, Rolls-Royce, and Bentley. Since 2006, he has been the chairman of the Czech Jaguar fan club, which he founded. In 2023, the club had only three members.[16]
On 23 June 2025, the website "Page not found" reported that Turek had been accused by his former partner in a criminal complaint of domestic violence, threatening with a firearm, and rape.[17]
^Menšík, Jan (9 June 2024). "Turek je hvězdou eurovoleb" [Turek is the star of the European elections]. Novinky.cz (in Czech). Borgis. Retrieved 9 June 2024.