(Repeating story from late Wednesday)
* Slovakia's four coalition parties agree to EU safety net
* Cabinet meets Thursday to vote on 750 bln euro scheme
(Adds further detail, quotes, context)
By Martin Santa
BRATISLAVA, July 14 (Reuters) - Leaders of Slovakia's ruling coalition parties on Wednesday dropped resistance to the euro zone's planned emergency loan facility, a move that would allow the scheme to go ahead in the coming weeks.
Slovakia, the euro zone's poorest member, had been holding up the 750-billion-euro ($953 billion) EFSF scheme to help countries in trouble and refused to contribute 800 million euros in bilateral aid in a separate plan for debt-laden Greece.
The coalition grouping the Christian Democratic Union (SDKU) of Prime Minister Iveta Radicova, the Freedom and Solidarity (SaS), the Christian Democrats (KDH) and the ethnic Hungarian Most-Hid agreed on Wednesday to support the EFSF mechanism.
The Finance Ministry, in a draft resolution to be presented to a cabinet meeting on Thursday, (http://www.rokovania.sk/Rokovanie.aspx/BodRokovaniaDetail?idMaterial=18276) proposed the government sign a framework agreement on creating the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF), and that Slovakia take part in the scheme.
If Bratislava signs off on the EFSF, it can move ahead. However, the Slovak parliament would still have to vote on Slovak participation worth 4.5 billion euro in guarantees.
"We (SaS) will support the EFSF at the government meeting and also in parliament," Richard Sulik, head of SaS and the chairman on the parliament, said after talks with its coalition partners on Wednesday night.
The other party leaders followed suit, saying they would recommend its ministers support approval of the loan scheme at Thursday's cabinet meeting.
SCANT SUPPORT FOR AID TO GREECE
But only the Christian Democrats among the governing parties said they would support specific financial aid to Greece.
Pressure on Slovakia to unblock the EFSF had mounted over the past few weeks because the fund is a crucial part, together with stress tests of EU banks, of Europe's efforts to restore confidence in financial markets after the Greek debt crisis.
European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso has said he expected Bratislava to sign the EFSF very soon.
Eurogroup chairman Jean-Claude Juncker said he expected Slovaks to sign the framework agreement on the EFSF and take on board all the commitments made by the previous cabinet.
Slovak Finance Minister Ivan Miklos, a fiscal hawk, said this week's negotiations with his EU counterparts in Brussels on Slovakia's position were not easy.
The previous leftist government under Robert Fico, which was defeated in an election last month, supported the aid schemes.
But Bratislava, facing the need for tough fiscal consolidation, market reforms and overall to its pension system and labour market, has little desire to contribute to bailouts for more affluent euro zone peers such as Greece.
Slovakia, with a 5.4 million population, adopted the single currency in January 2009 but Slovaks never anticipated a euro zone debt crunch requiring them to chip in for rescues of stricken member states.
Miklos said he thought it was wrong that a country with a gross domestic product (GDP) per capita of just 72 percent of the EU's average should be expected to help richer countries.
"Today, we are in a situation when we choose only among bad solutions," Miklos told reporters after the cabinet meeting.
The Slovak minimum monthly wage is 308 euros and the average is 725 euros, which is below even Greece's minimum legal wage of 863 euros. Opinion polls have shown two-thirds of Slovaks are against extending aid to Greece.
"There must be belt-tightening, spending cuts and restructuring of the Greek social system. They have to start to save and lower their living standards," said Matej Gregora, 28.
(Editing by Mark Heinrich)