Ivanov has been consistently opposing the deal. Back in June, he refused to sign the bill on the agreement into law, saying that he would not advocate the "damaging" deal, which, according to him, violates Macedonian law. The Macedonian parliament later adopted the agreement by a majority of votes.
READ MORE: EU Commission: Macedonia's Name Vote Should Be Free From Foreign Influence
"As for me, I already voted 27 years ago – on September 8, 1991 [at the referendum on the country's independence]. I do not backtrack on my decision. Therefore, I will not go to the polls on September 30," Ivanov said, addressing Macedonian diaspora in the US city of Detroit on Saturday, with the video of his speech posted on the president's Facebook page.
According to Ivanov, this agreement not only changes the name of the country, it creates a "new semi-sovereign state … with a new internal and international legal identity."
In presence of US lawmakers Paul Mitchell from the Republican Party and Deborah Ann Dingell from the Democratic Party, who also attended his meeting with the diaspora, Ivanov pointed to the need for anti-corruption fight in the country as a necessary prerequisite for the cession to NATO and the European Union.
"Even with the adoption of the harmful Greek treaty and [relevant] constitutional amendments, membership in NATO and the European Union will not come automatically," the president stressed.
The country’s new constitutional name will open the way for Macedonia’s accession to the European Union and NATO, which has long been blocked by Athens over concerns that the neighboring country might have territorial claims to Greece’s own region of the same name.