Viktor Uspaskich, whose Labour party had the strongest showing in the election, said the nuclear plant could be put to a vote again once there was a clearer picture on how it will be financed.
"As new circumstances appear, you can ask the opinion of the people once again. When there is a ready project, when most questions are answered, after two years it's possible to ask people once again," he said on Monday.
The government that was voted out in Sunday's election had proposed building the new plant on the site of the Soviet-built Ignalina plant in eastern Lithuania, that was shut in 2009.
Lithuania's finance ministry projects the total cost of building the plant at 6.8 billion euros. It says 4 billion euros would come from loans, and the rest would be put up by the contractor and energy firms in the Baltic states.
(Editing by William Hardy)
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