New Democratic Party of Serbia explained

New Democratic Party of Serbia
Native Name:Нова Демократска странка Србије
Nova Demokratska stranka Srbije
Native Name Lang:sr
Abbreviation:NDSS
President:Miloš Jovanović
Founder:Vojislav Koštunica
Leader1 Title:Vice-Presidents
Split:Democratic Party
Ideology:National conservatism
Position:Right-wing
Colours: Blue
Affiliation1 Title:Parliamentary group
Affiliation1:National Democratic Alternative
Headquarters:Braće Jugovića 2a, Belgrade
Seats1 Title:National Assembly
Seats2 Title:Assembly of Vojvodina
Seats3 Title:City Assembly of Belgrade
Country:Serbia

The New Democratic Party of Serbia (Serbian: Нова Демократска странка Србије|Nova Demokratska stranka Srbije, pronounced as /nova demǒkratskaː strânka sr̂bije/, abbr. NDSS), known as the Democratic Party of Serbia (DSS) until 2022, is a national-conservative political party in Serbia. Miloš Jovanović serves as the current president of NDSS.

DSS was formed as a conservative split from the Democratic Party (DS) and has played a key role in the opposition during the 1990s. It was a part of the "Together" coalition and was later a founding member of the Democratic Opposition of Serbia (DOS). Its first leader, Vojislav Koštunica, was elected president of Yugoslavia in 2000, a role which he served until 2003. DSS left the DOS government in 2001 and served in the opposition until the 2003 parliamentary election, after which it managed to form a government with other right-wing parties. Koštunica was appointed prime minister, and after 2008, it went to the opposition again after being unable to form a government. It saw its decline in the 2010s and failed to pass the threshold in the 2014 parliamentary election, leading to Koštunica resigning from the position as party leader. He was replaced by Sanda Rašković Ivić, and in 2016, DSS managed to enter the National Assembly again, this time in a coalition with Dveri. Rašković Ivić was ousted after the parliamentary election and was replaced by Miloš Jovanović as president of the party.

A former member of the European People's Party, it maintained a centre-right and moderate conservative image until the early 2010s, when the party shifted to a more right-wing and eurosceptic position. It leads the National Democratic Alternative (NADA) coalition, which took part in the 2022 general election.

History

1992–2000

The Democratic Party of Serbia (DSS) was founded in 1992 by a breakaway nationalist faction of the Democratic Party (DS), which advocated involvement in the Democratic Movement of Serbia (DEPOS).[1]

Founding members of the party were Vojislav Koštunica, Vladeta Janković, Đurđe Ninković, Draško Petrović, Mirko Petrović and Vladan Batić. The founding assembly was held on 26 July 1992 and elected Vojislav Koštunica as its first president. The first party assembly was held on 5 December 1992 and adopted the party's first manifesto.The DSS first competed in the December 1992 parliamentary elections. As part of DEPOS, the DSS received 18 seats in the National Assembly of Serbia - which grew to 20 after non-party-aligned members of DEPOS decided to leave the Parliament. Soon, similar differences of opinion over ways in which to fight the ruling Socialist Party of Serbia and the DSS's belief in Serbian nationalism led to a division in DEPOS too. The DSS left the coalition in mid-1993.[1]

Next parliamentary elections in Serbia were called prematurely for 19 December 1993. This time DSS ran independently and received seven seats. This was a period of the party's political stagnation as most nationalist votes went to the Serbian Radical Party. It did not have enough seats to significantly influence matters in Serbia and was left without representation in the Federal Assembly.

In 1996, opposition Zajedno (Together) coalition was created. DSS entered the 1996 federal parliamentary elections as part of the coalition and won four seats in the Federal Assembly.[1]

2000–2008

The DSS was a founding member of the Democratic Opposition of Serbia (DOS) whose presidential candidate and leader of the DSS, Vojislav Koštunica defeated Slobodan Milošević in the 2000 Yugoslav presidential election held on 24 September 2000 winning 50.24% of the vote.[1]

In the December 2000 Serbian parliamentary election, the Democratic Opposition of Serbia won 64.7% of the popular vote, securing 176 seats in the National Assembly. The DSS was allocated 45 seats. In the ensuing Democratic Opposition of Serbia coalition government, DSS had very little influence with just two cabinet-level ministerial posts, that of Deputy Prime Minister (held by Aleksandar Pravdić) and Minister of Health (held by Obren Joksimović) as well as very few second tier posts of Deputy Minister. The DSS was unhappy with the direction of the DOS Government policy and split from the coalition in late 2001.[2]

In the 2003 parliamentary election, the DSS won 17.7% of the popular vote, translating into 53 seats in the parliament. Of these 53 seats, three went to the People's Democratic Party (NDS), one to the Serbian Liberal Party and one to the Serbian Democratic Party (SDS).

In 2004 NDS left the coalition with DSS, leaving it with 50 seats in the National Assembly. However, in 2005 both the NDS and the SDS merged into the DSS, bringing its size to 52 seats in the National Assembly.

The DSS won 47 seats in coalition with New Serbia in the 2007 parliamentary election, receiving 667,615 votes or 16.55% of the total popular vote. DSS itself received 33 seats in the parliament, and formed a group together with New Serbia, the Serbian Democratic Renewal Movement and United Serbia.

The leader of the DSS since its foundation, Vojislav Koštunica, was the Prime Minister of Serbia between March 2004 and July 2008 heading up two coalition governments. The first coalition government between March 2004 and July 2007 in coalition with Serbian Renewal Movement and G17 Plus. The second coalition government between July 2007 and July 2008 in coalition with the Democratic Party and G17 Plus.

2008–2014

In the early 2008 parliamentary election held in May 2008 following the self-proclaimed declaration of independence by the Serbian province of Kosovo, the DSS won 30 seats in the National Assembly in coalition with New Serbia. It won 480,987 votes representing 11.62% of the electorate. In coalition with New Serbia 2008–10, it formed the second largest opposition block in the Serbian parliament.

Since 2008 the DSS has positioned itself as a staunch defender of the premise that Kosovo should remain within Serbia (in some shape or form) and that further negotiations must take place to determine a workable political outcome regarding Kosovo and Serbia. Because of this approach, the DSS is against Serbia joining the EU if in return it is bound to acknowledge the legitimacy of the self-proclaimed independent Kosovo.

The party has become increasingly nationalist and eurosceptic since the independence of Kosovo. In 2012, Vojislav Koštunica stated that the EU is destroying Serbia and that Serbia should abstain on EU membership. The party subsequently left the European People's Party in February 2012.[3]

The party competed independently in the 2012 parliamentary elections in May 2012 and received around 7% of the popular vote (273,532 votes) translating into 21 Members of Parliament.

2014–present

In 2014, founder and first president of DSS Vojislav Koštunica left the party over its abandonment of the idea of political neutrality. Subsequently, Slobodan Samardžić, Dragan Jočić, Vladeta Janković and Dejan Mihajlov also announced their departure in response to differences of opinion over the course of DSS.

On 26 January 2021, DSS and the Movement for the Restoration of the Kingdom of Serbia (POKS) signed an agreement on joint action and agreed on a joint political-program platform called the National-Democratic Alternative.[4] In early May, the National-Democratic Alternative was transformed into a pre-electoral coalition.[5] On 24 May, the 14th party assembly was held in which Jovanović was re-elected as the president of the party, while Dejan Šulkić, Zoran Sandić, and Predrag Marsenić were elected as vice-presidents.[6] DSS changed its name to New Democratic Party of Serbia following the 15th assembly on 29 May 2022.[7]

Political positions

Initially aligned on the centre-right on the political spectrum,[8] [9] it has shifted to the right-wing in the early 2010s.[10] [11] [12] [13] A national-conservative party,[14] [15] [16] it is strongly opposed to the accession of Serbia to the European Union.[17] [18] It has been also described as conservative,[19] [20] nationalist,[21] [22] populist,[23] [24] and Christian democratic.[25] It was historically supportive of Western integration and European Union, and was a member of the European People's Party until 2012.[26] [27]

Together with the People's Party, Serbian Party Oathkeepers, and Dveri, it signed a joint declaration for the "reintegration of Kosovo into the constitutional and legal order of Serbia" in October 2022.[28]

In the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, DSS was associated with the European People's Party until 2012, after which it became a member of the European Democrat Group until 2014.[29]

List of presidents of the Democratic Party of Serbia

PresidentBorn–diedTerm startTerm end
11944– 26 July 1992 19 March 2014
2 1956– 12 October 2014 2 August 2016
3Miloš Jovanović1976– 21 December 2016 Incumbent

Acting leaders

Ref:[30]

Electoral performance

Parliamentary elections

National Assembly of Serbia! Year! Leader! Popular vote! % of popular vote! ! # of seats! Seat change! Coalition! Status
1992Vojislav Koštunica797,83117.98% 3rd 18DEPOS
1993218,0565.29% 5th 11
1997Election boycott 7
20002,404,75865.69% 1st 45DOS
2003678,03117.96% 2nd 8DSS–SLS
2007667,61516.83% 3rd 20DSS–NSJSSDPO
2008480,98711.87% 3rd 12DSS–NS
2012273,5327.32% 4th 0
2014152,4364.38% 5th 21
2016Sanda Rašković Ivić190,5305.19% 6th 6DSS–Dveri
2020Miloš Jovanović72,0852.32% 6th 6Metla 2020
2022204,4445.54% 4th 7NADA
2023191,4315.16% 4th 0NADA

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Presidential elections

1st round popular vote! % of popular vote! colspan="2"
2nd round popular vote% of popular voteNotes
1992Milan Panić1,516,69334.65%Supported Panić, an independent candidate
Sep 1997Election boycottElection annulled due to low turnout
Dec 1997Election boycott
Sep–Oct 2002Vojislav Koštunica1,123,42031.56%1,991,94768.38%Election annulled due to low turnout
Dec 20021,699,09859.28%Election annulled due to low turnout
2003Election boycottElection annulled due to low turnout
2004Dragan Maršićanin414,97113.47%
2008Velimir Ilić305,8287.57%Supported Ilić
2012Vojislav Koštunica290,8617.79%
2017Aleksandar Popović38,1671.06%
2022Miloš Jovanović226,1376.10%

Positions held

Major positions held by Democratic Party of Serbia members:

Years
Vojislav Koštunica2000–2003
Years
Vojislav Koštunica2004–2008
Years
Zoran Šami2004–2006
Years
Dragan Maršićanin

Notable members

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Izbori 2012 - Stranke. sr. B92. 26 April 2012.
  2. News: Serbia vote: Parties and players. BBC News. 24 December 2003. 23 August 2010.
  3. Web site: DSS napustio Evropsku narodnu partiju. sr. Radio-televizija Srbije. 25 February 2012. 27 February 2012.
  4. Web site: DSS i POKS potpisali Sporazum o zajedničkom delovanju. 26 January 2021. www.danas.rs. 26 January 2021 . sr. Danas.
  5. Web site: DSS i POKS potpisali koalicioni sporazum. 6 May 2021. N1. rs.n1info.com. sr.
  6. Web site: Članovi DSS izabrali rukovodstvo stranke, Jovanović ostaje predsednik. 24 May 2021. N1. rs.n1info.com. Serbian.
  7. Web site: Radovanović . Vojin . 27 May 2022 . DSS (ponovo) postaje "Novi", odluka možda nesvrishodna . 29 May 2022 . Danas . sr-RS.
  8. Book: Nezi . Spyridoula . Europe-Asia Studies . Sotiropoulos . Dimitri . Toka . Panayiota . Routledge . August 2009 . Glasgow . 1006 . Explaining the Attitudes of Parliamentarians towards European Integration in Bulgaria, Greece and Serbia: Party Affiliation, 'Left-Right' Self-placement or Country Origin? . 0966-8136.
  9. Book: Ilonszki, Gabriella . Perceptions of the European Union in New Member States : a Comparative Perspective. . 2013 . Taylor and Francis . 978-1-317-96578-7 . Hoboken . 90 . 863822466.
  10. Book: Chun, Kwang-Ho . Kosovo: A New European Nation-State? . International Area Studies Review . 2011 . 91.
  11. Book: Ramet, Sabrina . Serbia since July 2008: at the Doorstep of the EU . 2010 . 20.
  12. Book: Three freedoms under the magnifying glass: Review of violations of freedom of association, assembly and expression in Serbia from March to July 2019 . Three Freedoms Platform . 2019 . 4.
  13. Book: Party politics in the Western Balkans . 30 October 2009 . Routledge . 978-0415550994 . Stojarová . Věra . Political parties in Serbia . 26 April 2020 . Emerson . Peter . https://www.bochsler.eu/publi/bochsler_serbiacountry.pdf.
  14. Book: Constitutional politics in Central and Eastern Europe : from post-socialist transition to the reform of political systems . 2016 . Anna Fruhstorfer, Michael Hein . 978-3-658-13762-5 . Wiesbaden . 278 . 960701696.
  15. Book: Stojic, Marko . Party responses to the EU in the western Balkans : transformation, opposition or defiance? . 2018 . 978-3-319-59563-4 . Cham, Switzerland . 233 . 1003200383.
  16. Book: Orlović, Slaviša . Ideologija i političke stranke u Srbiji . Antonić . Slobodan . Vukomanović . Dijana . Stojiljković . Zoran . Vujačić . Ilija . Đurković . Miša . Mihailović . Srećko . Gligorov . Vladimir . Komšić . Jovan . Friedrich Ebert Stiftung, Faculty of Political Sciences, Institute for Humanities . 2007 . 978-86-83767-23-6 . Belgrade . sr . Ideology and Political Parties in Serbia . 17 July 2001 . https://web.archive.org/web/20131127041235/http://izbornareforma.rs/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/resurscentar/Ideologija%20i%20politicke%20stranke%20u%20Srbiji.pdf . 27 November 2013 . dead . Pajvančić . Marijana . Pantić . Dragomir.
  17. Book: Čavoški, Aleksandra . Idealism or realism in the process of EU enlargement: The case of Serbia . East European Quarterly . December 2015 . Birmingham . 279 . 0012-8449.
  18. Antonić . Slobodan . 2012 . Eurosceptism in Serbia . Serbian Political Thought . . 5 . 1 . 69 . 10.22182/spt.512012.4.
  19. Drezgić . Rada . Religion, Politics and Gender in the Context of Nation-State Formation: the case of Serbia . Third World Quarterly . Taylor & Francis, Ltd. . 2010 . 31 . 6 . 955–970 . Belgrade . 10.1080/01436597.2010.502728. 20857571 . 33001865 .
  20. Book: Serbia Country Report . Bertelsmann Transformation Index . 2010 . Gütersloh . 2.
  21. Book: Gligorov, Vladimir . Serbia: stability at risk . February 2007 . 2.
  22. Book: Woehrel, Steven . Serbia: Current Issues and U.S. Policy . Congressional Research Service . May 2013 . Washington D.C. . 1.
  23. Book: The Western Balkan candidates for NATO membership and partnership : a report . 2005 . Centre for European Security Studies . David Greenwood, Centre for European Security Studies . 90-76301-20-4 . Groningen . 71641941.
  24. Vykoupilová . Hana . Stojarová . Věra . 2007 . Populism in the Balkans: The Case of Serbia . Muni Journals. 2–3 . 95–112 .
  25. Web site: Nordsieck . Wolfram . 2020 . Serbia . 29 June 2020 . Parties and Elections in Europe.
  26. Web site: 22 November 2020 . Koštunica se nadao da će SR Jugoslavija ući u EU . danasrs . Danas . Serbian.
  27. Web site: 25 February 2012 . DSS napustio Evropsku narodnu partiju . 28 February 2022 . Radio Television of Serbia . sr.
  28. Web site: 4 October 2022 . Pokret za odbranu KiM i pet partija usvojili Deklaraciju za reintegraciju KiM . 5 October 2022 . Tanjug . sr.
  29. Web site: Mr Miloš Aligrudić (Serbia, EDG) . 29 July 2023 . Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe.
  30. Web site: Serbian ministries, etc.. rulers.org. B. Schemmel. 13 August 2016.