Dragan Crnogorac | |
Native Name: | Драган Црногорац |
Native Name Lang: | sr-Cyrl |
Office: | President of Joint Council of Municipalities |
Predecessor: | Jovan Ajduković |
Successor: | Srđan Jeremić |
Citizenship: | Croatia |
Term Start1: | 2005 |
Term End1: | 2017 |
Birth Date: | 4 September 1978 |
Birth Place: | Vinkovci, SR Croatia, SFR Yugoslavia |
Party: | Independent Democratic Serb Party |
Alma Mater: | University of Novi Sad, Zrenjanin |
Dragan Crnogorac (Serbian: Драган Црногорац; born 4 September 1978) is the former President of the Joint Council of Municipalities, a sui generis body that aligns interests of Serb ethnic community in Osijek-Baranja and Vukovar-Syrmia Counties. From October 2012 to 2015, he was also a member of the Sabor.[1] Until the end of his parliamentary mandate, he was a member of the Independent Democratic Serb Party. At the time, he was involved in Serbia-Croatia Intergovernmental Mixed Committee for Minorities, Assembly of Serb National Council, Croatian Radiotelevision program committee, Secretary of the Municipal Council of the Serbian national minority in Stari Jankovci municipality, president of local branch of Independent Democratic Serb Party in Stari Jankovci, Vice President of City Council of the City of Vukovar and member of County Council of the Serbian national minority of Vukovar-Syrmia County.[2] After internal disagreement Crnogorac left the party and became a prominent critic of the SDSS and independent politician within the Serb community.
Dragan Crnogorac was elected president in 2005. His election at this point was unexpected since he was only 27 years old and worked as a young professor of technical education and technical drawing.[3] He took the term from former president Jovan Ajduković, becoming the third president since the establishment of the Joint Council of Municipalities in 1997.[3] As one of its main priorities in the first term he set education.[3] In addition, he announced reform and modernization of the Council internal organizational structure.[3]
As the President of the Council, among other activities, he held a formal meetings with the President of Croatia Ivo Josipović,[4] the President of Serbia Boris Tadić,[5] U.S. Ambassador in Croatia James B. Foley.[6]