Democratic Party (Serbia)

Democratic Party
Демократска странка
Demokratska stranka
President Dragan Šutanovac
Founder The Founding Committee of the Democratic Party
Founded February 3, 1990 (1990-02-03)
Preceded by Democratic Party (Yugoslavia)
(not legal predecessor)
Headquarters Terazije 3/4,
Belgrade
Youth wing Democratic Youth
Membership (2016) 18,459 [1]
Ideology Social democracy[2][3]
Social liberalism[2][3]
Pro-Europeanism
Political position Centre to Centre-left[4]
European affiliation Party of European Socialists (associate)
International affiliation Socialist International
Progressive Alliance
Colours Yellow (official)
Blue (customary)
National Assembly
12 / 250
Assembly of Vojvodina
9 / 120
City Assembly of Belgrade
22 / 110
Website
www.ds.org.rs

The Democratic Party (Serbian: Демократска странка, ДC / Demokratska stranka, DS,  listen ) is a social-democratic[3][5] and social-liberal[2] political party in Serbia. It is the major centre-left party in Serbia, and is the fifth largest party in the National Assembly.[6] The Democratic Party is a full member of the Socialist International, the Progressive Alliance, and is an associate member of the Party of European Socialists.

The party was officially founded on February 3, 1990 by a group of Serbian intellectuals as a revival of the original Yugoslav Democratic Party.[7] It was one of the main opposition parties to the presidency of Slobodan Milošević during the 1990s.[7] Democratic Party joined the Democratic Opposition of Serbia coalition in 2000,[8] and became part of the new coalition government after the 2000 parliamentary election. Zoran Đinđić, then president of the Democratic Party, became the Prime Minister of Serbia in January 2001, but was assassinated in 2003, and the Party lost the power at the parliamentary election later that year. New president of the Democratic Party, Boris Tadić, won the 2004 presidential election, and the party returned to power after the 2007 and 2008 parliamentary elections. Tadić was reelected in 2008, but both him and the Party lost the 2012 presidential and parliamentary elections, so the Democratic party became opposition party once again. Dragan Đilas, then-Mayor of Belgrade was elected new party president after the 2012 elections.[9] After the disappointing results in the 2014 election,[10] Bojan Pajtić, then-President of the Government of Vojvodina replaced Đilas as the party president.[11]

History

Re-establishment

On 11 December 1989, a group of Serbian intellectuals held a press conference announcing the revival of the Democratic Party, which had existed in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia before it was banned by the communists following World War II.[7]

They included anti-communist dissidents and liberal academics, well-known poets, writers and film and theatre directors, who all came together in December 1989 to begin the process of re-establishing the Democratic Party, which was to be the first opposition, non-communist political party in Serbia since 1945.[12] Some were attracted to politics by what they perceived to be the unsatisfactory national position of ethnic Serbs and Serbia as a constituent republic within the Yugoslav federation, while others felt that activity in a political party could help address the perceived deteriorating state of democracy and human rights in SFR Yugoslavia. Up to that point in time, the former primarily acted through the Serbian Writers Association (Udruženje književnika Srbije) while the latter channeled their activities through the Social Sciences Institute (Institut društvenih nauka) and the Philosophy Club (Filozofsko društvo). Sprinkled throughout the newly assembled group were also some surviving members of the pre-World War II party. Though the grip of the Communist League (SKJ), the only constitutionally allowed party in Yugoslavia's one-party political system, was not nearly as strong as it once was, DS members still feared the authorities' reaction to the party's creation.[13]

The first public proclamation of the Founding Committee was made on 11 December 1989 at a press conference held in Belgrade where the members publicly declared their intention to re-establish the Democratic Party (DS) which had been banned by the communists in 1945. The Founding Committee called upon all democratically minded citizens to join them in this endeavour.

There were thirteen signatories to the initial proclamation made by the members of the Founding Committee setting out their intention to initiate the re-establishment of the Democratic Party: Kosta Čavoški, Milovan Danojlić, Zoran Đinđić, Gojko Đogo, Vladimir Gligorov, Slobodan Inić, Marko Janković, Vojislav Koštunica, Dragoljub Mićunović, Borislav Pekić, Miodrag Perišić, Radoslav Stojanović, and Dušan Vukajlović. Over the following weeks nine other prominent intellectuals joined the thirteen initiators as members of the Founding Committee. They all worked together towards re-establishing the Democratic Party by drafting the first party political program and making preparations for the founding party conference.[12] By the end of December 1989, the Founding Committee also included: Vida Ognjenović, Ljubomir Tadić, Mirko Petrović, Đurđe Ninković, Nikola Milošević, Aleksandar-Saša Petrović, Aleksandar Ilić, Vladan Vasilijević, and Zvezdana Popović.

In the first two weeks of January the Founding Committee drafted the political program of the soon to be re-established Democratic Party which was published on 18 January 1990 as the "Pismo o namerama" (Letter of intent) to inform the public of the democratic principles and policies which the Democratic Party would pursue. The Letter of Intent was signed by all the 22 Members of the Founding Committee.[12]

Throughout January 1990 the Founding Committee worked on publicising the party's proposed political program and its democratic aims. It worked on gathering potential party members to ensure a successful founding conference. It finally organised the founding conference of the renewed Democratic Party on 3 February 1990 at which the party was formally re-established by several hundred founder members, including former members from the 1940s and a younger generation of new members. At the founding conference the founder members elected the party President, the Executive and General Committees tasked with running the party. Following the founding conference the party started establishing local committees and networks throughout Serbia.

However, the Democratic Party was strictly an illegal organisation until late spring of 1990 when it was finally given permission to be formally registered as a political party by the Communist regime. At that time the party newspaper Demokratija (Democracy) was also established to inform the public of what the DS was trying to achieve, since the Communist controlled state media did not give any coverage to it.

Even before the founding conference was held, differences over the Kosovo issue surfaced.[13] The party presidency was contested between Dragoljub Mićunović and Kosta Čavoški, two of DS' most prominent members. At the DS founding conference on 3 February 1990, Mićunović was elected president while Čavoški became the Executive Board (Izvršni odbor) president. Desimir Tošić and Vojislav Koštunica[14] were named vice presidents.

1990–1994: Mićunović leadership

Dragoljub Mićunović

Under Mićunović, DS did not have strong leadership, as the longtime university professor preferred a relaxed intellectual approach to a rigid party structure.

DS members participated in the first anti-government protests in 1990. Čavoški resigned his post as the party's executive board president on 29 September 1990; Zoran Đinđić got named to the post.

At the parliamentary elections on 9 December 1990, the party was on the ballot in 176 of 250 electoral districts, getting 374,887 votes that translated into 7 assembly seats.

Only several days prior to the elections, Čavoški left DS thinking that the conditions for a free and fair elections were not yet present in Serbia. Other DS members like Nikola Milošević, Vladan Vasilijević, and film director Saša Petrović accompanied him. By January 1991 they formed the Serbian Liberal Party (SLS), a conservative liberal party that favoured a monarchy instead of a republic and pushed for the rehabilitation of the politically-persecuted Serbs that were sentenced, exiled, or executed by the post-World War II communist Yugoslav authorities. SLS also wanted the Serbian government to set up an office whose job would be to comprehensively work on collecting, marking, and commemorating the Serbian victims of the Balkan Wars, World War I, and World War II. Čavoški's lasting legacy in the party was that its party program stated until 1997 that "DS is working towards the re-unification of Serbian lands".

On the other hand, DS had a very liberal economic program courtesy of economists Vladimir Gligorov and Slobodan Inić who were able to push it through as party policy, despite being in minority, because most other members were not really concerned with economic matters.[15] Both Giligorov and Inić left DS when the party decided to throw its support behind Prince Tomislav Karađorđević at the FR Yugoslavia 1992 presidential elections.

In July 1992, a much more serious fragmentation of the Democratic Party occurred when a large group led by Vojislav Koštunica left to establish the Democratic Party of Serbia (DSS). Overnight, DS lost 40% of its membership, including such prominent members as Mirko Petrović, Đurđe Ninković, Vladeta Janković, Draško Petrović and Vladan Batić. The immediate issue behind the split was their dissatisfaction over the DS decision not to enter the DEPOS coalition. A deeper cause was differences over the handling of the so-called national question that had been brewing within DS for quite some time.

Later that year at the 1992 parliamentary elections on 20 December (scheduled early following a referendum, among other things due to disintegration of Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and formation of the new state entity Federal Republic of Yugoslavia), DS fared poorly with 196,347 votes, down by almost two hundred thousand, giving the party only 6 assembly seats.

This is when the energetic 40-year-old DS founding member Zoran Đinđić began to assert himself at a time when DS was burdened by dwindling membership, only 6 MPs in the assembly and unclear political positions. Though Mićunović was still formally president, Đinđić increasingly became the face of DS. By summer 1993 Đinđić aggressively set about implementing his vision. His primary concern became establishing strong party infrastructure on the ground through a network of municipal branches that answered to party central in Belgrade. Zoran Živković, future short-time Serbian Prime Minister, who was at the time a DS member in the local Niš branch put it as follows:

Đinđić decided to transform this group of well-mannered people who spend their time pontificating on the events happening around them into a big political entity. He decided that the party which already had a brain should get a body and some muscles.[15]

Đinđić got his first chance to gauge the results of his approach before he formally became its president. In October 1993, Serbian president Slobodan Milošević dissolved the parliament, scheduling a parliamentary elections for 19 December 1993. As a result, DS main board met twice that month, on the 16th and 30 October, deciding that Đinđić rather than party president Mićunović will lead the election campaign. Supported by a carefully crafted media and marketing campaign featuring memorable "Pošteno" slogan, DS recorded its best result to date with 497,582 votes, giving them 29 assembly seats. However, despite improvement over previous elections, the party was still well behind Milošević's SPS, DEPOS coalition (headed by Vuk Drašković's SPO), and Vojislav Šešelj's SRS.

Ahead of the December 1993 parliamentary elections DS was in advanced negotiations with SPS about forming a coalition between the two parties. Following the summer 1993 disintegration of SPS' coalition with SRS, Milošević turned to DS. Opposed by party leader Mićunović, the idea of a coalition with Milošević found a more receptive audience among some other DS members, including Đinđić.[16] The issue of the DS' coalition negotiations with Milošević is still controversial with certain DS members such as Zoran Živković denying that they ever took place.[16] Others like Mićunović and high-ranking member Goran Vesić claimed they had indeed taken place.[16]

1994–2003: Đinđić leadership

Serbian prime minister Zoran Đinđić speaks at the 2003 World Economic Forum in Davos on 24 January 2003

The new balance of power within DS led to an early party conference. At the party conference on 5 January 1994 in Belgrade, Đinđić became president, pushing out personal political mentor Mićunović who was forced into resigning as the local party branches turned against him. The (in)famous quip uttered at the conference by 41-year-old Đinđić about 63-year-old Mićunović was: "Mićunović's time has passed.... He's no Tina Turner who sings better now than when she was thirty".[17] In his embittered speech at the conference during which he resigned his post, Mićunović characterized the manner of Đinđić's takover of DS as the "combination of Machiavellianism and revolutionary technique".[18] In this internal party showdown with Mićunović, Đinđić also benefited from some discreet support in the Milošević-controlled state-run media.[17] Though many DS members didn't like the way this transfer of power was executed, symbolically referring to it as "oceubistvo" (patricide), many others such as founding member Gojko Đogo found benefits in Đinđić's agile approach:

Mićunović is without any doubt a man of tolerance, but he is not able to mobilize those around him into action and as a result the party stagnated under him. When Đinđić realized this, he made a clean break, cut Mićunović out and began to mold the DS party into a well-oiled enterprise.[15]

Following Mićunović's resignation, party vice-president Vida Ognjenović also resigned. Getting in alongside new party president Đinđić were new party vice-presidents, Miroljub Labus and Miodrag Perišić, while Ivan Vujačić became the new overseeing board president. Ljiljana Lučić became new executive board president and Srđa Popović became the president of the party's youth wing.

Đinđić managed to quickly move DS away from what he occasionally referred to in derisive terms as the "debate club" towards a modern and efficient organizational structure that functioned according to a business management model.[19] On 12 May 1994, the party's main board met to discuss the decision by the two DS members, Slobodan Radulović and Radoje Đukić, to enter the SPS government of Mirko Marjanović. Both were expelled from DS, while the party's political council president Slobodan Vučković resigned. Another early party conference was called and held on 25 June 1994 in Novi Sad; this time the party elected its all new political council with Radomir Šaper as the new council president.

The following year, on 15 April 1995, regular party conference was held and Đinđić got re-elected as party president. Labus and Perišić stayed vice-presidents while Slobodan Gavrilović and Zoran Živković became vice-presidents as well. Disappointed and marginalized ever since his resignation from the position of the party president 14 months earlier, Mićunović left DS after this conference, founding non-governmental organization Centre for Democracy that eventually transformed into Democratic Centre (DC). Others that followed him to DC were Desimir Tošić, Vida Ognjenović, Bora Kuzmanović, as well as many other prominent, though mostly older, DS party members. Mićunović offered the following as his view of the events of the period:

After his row with Šešelj, Milošević offered me co-operation because he wanted to make a coalition with DS after SPS' coalition with Šešelj's SRS broke apart. Among the things he was offering me was the position of FR Yugoslavia's ambassador to the UN, all of which I flatly rejected. After my refusal, he turned to some other people in DS. I realized that my rigid stance on this issue doesn't have a clear support within the party and that DS wants to shed its election loser image by trying a different, more flexible approach. I didn't want to stand in the way of this wave of pragmatism that Đinđić pushed within the party. After the elections, Milošević continued pursuing Đinđić because he wanted to form a government with DS. Đinđić himself told me Milošević offered him the Prime Minister position in the new government. I strongly advised him not to take it. Seeing that SPS had 123 MPs and we had 29, I was convinced that Milošević would use him and dump him like he did with Dobrica Ćosić and Milan Panić a few years earlier. Despite my protestations Đinđić wanted to take the offer, telling me that he can outfox Milošević from within. In the end no government was formed with DS. Four years later, in 1998, Đinđić told me Milošević ended up offering him only the deputy prime minister position as the deputy to SPS' Mirko Marjanović instead of the promised prime ministerial role. Đinđić refused, so Milošević then went to Slobodan Radulović who accepted.[15][18]

Though a much better organized party under Đinđić, DS still experienced trouble formulating a clear stance on the national question. Đinđić's own actions perhaps made a good illustration of this seemingly confused standing on both sides of the issue. Đinđić basically refused to acknowledge the national question as a real issue, making not a single mention of the Serbs living in other parts of the former Yugoslavia in his book Yugoslavia as an Unfinished State. At the same time he maintained close links with Bosnian Serb war leader Radovan Karadžić, visiting him at Pale in February 1994 while American forces threatened to bombard Bosnian Serb positions. This seeming flip-flopping on the national issue was effectively used by DS' political opponents and Đinđić's critics across the political spectrum.

As the Bosnian War ended with the signing of the Dayton Peace Accord in November 1995, in addition to his grip on power domestically, Milošević enjoyed stable support from the international community that recognized him as the "peace and stability factor in the Balkans". The next chance to dent his armour came at the November 1996 municipal elections, which the DS entered as part of an opposition coalition called Zajedno featuring SPO, DSS, and GSS. Democratic Party (at the time with a total of only 7,000 members across Serbia) joined Zajedno against Đinđić's personal wishes as he got outvoted on three separate occasions when the decision was discussed internally.[20] Following opposition victories in key Serbian cities such as Belgrade, Niš and Novi Sad, Milošević refused to recognize the results, sparking three months of peaceful protest marches by hundreds of thousands of citizens. Under pressure, Milošević acknowledged the results and on 21 February 1997 Đinđić got inaugurated as the mayor of Belgrade.

Later that year Đinđić made a bold decision to boycott the parliamentary elections on 21 December 1997, thus breaking up the Zajedno coalition.

In 1998, most of the student leaders of 1996-97 street protests (gathered around an organization called Studentski politički klub (SPK)) joined DS. This included leaders such as Čedomir Jovanović, Čedomir Antić, and Igor Žeželj joined the party.

Milošević's fall in October 2000 occurred after further street protests. The Democratic Party was the largest party of the Democratic Opposition of Serbia block that won 64.7% of the votes in the December 2000 elections, getting 176 of 250 seats in the Parliamentary Assembly. In 2001 Đinđić was appointed Prime Minister of Serbia at the head of the first post-Milošević government on January 25, 2001.

On March 12, 2003, Đinđić was assassinated by a sniper's bullet while entering the Serbian government building. Boris Tadić was elected new president of Democratic Party in 2004.

2004–2012: Tadić leadership

At the party conference on 23 February 2004 in Belgrade, Boris Tadić became president, defeating deputy president Zoran Živković (who succeeded Đinđić as Prime Minister) by a landslide. Getting in alongside new party president Tadić were new party vice-presidents, Nenad Bogdanović, Bojan Pajtić, Dušan Petrović, and Slobodan Gavrilović.

Tadić contended in the 2004 Serbian presidential election in the same year, and won it while Democratic party was still in opposition in parliament.

In the 2007 parliamentary election, the coalition surrounding the Democratic Party received 915,854 popular votes or 22.71%, and thus won 64 out of 250 seats in parliament. Three of its seats went to the Sanjak Democratic Party, which formed a club with DS under Dušan Petrović as president and Milan Marković as vice-president. DS became a part of new parliamentary majority, its members took 11 out of 25 ministerial position, as well as financial minister Mirko Cvetković, who was proposed to that position by this party, although not a member.

Tadić was re-elected at the 2008 Serbian presidential election.

In the 2008 parliamentary election, the pro-European bloc led by DS received 38.5% of the popular vote, translating into 102 seats in the Serbian National Assembly, making it the largest party bloc in parliament, as well as the leading party in the new majority, with non-partisan Cvetkovic as prime minister. The party also received three seats in the Community Assembly of Kosovo and Metohija, but refused to sit until the situation in Kosovo stabilized.[21]

In the 2012 parliamentary election, the Choice for a Better Life coalition gathered around the Democratic Party received 22.11% of the popular vote, but does not participate in current parliamentary majority. During the same election, Tadić lost his reelection bid. As a consequence of this, an extraordinary party assembly session was held on 25 November 2012 and Tadić was replaced as party leader by his main opponent Dragan Đilas, mayor of Belgrade. Tadić was, in turn, elected to be the party's honorary president.[9]

2012–2014: Đilas leadership

At the party conference on 25 November 2012 in Belgrade, then-Mayor of Belgrade and deputy president of the party Dragan Đilas was elected president. For the first time in the party's history, the number of vice-presidents was increased from 5 to 7, and the function of honorary president was established. The new vice-presidents were Miodrag Rakić, Nataša Vučković, Dejan Nikolić, Vesna Martinović, Jovan Marković and Goran Ćirić, while Bojan Pajtić was re-elected as vice-president. Boris Tadić was appointed by acclamation to the new post of honorary president, and Dragoljub Mićunović was re-elected president of the political council.[22]

On 27 December 2012, the party's main board decided that all the ministers who served in the former government should resign as MPs.[23] Most of the former ministers agreed to resign as MPs. Unlike other former ministers Goran Bogdanović, Božidar Đelić and Dragan Šutanovac were allowed to stay MPs under the claim that the party needs them in parliament. Milan Marković left the party after resigning as MP. Dušan Petrović and Vuk Jeremić refused to give up their parliamentary seats.[24]

Due to their opposition, the party's executive board decided to expel Petrović on 31 January 2013,[25] and Jeremić on 14 February 2013.[26] After the decision to expel him, Jeremić filed suit at the Constitutional Court, claiming that the party's decision is unconstitutional.[27] After the rejection of the appeal by the Constitutional Court, Jeremić complied with the decision and left the party but kept his parliamentary seat.[28]

During this period, the party leadership considered that the party should support the current government in resolving the Kosovo issue.[29]

On 30 January 2014, the honorary president of the Democratic Party, former party leader and former President of Serbia Boris Tadić left the party. He was a member of the party since its re-founding in 1990.[30] Others that followed him were Jelena Trivan, Snežana Malović and vice-president Miodrag Rakić, as well as a number of MPs and former ministers. They founded a new party called the New Democratic Party.[31]

In the 2014 parliamentary election, the Democratic Party made a coalition with the New Party, Democratic Alliance of Croats in Vojvodina, Rich Serbia and United Trade Unions of Serbia "Unity" under the name of "With the Democratic Party for Democratic Serbia".[32] This coalition won 6.03% of the popular vote and 19 MPs, out of which DS received 17. After the end of the parliamentary election, Dragan Đilas announced an extraordinary party assembly session and ran for re-election as the president of the party. His opponent was deputy president Bojan Pajtić.[33]

2014–2016: Pajtić leadership

At the party conference on 31 May 2014 in Belgrade, then-President of the Government of Vojvodina and deputy president of the party Bojan Pajtić was elected president. Borislav Stefanović, Nataša Vučković, Goran Ješić, Maja Videnović and Gordana Čomić were elected vice-presidents, while Dragoljub Mićunović was re-elected president of the political council.[34]

Presidents of the Democratic Party (1990–present)

# President Born–Died Term start Term end
1 Dragoljub Mićunović 1930– 3 February 1990 29 January 1994
2 Zoran Đinđić 1952–2003 29 January 1994
12 March 2003
(assassinated)
3 Boris Tadić 1958– 22 February 2004 25 November 2012
4 Dragan Đilas 1967– 25 November 2012 31 May 2014
5 Bojan Pajtić 1970– 31 May 2014 24 September 2016
6 Dragan Šutanovac 1968– 24 September 2016 Incumbent

Provisional leadership after the assassination of Đinđić (2003–2004)

Ref:[35]

# Name Born–Died Term start Term end
Zoran Živković 1960– 18 March 2003 23 February 2004
Boris Tadić 1958–
Čedomir Jovanović 1971–
Gordana Čomić 1958–

Electoral results

Parliamentary elections

Year Popular vote % of popular vote # of seats Seat change Notes Government
1990 374,887 7.45%
7 / 250
Increase 7 opposition
1992 196,347 4.16%
6 / 250
Decrease 1 opposition
1993 497,582 11.57%
29 / 250
Increase 23 opposition
1997 Election boycott Election boycott
0 / 250
Decrease 29 non-parliamentary
2000 2,402,387 64.09%
45 / 250
Increase 45 Coalition DOS government
2003 481,249 12.58%
27 / 250
Decrease 18 Coalition GSS-SDU-KZS opposition
2007 915,854 22.71%
60 / 250
Increase 33 government
2008 1,590,200 38.42%
64 / 250
Increase 4 Coalition ZES government
2012 863,294 22.07%
49 / 250
Decrease 15 Coalition ZBŽ opposition
2014 216,634 6.03%
17 / 250
Decrease 32 Coalition with NP opposition
2016 227,589 6.02%
12 / 250
Decrease 5 Coalition NP-ZZS-DSHV opposition

Years in government (1990– )

Presidential elections

President of Serbia
Election year # Candidate 1st round votes % 2nd round votes % Notes
2003 Increase 2nd Dragoljub Mićunović 893,906 35.42 Election declared invalid due to low turnout
2004 Increase 1st Boris Tadić 853,584 27.38 1,681,528 53.97
2008 Steady 1st Boris Tadić 1,457,030 35.39 2,304,467 50.31 For a European Serbia coalition
2012 Decrease 2nd Boris Tadić 989,454 25.31% 1,481,952 47.31% Choice for a Better Life coalition

Positions held

Major positions held by Democratic Party members:

President of Serbia Years
Boris Tadić 2004–2012
Prime Minister of Serbia Years
Zoran Đinđić 2001–2003
Zoran Živković 2003–2004
Mirko Cvetković 2008–2012
President of the National Assembly of Serbia Years
Oliver Dulić 2007–2008
Mayor of Belgrade Years
Zoran Đinđić
1997
Nenad Bogdanović 2004–2007
Zoran Alimpić 2007–2008
Dragan Đilas 2008–2013
President of the Government of Vojvodina Years
Đorđe Đukić 2000–2004
Bojan Pajtić 2004–2016

References

Notes

  1. "DS in Numbers" (in Serbian). Democratic Party.
  2. 1 2 3 Orlović, Slaviša; Antonić, Slobodan; Vukomanović, Dijana; Stojiljković, Zoran; Vujačić, Ilija; Đurković, Miša; Mihailović, Srećko; Gligorov, Vladimir; Komšić, Jovan; Pajvančić, Marijana; Pantić, Dragomir (2007). Ideologija i političke stranke u Srbiji [Ideology and Political Parties in Serbia] (PDF) (in Serbian). Belgrade: Friedrich Ebert Stiftung, Faculty of Political Sciences, Institute for Humanities. ISBN 978-86-83767-23-6. Retrieved 17 July 20014. Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
  3. 1 2 3 Nordsieck, Wolfram (2014). "Parties and Elections in Europe - Serbia". Parties & Elections. Retrieved 17 July 2014.
  4. Andric, Gordana (26 October 2011), "Serbian Liberals Mull Pro-European Coalition", Balkan Insight
  5. "URS offers economic program for new government". B92. 12 June 2012. Archived from the original on 29 October 2013. Retrieved 17 July 2014.
  6. "Parliamentary groups". National Assembly official web site. Retrieved 17 July 2014.
  7. 1 2 3 Bugajski, Janusz (2002), Political parties of Eastern Europe: a Guide to Politics in the Post-ommunist Era, The Center for Strategic and International Studies, p. 412
  8. Flags of the World: Democratic Opposition of Serbia, Tomislav Todorović, 22 November 2005
  9. 1 2 "Belgrade mayor is new leader of opposition DS". B92. 26 November 2012. Retrieved 26 November 2012.
  10. "Izbori u DS 31. maja" [Election in DS on 31 May]. B92. 30 March 2014. Retrieved 17 July 2014.
  11. "Bojan Pajtić novi predsednik DS" [Bojan Pajtić New President of the DS]. B92. 31 May 2014. Retrieved 17 July 2014.
  12. 1 2 3 British Library Catalogue Article "Remembering the beginnings of the (re-established) Democratic Party", SOUTH SLAV JOURNAL, 2006, VOL 27; NUMB 3/4, pages 62-71
  13. 1 2 NIN 2010, p.16
  14. "Osnivači Demokratske stranke" [The Founders of the Democratic Party] (in Serbian). Politika. 23 March 2008. Retrieved 17 July 2014.
  15. 1 2 3 4 NIN 2010, p.17
  16. 1 2 3 Drčelić, Zora (15 March 2012). "Kanabe nas je održalo" [Kanab has kept us] (in Serbian). Vreme. Retrieved 17 July 2014.
  17. 1 2 Vukadinović, Đorđe (17 January 2002). "Čovek na mestu ili konac delo krasi". Vreme. Retrieved 17 July 2014.
  18. 1 2 Nikčević, Tamara (7 March 2013). "O sukobu, pomirenju i saradnji sa Zoranom Đinđićem" [On Conflict, Reconciliation and Cooperation with Zoran Đinđić] (in Serbian). Vreme. Retrieved 17 July 2014.
  19. Vukadinović, Đorđe (12 February 2010). "Dvadeset godina DS-a – istorija i izazovi" [Twenty Years of DS – History and Challenges] (in Serbian). Nova srpska politička misao. Retrieved 17 July 2014.
  20. NIN 2010, p.18
  21. Jovanovic, Igor; Foniqi-Kabashi, Blerta (30 June 2008). "Kosovo Serbs convene parliament; Pristina, international authorities object". Southeast European Times. Retrieved 1 July 2008.
  22. "Dragan Đilas novi predsednik DS" (in Serbian). B92. 25 November 2012. Retrieved 31 July 2014.
  23. "Đilas: Jedna stranka, jedna politika" (in Serbian). B92. 27 December 2012. Retrieved 31 July 2014.
  24. "Marković napustio DS, Đilas žali" (in Serbian). B92. 28 December 2012. Retrieved 31 July 2014.
  25. "DS: Petrović i još troje isključeni" (in Serbian). B92. 31 January 2013. Retrieved 31 July 2014.
  26. "I Vuk Jeremić isključen iz DS-a" (in Serbian). B92. 14 February 2013. Retrieved 31 July 2014.
  27. ""Odluka DS o mandatima krši Ustav"" (in Serbian). B92. 19 February 2013. Retrieved 31 July 2014.
  28. "USS nenadležan za mandat Jeremića" (in Serbian). B92. 23 April 2013. Retrieved 31 July 2014.
  29. "Đilas: Podrška Vladi oko Kosova" (in Serbian). B92. 14 March 2013. Retrieved 31 July 2014.
  30. "Boris Tadić izašao iz DS" (in Serbian). B92. 30 January 2014. Retrieved 31 July 2014.
  31. "Đilas: Demokratija je na staroj adresi" (in Serbian). RTS. 6 February 2014. Retrieved 31 July 2014.
  32. "RIK proglasio listu DS-a" (in Serbian). B92. 13 February 2014. Retrieved 31 July 2014.
  33. "Pajtić ipak ide protiv Đilasa?" (in Serbian). B92. 6 May 2014. Retrieved 31 July 2014.
  34. "Bojan Pajtić novi predsednik DS" (in Serbian). B92. 31 May 2014. Retrieved 31 July 2014.
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