Prime Minister of Croatia
President of the Government of Croatia
Predsjednik / Predsjednica Vlade Hrvatske | |
---|---|
Style | His Excellency[1] |
Appointer | President of the Republic |
Inaugural holder | Stjepan Mesić |
Formation | 30 May 1990 |
Website | www.vlada.hr |
The Prime Minister of Croatia (Croatian: Premijer/ Premijerka Hrvatske), officially the President of the Government of the Republic of Croatia (Croatian: Predsjednik/ Predsjednica Vlade Republike Hrvatske), is Croatia's head of government, and is the de facto most powerful and influential state officeholder in the Croatian system of government. Following the first-time establishment of the office in 1945, the 1990-2001 semi-presidential period is the only exception where the President of Croatia held de facto authority. In the formal Croatian order of precedence, however, the position of prime minister is the third highest state office, after the President of the Republic and the Speaker of the Parliament.
The Constitution of Croatia prescribes that "Parliament supervises the Government" (Article 81) and that "the President of the Republic ensures the regular and balanced functioning and stability of government" (as a whole; Article 94), while the Government is introduced in Article 108.[2] Since 2000, the prime minister has had various added constitutional powers and is mentioned before the Government itself in the text of the Constitution, in Articles 87, 97, 99, 100, 101, 103, 104.[2] The current Prime Minister of Croatia is Andrej Plenković. The Government of Croatia meets in Banski dvori, a historical building located on the west side of St. Mark's Square in Zagreb.
Name
The official name of the office, literally translated, is "President of the Government" (Predsjednik Vlade), rather than "Prime Minister" (Prvi Ministar). When the office was first established in 1945, the name "President of the Government" was introduced. The name of the office was changed 8 years later with the Yugoslav constitutional reforms of 1953, into "President of the Executive Council" (Predsjednik Izvršnog vijeća). After another round of constitutional reforms in 1990, the office was renamed back to its original 1945-1953 title of "President of the Government". For all periods, however, the term "Prime Minister" is colloquially used (especially in the media) in English-language usage.
History
The Royal Government of the Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia (1868-1918) was headed by Ban (Viceroy), who represented the King. The first head of government of Croatia as a constituent republic of Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia was Vladimir Bakarić, who assumed the position on 14 April 1945. The position was then, as it is today, the most powerful public office in the state (the only historical exception being the extremely powerful semi-presidential system used from 1990 until 2000, during which the President was by far the most significant figure in the government hierarchy). In post-World War II Socialist Republic of Croatia, a single-party system was in place. During this time there were twelve heads of government (using the title President of the Executive Council), all from the ranks of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia (KPJ), which was reformed and renamed into the League of Communists of Yugoslavia (SKJ) in 1952. The federal party was organized into six sub-organizations - the republic parties, one for each of the six federal republics. Croatian politicians and prime ministers of the period were members of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia through their membership in the League of Communists of Croatia (SKH), the Croatian part of the federal party (as was respectively the case with all Yugoslav politicians). The office remained the central post of Croatian politics in spite of the institution of a collective Presidency in 1974 (previously the mostly-nominal function of the head of state belonged to the Speaker of the Croatian Parliament, the Sabor).
After the constitutional amendments that allowed for multi-party elections in Croatia, the Parliament enacted amendments to the constitution (25 July) which eliminated socialist references and adopted new national symbols. The newly elected tricameral Parliament proceeded to change the Constitution of Croatia, and on 22 December 1990, this so-called "Christmas Constitution" fundamentally defined the Republic of Croatia and its governmental structure. From the 1990 constitutional reforms onward Croatia was a semi-presidential republic, which meant the President of Croatia had broad executive powers (further expanded with laws to a point of superpresidentialism), including the appointment and dismissal of the Prime Minister and other officials in the government. During this period, lasting until constitutional amendments in late 2000, Croatia had seven prime ministers. The first Prime Minister of Croatia since the 1990 constitutional reforms was Stjepan Mesić, assuming office on 30 May 1990.[3][4]
Following the May 1991 independence referendum in which 93% of voters approved secession, Croatia formally proclaimed independence from Yugoslavia on 25 June 1991, with Josip Manolić continuing in the role of prime minister as head of government of an independent Croatia. However, the country then signed the July 1991 Brijuni Agreement in which it agreed to postpone further activities towards severing ties with Yugoslavia. Meanwhile, the Croatian War of Independence ensued, and Franjo Gregurić was appointed to lead a Government of National Unity. In October the same year, Croatia formally severed all remaining legal ties with the Yugoslav Federation.
Following the January 2000 general election the winning centre-left coalition led by the Social Democratic Party amended the Constitution and effectively stripped the President of most of his executive powers, strengthening the role of the Parliament and the Prime Minister, turning Croatia into a parliamentary republic. The Prime Minister again (as before 1990) became the foremost post in Croatian politics.
To date there have been twelve Prime Ministers who have chaired 14 governments since the first multi-party elections. Nine Prime Ministers were members of the Croatian Democratic Union during their terms of office, two were members of the Social Democratic Party and one was not a member of any political party. Since independence there has been one female Prime Minister (Jadranka Kosor), while Savka Dabčević-Kučar was the first woman (not only in Croatia, but in Europe) to hold an office equivalent to a head of government as Chairman of the Executive Council of the Socialist Republic of Croatia (1967-1969).
List of officeholders (1945–present)
League of Communists of Yugoslavia Croatian Democratic Union Social Democratic Party of Croatia Independent
Presidents of the Executive Council of the Socialist Republic of Croatia (1945–1990)
No. | Name (Born–Died) |
Portrait | Term of Office | Political party | Election | Cabinet | Cabinet parties | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Took Office | Left Office | Duration | |||||||
N/A | Pavle Gregorić (1892–1989) |
7 March 1945 | 14 April 1945 | 39 days | Communist Party of Yugoslavia | — | Gregorić | KPH | |
1 | Vladimir Bakarić (1912–1983) |
14 April 1945 | 18 December 1953 | 8 years, 7 months, 18 days | Communist Party of Yugoslavia (party renamed in 1952) League of Communists of Yugoslavia (party renamed in 1952) |
— | Bakarić 1st Executive Council |
KPH | |
President of the Government of the People's Republic of Croatia from 1945 to 1953. On 6 February 1953 he was elected to the new position of President of the Executive Council. Simultaneously held these positions along with the post of Secretary of the Central Committee of the League of Communists of Croatia. Subsequently, became President of the Parliament of the People's Republic of Croatia (1953–1963). | |||||||||
2 | Jakov Blažević (1912–1996) |
18 December 1953 | 10 July 1962 | 8 years, 7 months | League of Communists of Yugoslavia | — | 2nd Executive Council 3rd Executive Council |
SKH | |
Resigned as President of the Executive Council to take the post of president of the Chamber of Commerce of Yugoslavia.[5] He was replaced by Zvonko Brkić for the remainder of the term of the 3rd Executive Council. | |||||||||
3 | Zvonko Brkić (1912–1977) |
10 July 1962 | June 1963 | 11 months | League of Communists of Yugoslavia | — | 4th Executive Council | SKH | |
Member of the Executive Council from 1953 to 1963. After Jakov Blažević's resignation as President of the Executive Council he served the remainder of his term. He subsequently became Vice President of the Federal Assembly (1963–1967). | |||||||||
4 | Mika Špiljak (1916–2007) |
June 1963 | 11 May 1967 | 3 years, 11 months | League of Communists of Yugoslavia | — | 5th Executive Council | SKH | |
Became President of the Federal Executive Council on 16 May 1967. | |||||||||
5 | Savka Dabčević-Kučar (1923–2009) |
11 May 1967 | 8 May 1969 | 2 years | League of Communists of Yugoslavia | — | 6th Executive Council | SKH | |
After her term expired she was immediately appointed Secretary of the Central Committee of the League of Communists of Croatia (1969–1971). | |||||||||
6 | Dragutin Haramija (1923–2012) |
May 1969 | 28 December 1971 | 2 years, 7 months | League of Communists of Yugoslavia | — | 7th Executive Council | SKH | |
Denounced at the XXI. Meeting of the Presidency of the Central Committee of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia held in Karađorđevo on 1 and 2 December 1971 and forced to resign. Subsequently, withdrew from politics. | |||||||||
7 | Ivo Perišin (1925–2008) |
28 December 1971 | 8 May 1974[6] | 2 years, 4 months | League of Communists of Yugoslavia | — | 8th Executive Council | SKH | |
Subsequently, served as President of the Parliament of the Socialist Republic of Croatia (1974–1978). | |||||||||
8 | Jakov Sirotković (1922–2002) |
8 May 1974 | 9 May 1978 | 4 years, 1 month | League of Communists of Yugoslavia | — | 9th Executive Council | SKH | |
9 | Petar Fleković (1932–) |
9 May 1978 | May 1982 | 4 years | League of Communists of Yugoslavia | — | 10th Executive Council | SKH | |
Subsequently, named director of INA (1982–1990). | |||||||||
10 | Ante Marković (1924–2011) |
May 1982 | 20 November 1985 | 4 years | League of Communists of Yugoslavia | — | 11th Executive Council | SKH | |
Elected by Parliament as President of the Presidency of SR Croatia on 10 May 1986. | |||||||||
11 | Ema Derossi-Bjelajac (1926-) |
20 November 1985 | 10 May 1986 | 4 years | League of Communists of Yugoslavia | — | 12th Executive Council | SKH | |
Concurrently serving as President of the Presidency of SR Croatia | |||||||||
12 | Antun Milović (1934–2008) |
10 May 1986 | 30 May 1990 | 4 years, 21 days | League of Communists of Yugoslavia (until January 1990) Social Democratic Party (from January 1990) |
— | 13th Executive Council | SKH/SDP |
Prime Ministers of the Republic of Croatia (1990–present)
(*) While Stjepan Mesić formally held the post of President of the Executive Council of the Socialist Republic of Croatia and not of Prime Minister of the Republic of Croatia during his term in office (May-August 1990), he is considered by the Government of Croatia to have been the first Prime Minister of modern-day Croatia as the head of the first Croatian government cabinet (in fact the 14th Executive Council of SR Croatia) following the first multi-party elections in 1990 and the constituting of the first multi-party Sabor. When Josip Manolić took the title of Prime Minister in August 1990, Croatia was still legally within the Yugoslav federation and declared independence on 25 June 1991, which was followed by the severing of all remaining legal ties with Yugoslavia on 8 October 1991, during the term of Franjo Gregurić, the third Prime Minister since the 1990 elections. Thus, it is as of 2016 officially considered that there have been 12 Prime Ministers of the Republic of Croatia to date and that the office of Prime Minister is not a direct continuation of or a successor to the post of President of the Executive Council of the Socialist Republic of Croatia, which was formally and legally one of six constituent republic of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (a federal country), and was thus not an independent nation. Namely, the Presidents of the republic's Executive Council, though formally being heads of government, held a sub-national office most similar to modern-day First Ministers in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland or Minister-presidents in German states, and were subordinate to the Federal Executive Council in Belgrade. It is thus legally and technically correct to consider Josip Manolić the first Croatian Prime Minister and head of government in general after independence was achieved in June 1991.
No. | Name (Born–Died) |
Portrait | Term of Office | Political party | Election | Cabinet | Cabinet parties | Assembly - Confidence | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Designated Took Office Confidence |
Resignation Left Office |
Duration | ||||||||
(13)* 1 |
Stjepan Mesić (1934–) |
30 May 1990 | 24 August 1990 | 86 days | Croatian Democratic Union | 1990 | Mesić (formally 14th Executive Council)* |
HDZ | 1st Assembly | |
14* |
Josip Manolić (1920–) |
24 August 1990[a] | 25 June 1991 | 327 days | Croatian Democratic Union | — | Manolić | HDZ | 1st Assembly | |
2 |
25 June 1991 | 17 July 1991 | ||||||||
3 |
Franjo Gregurić (1939–) |
17 July 1991[a] | 12 August 1992 | 392 days | Croatian Democratic Union | — | Gregurić | HDZ-SDP -HSLS-HKDS (National unity government) |
1st Assembly | |
4 |
Hrvoje Šarinić (1935–2017) |
12 August 1992[a] 8 September 1992 |
3 April 1993 | 234 days | Croatian Democratic Union | 1992 | Šarinić | HDZ | 2nd Assembly | |
5 |
Nikica Valentić (1950–) |
29 March 1993 3 April 1993[a] |
7 November 1995 | 948 days | Croatian Democratic Union | — | Valentić | HDZ | 2nd Assembly | |
6 |
Zlatko Mateša (1949–) |
4 November 1995 7 November 1995[a] 28 November 1995[7] |
27 January 2000 | 1542 days | Croatian Democratic Union | 1995 | Mateša | HDZ | 3rd Assembly - 77/127 MPs | |
7 |
Ivica Račan (1944–2007) |
22 January 2000 27 January 2000[a] 2 February 2000 |
5 July 2002 (Resigned) 30 July 2002 |
1426 days | Social Democratic Party | 2000[8] | Račan I | SDP-HSLS-HNS -HSS-IDS-LS |
4th Assembly - 122[9]/151 MPs (Račan I) - 84/151 MPs (Račan II) | |
11 June 2002 30 July 2002 |
23 December 2003 | Račan II | SDP-HNS-HSS -LS-Libra | |||||||
8 |
Ivo Sanader (1953–) |
9 December 2003 23 December 2003 |
12 January 2008 | 2022 days | Croatian Democratic Union | 2003 | Sanader I | HDZ-DC | 5th Assembly - 88/151 MPs (Sanader I) 6th Assembly - 82/153 MPs (Sanader II) | |
15 December 2007 12 January 2008 |
1 July 2009 (Resigned) 6 July 2009 |
2007 | Sanader II | HDZ-HSLS-HSS -SDSS | ||||||
9 |
Jadranka Kosor (1953–) |
3 July 2009 6 July 2009 |
23 December 2011 | 900 days | Croatian Democratic Union | — | Kosor | HDZ-HSLS-HSS -SDSS |
6th Assembly - 83/153 MPs | |
10 |
Zoran Milanović (1966–) |
14 December 2011 23 December 2011 |
22 January 2016 | 1491 days | Social Democratic Party | 2011 | Milanović | SDP-HNS -IDS |
7th Assembly - 89/151 MPs | |
11 |
Tihomir Orešković (1966–) |
23 December 2015 22 January 2016 |
16 June 2016 (No confidence) 19 October 2016 |
271 days | Independent | 2015 | Orešković | HDZ-MOST | 8th Assembly - 83/151 MPs | |
12 |
Andrej Plenković (1970–) |
10 October 2016 19 October 2016 |
Incumbent | 302 days | Croatian Democratic Union | 2016 | Plenković | HDZ-MOST (until 28 April 2017) - HDZ (from 28 April to 9 June 2017) - HDZ-HNS (from 9 June 2017) |
9th Assembly - 91/151 MPs |
Statistics
# | Prime Minister | Age at ascension (first term) |
Time in office (total) |
Age at retirement (last term) |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Stjepan Mesić | 55 years, 157 days | 0 years, 86 days | 55 years, 243 days |
2 | Josip Manolić | 70 years, 155 days | 0 years, 327 days | 71 years, 117 days |
3 | Franjo Gregurić | 51 years, 278 days | 1 year, 26 days | 52 years, 305 days |
4 | Hrvoje Šarinić | 57 years, 177 days | 0 years, 234 days | 58 years, 45 days |
5 | Nikica Valentić | 42 years, 130 days | 2 years, 218 days | 44 years, 348 days |
6 | Zlatko Mateša | 46 years, 143 days | 4 years, 81 days | 50 years, 224 days |
7 | Ivica Račan | 55 years, 337 days | 3 years, 330 days | 59 years, 302 days |
8 | Ivo Sanader | 50 years, 198 days | 5 years, 195 days | 56 years, 28 days |
9 | Jadranka Kosor | 56 years, 5 days | 2 years, 170 days | 58 years, 175 days |
10 | Zoran Milanović | 45 years, 54 days | 4 years, 30 days | 49 years, 84 days |
11 | Tihomir Orešković | 50 years, 21 days | 0 years, 271 days | 50 years, 292 days |
12 | Andrej Plenković | 46 years, 195 days | 302 days (Ongoing) | Incumbent |
Spouses of Prime Ministers
Name | Relation to Prime Minister |
---|---|
Milka Mesić (née Dudunić) | wife of Prime Minister Stjepan Mesić |
Marija Eker Manolić | wife of Prime Minister Josip Manolić |
Jozefina Gregurić (née Abramović) | wife of Prime Minister Franjo Gregurić |
Erika Šarinić | wife of Prime Minister Hrvoje Šarinić |
Antonela Valentić | wife of Prime Minister Nikica Valentić |
Sanja Gregurić-Mateša | wife of Prime Minister Zlatko Mateša |
Dijana Pleština | wife of Prime Minister Ivica Račan |
Mirjana Sanader (née Šarić) | wife of Prime Minister Ivo Sanader |
Jadranka Kosor divorced before becoming Prime Minister | |
Sanja Musić Milanović | wife of Prime Minister Zoran Milanović |
Sanja Dujmović Orešković | wife of Prime Minister Tihomir Orešković |
Ana Maslać Plenković | wife of Prime Minister Andrej Plenković |
Living former Heads of government of Croatia
There are eleven living former Heads of government (3 former Presidents of the Executive Council of SR Croatia and 8 former Prime Ministers of Croatia). The last former head of government to die was Hrvoje Šarinić (1992-1993) on 21 July 2017.
Presidents of the Executive Council of the Socialist Republic of Croatia (until 1990):
Petar Fleković
(1978–1982)
September 14, 1932Ema Derossi-Bjelajac
(1985–1986)
May 3, 1926Stjepan Mesić
(1990)
December 24, 1934
Prime Ministers of the Republic of Croatia (1990–present):
Josip Manolić
(1990–1991)
March 22, 1920Franjo Gregurić
(1991–1992)
October 12, 1939Nikica Valentić
(1993–1995)
November 24, 1950Zlatko Mateša
(1995–2000)
June 17, 1949Ivo Sanader
(2003–2009)
June 8, 1953Jadranka Kosor
(2009–2011)
July 1, 1953Zoran Milanović
(2011–2016)
October 30, 1966Tihomir Orešković
(2016)
January 1, 1966
Facts and records of Croatian Prime Ministers (since 30 May 1990)
Age at appointment
- Oldest person to assume office: Josip Manolić (70 years, 155 days)
- Youngest person to assume office: Nikica Valentić (42 years,130 days)
Age at retirement
- Oldest person to leave office: Josip Manolić (71 years, 117 days)
- Youngest person to leave office: Nikica Valentić (44 years, 348 days)
Oldest and youngest living prime ministers
- Oldest living prime minister: Josip Manolić (97 years, 148 days)
- Youngest living prime minister: Andrej Plenković (47 years, 131 days)
Longest and shortest lived prime ministers
- Longest-lived prime minister: Josip Manolić (97 years, 148 days)
- Shortest-lived prime minister: Andrej Plenković (47 years, 131 days)
Longest and shortest retirements
- Living prime minister with the longest period lived after leaving office: Stjepan Mesić (26 years, 358 days)
- Living prime minister with the shortest period lived after leaving office: Tihomir Orešković (302 days)
- Deceased prime minister with the longest period lived after leaving office: Hrvoje Šarinić (24 years, 109 days)
- Deceased prime minister with the shortest period lived after leaving office: Ivica Račan (3 years, 127 days)
Age difference between incoming and outgoing officeholders
- Largest age difference between an incoming and outgoing prime minister: Franjo Gregurić (born 12 October 1939) was 19 years, 204 days younger than Josip Manolić (born 22 March 1920) whom he succeeded in 1991.
- Smallest age difference between an incoming and outgoing prime minister: Jadranka Kosor (born 1 July 1953) was 23 days younger than Ivo Sanader (born 8 June 1953) whom she succeeded in 2009.
Length of service
- Longest-serving prime minister: Ivo Sanader (5 years, 195 days)
- Shortest-serving prime minister: Stjepan Mesić (86 days)
Terms of office and number of cabinets
- Two terms in office: Ivo Sanader (2003-2008, 2008-2009) and Ivica Račan (2000-2002, 2002-2003)
- One term in office: Stjepan Mesić (1990), Josip Manolić (1990-1991), Franjo Gregurić (1991-1992), Hrvoje Šarinić (1992-1993), Nikica Valentić (1993-1995), Zlatko Mateša (1995-2000), Jadranka Kosor (2009-2011), Zoran Milanović (2011-2016), Tihomir Orešković (2016) and Andrej Plenković (in office since 2016)
- Prime Minister who won the most parliamentary elections: Ivo Sanader (2003 and 2007)
- Prime Minister who headed the most cabinets while in office: Ivo Sanader and Ivica Račan (each headed two cabinets)
- Cabinet with longest duration: Cabinet of Zlatko Mateša (4 years, 81 days)
- Cabinet with shortest duration: Cabinet of Stjepan Mesić (formally 14th Executive Council of the Parliament of SR Croatia) (86 days)
Size of cabinet
- Prime minister of cabinet with largest number of members during its duration (including removed or deceased members): Franjo Gregurić (45 members including the Government secretary)
- Prime Minister of cabinet with smallest number of members during its duration (including removed or deceased members): Ivo Sanader (19 members in First Sanader cabinet)
- Prime Minister of cabinet with largest number of members on date of formation: Josip Manolić (27 members named on 17 July 1990)
- Prime Minister of cabinet with smallest number of members on date of formation: Stjepan Mesić (5 members named on 30 May 1990. Another 15 named on 31 May 1990)
- Prime Minister of cabinet with largest number of members on date of dissolution (excluding removed or deceased members): Franjo Gregurić (30 members on 12 August 1992)
- Prime Minister of cabinet with smallest number of members on date of dissolution (excluding removed or deceased members): Ivo Sanader (14 members on 12 January 2008 upon dissolution of First Sanader Cabinet)
Number of political parties in cabinet
- Prime Ministers of cabinets with largest number of political parties represented in them during their total duration (including removed or deceased members on date of dissolution): Franjo Gregurić and Ivica Račan (First and Second cabinets) (each prime minister had 5 parties represented in their cabinet)
- Prime Ministers of cabinets with the smallest number of political parties represented in them during their total duration (including removed or deceased members): Stjepan Mesić, Josip Manolić, Hrvoje Šarinić and Zlatko Mateša (each prime minister had only 1 party (the HDZ) represented in their cabinet)
- Prime Minister of cabinet with the largest number of parties represented in it on the date of its formation: Ivica Račan (5 parties had representation in his First cabinet on 27 January 2000)
- Prime ministers of cabinets with the smallest number of parties represented in them on the date of their formation: Stjepan Mesić, Josip Manolić, Hrvoje Šarinić and Zlatko Mateša (each prime minister had only 1 party (the HDZ) represented in their cabinet on the date it was formed)
- Prime Minister of the cabinet with the largest number of political parties represented in it on the date of its dissolution: Ivica Račan (5 parties were represented in his Second cabinet on 23 December 2003)
- Prime Ministers of cabinets with the smallest number of political parties represented in them on the date of their dissolution: Stjepan Mesić, Josip Manolić, Franjo Gregurić, Hrvoje Šarinić, Nikica Valentić, Zlatko Mateša and Ivo Sanader (First cabinet) (each prime minister had only 1 party (the HDZ) represented in their cabinet on the date it was dissolved)
Female prime ministers
- First female prime minister: Jadranka Kosor
Other national and international offices held after retirement
- Only prime minister to have held the three highest offices of government: Stjepan Mesić — Prime Minister (1990), Speaker of Parliament (1992-1994) and President (2000-2010)
- Only prime minister to have served as head of state of another independent country: Stjepan Mesić (as President of the Presidency of Yugoslavia from 1990-1991)
- First prime minister elected president: Stjepan Mesić (in 2000)
- First prime minister elected Speaker of Parliament: Stjepan Mesić (in 1992)
- First prime minister elected Speaker of the Chamber of Counties (upper house of Croatian Parliament until 2001): Josip Manolić (in 1993)
- Only prime minister to become Secretary General of the Non-Aligned Movement: Stjepan Mesić (as President of the Presidency of Yugoslavia)
Foreign-born prime ministers
- Ivica Račan was born in Ebersbach (then-Nazi Germany), now Ebersbach-Neugersdorf, Germany
Prime Ministers born in predecessor states of modern Croatia (before 1991)
- Prime Ministers born in:
- Kingdom of Yugoslavia (1918-1945) (known as the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes until 1929) (4): Josip Manolić (1920), Stjepan Mesić (1934), Hrvoje Šarinić (1935) and Franjo Gregurić (1939)
- Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (1945-1991) (7): Zlatko Mateša (1949), Nikica Valentić (1950), Ivo Sanader (1953), Jadranka Kosor (1953), Zoran Milanović (1966), Tihomir Orešković (1966) and Andrej Plenković (1970)
Period lived before Croatian independence was declared (25 June 1991)
- Oldest (future or previous) prime minister on date of Croatia's declaration of independence: Josip Manolić (71 years, 95 days)
- Youngest (future or previous) prime minister on date of Croatia's declaration of independence: Andrej Plenković (21 years, 78 days)
Service under the most heads of state
- Prime Ministers who served under the most Presidents (excluding Acting Presidents): Jadranka Kosor and Zoran Milanović (both served under two presidents — Stjepan Mesić and Ivo Josipović (Kosor), Ivo Josipović and Kolinda Grabar-Kitarović (Milanović))
- Prime Ministers who served under the most heads of state (including Acting Presidents): Ivica Račan (served under three heads of state — Acting Presidents Vlatko Pavletić and Zlatko Tomčić and President Stjepan Mesić)
See also
- List of Croatian Governments
- List of Croatian Prime Ministers by time in office
- List of Prime Ministers of Croatia by longevity
- President of Croatia
- Speaker of the Croatian Parliament
- Secretary of the League of Communists of Croatia
- Politics of Croatia
- List of heads of state of Yugoslavia
- Prime Minister of Yugoslavia
Notes
^a From 1990 until the constitutional changes in November 2000 (which replaced a powerful semi-presidential system with an incomplete parliamentary system), the term of the Prime Minister began when he was appointed by the President of the Republic, and not from the point when he received a vote of confidence in Parliament.
References
- ↑ , Protocol and Liaison Service, United Nations.
- 1 2 "The Constitution of the Republic of Croatia (consolidated text)". Croatian Parliament. Retrieved 2011-02-16.
- ↑ "Chronology of Croatian governments" (in Croatian). Croatian Information-Documentation Referral Agency. Retrieved 2011-05-13.
- ↑ "Prethodne Vlade RH" [Former Governments of the Republic of Croatia] (in Croatian). Croatian Government. Retrieved 2010-12-13.
- ↑ Bukvić, Nenad (2012). "Izvršno vijeće Sabora Narodne Republike Hrvatske : ustroj i djelovanje (1953–1963)". Arhivski vjesnik (in Croatian). 55: 9–46.
- ↑ Bukvić, Nenad (2013). "Izvršno vijeće Sabora Socijalističke Republike Hrvatske: ustroj i djelovanje (1963–1974)". Arhivski vjesnik (in Croatian). 56: 50.
- ↑ file:///C:/Users/h.r/Downloads/HS_1995-1999_ZD_1_ocr.pdf
- ↑ After the changes to the Constitution of the Republic of Croatia the country moved from a semi-presidential system to a parliamentary system, making the Prime Minister the most powerful office in the country.
- ↑ file:///C:/Users/h.r/Downloads/Zapisnik_01_sjednice_Zastupnickog_doma_Hrvatskog_drzavnog_sabora.pdf