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Kurir is generally seen as pro-government. It was favorable to the Democratic Party (DS) when it ruled but after its loss in 2012 to the Serbian Progressive Party (SNS), Kurir switched allegiances and became pro-SNS, an editorial stance that has remained. [7]
The SNS–SPS government, led by Dačić, was re-shuffled in July 2013 due to disagreements between the governing parties. [38] Dačić also threatened SNS that, his party would leave the government if SNS does not accept the re-shuffle, which also speculated that snap elections might be called earlier. [39]
Following the 2008 split in the SRS and founding of the Serbian Progressive Party, Pelević was elected MP on the SNS ballot in the 2012 election but soon developed disagreements over SNS policies on Kosovo and the EU, eventually leaving the SNS parliamentary group and becoming an independent MP. [3]
Tomislav Nikolić and Aleksandar Vučić at the founding convention on 21 October 2008. The conflict between Tomislav Nikolić and Vojislav Šešelj came to light after Nikolić's statement that the Serbian Radical Party (SRS), a far-right political party, [1] in the National Assembly would support the Stabilisation and Association Process agreement for the accession of Serbia to the European ...
Marko Đurić (Serbian Cyrillic: Марко Ђурић; born 25 June 1983) is a Serbian politician and diplomat serving as the minister of foreign affairs since 2024. Prior to becoming a government minister, Đurić was the ambassador of Serbia to the United States of America since 8 October 2020, [1] [2] and the non-resident ambassador of Serbia to Colombia since 3 July 2021.
SNS and its coalition partners secured a supermajority in the parliament after the 2020 parliamentary election, with no official opposition represented in the parliament itself. [227] In early May 2021, Vučić sent a proposal to Aleksandar Šapić , the leader of the Serbian Patriotic Alliance (SPAS), about the merger of two parties.
Later that year he defected to the Serbian Progressive Party (SNS). [1] After the 2012 parliamentary election, Babić was appointed deputy head of the Serbian Progressive Party parliamentary group. [3] In 2013, he became the head of the group. [4]
There were large number of incidents on government rally, including attacks on journalists and anti-government protesters by SNS supporters and, so called, party parapolice members. [14] On opposition protest were few thousand people from Belgrade, and on government rally was 10 000 people from entire Serbia.