Zoran Milanović
Zoran Milanović (pronounced [zǒran milǎːnoʋitɕ] (listen);[2] born 30 October 1966) is a Croatian politician who has served as President of Croatia since 19 February 2020. Prior to assuming the presidency, he was Prime Minister from 2011 to 2016, and president of the Social Democratic Party from 2007 to 2016.
Zoran Milanović | |
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President of Croatia | |
Assumed office 19 February 2020 | |
Prime Minister | Andrej Plenković |
Preceded by | Kolinda Grabar-Kitarović |
Prime Minister of Croatia | |
In office 23 December 2011 – 22 January 2016 | |
President | Ivo Josipović Kolinda Grabar-Kitarović |
Deputy | Radimir Čačić Branko Grčić Milanka Opačić Vesna Pusić |
Preceded by | Jadranka Kosor |
Succeeded by | Tihomir Orešković |
Leader of the Opposition | |
In office 22 January 2016 – 26 November 2016 | |
Prime Minister | Tihomir Orešković Andrej Plenković |
Preceded by | Tomislav Karamarko |
Succeeded by | Davor Bernardić |
In office 2 June 2007 – 23 December 2011 | |
Prime Minister | Ivo Sanader Jadranka Kosor |
Preceded by | Ivica Račan Željka Antunović (acting) |
Succeeded by | Jadranka Kosor |
President of the Social Democratic Party | |
In office 2 June 2007 – 26 November 2016 | |
Deputy | Zlatko Komadina Gordan Maras Milanka Opačić Rajko Ostojić |
Preceded by | Ivica Račan Željka Antunović (acting) |
Succeeded by | Davor Bernardić |
Personal details | |
Born | Zagreb, SR Croatia, SFR Yugoslavia | 30 October 1966
Political party |
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Spouse(s) | Sanja Musić (m. 1994) |
Children | 2 |
Parents |
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Alma mater | |
Signature | |
Website | Official website |
After graduating from the Zagreb Faculty of Law, Milanović started working in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. He served as an advisor at the Croatian Mission to the European Union and NATO in Brussels from 1996 to 1999. During the same year he joined the Social Democratic Party. In 1998 he earned his master's degree in European Union law at the Flemish University in Brussels and was an assistant to the Foreign minister of Croatia for political multilateral affairs in 2003. In June 2007 he was elected president of the SDP, following the death of the long-time party leader and former prime minister Ivica Račan. Under Milanović's leadership the party finished in second place in the 2007 parliamentary election and was unable to form a governing majority. Despite losing the election, he was reelected party leader in 2008. In 2011 Milanović initiated the formation of the Kukuriku Coalition, uniting four centre to centre-left political parties. The coalition won an absolute majority in the 2011 parliamentary election, with the SDP itself becoming the largest party in Parliament. Milanović thus became Prime Minister on 23 December 2011, after the Parliament approved his cabinet.
The beginning of his prime ministership was marked by efforts to finalise the ratification process of Croatia's entry into the European Union and by the holding of a membership referendum. His cabinet introduced changes to the tax code, passed a fiscalisation law and started several large infrastructure projects. After the increase in the value of the Swiss franc, the government announced that all Swiss franc loans would be converted into euros. Milanović supported the expansion of same-sex couples' rights and introduced the Life Partnership Act. After the inconclusive 2015 election and more than two months of negotiations on forming a government, he was ultimately succeeded as prime minister by the nonpartisan technocrat Tihomir Orešković in January 2016. After Orešković's government fell, Milanović led the four-party People's Coalition in the subsequent snap parliamentary election in September 2016. In the election, his coalition suffered a surprise defeat to the centre-right Croatian Democratic Union and Milanović announced his withdrawal from politics. He then entered the consulting business and worked as an advisor to Albanian prime minister Edi Rama.
On 17 June 2019, Milanović announced that he would be running for the office of president in the 2019–20 election as the candidate of the Social Democratic Party; he was officially nominated on 6 July 2019. He thereafter proceeded to receive the most votes (29.55%) in the first round of the election on 22 December 2019, ahead of incumbent president Kolinda Grabar-Kitarović (26.65%) and to be elected as the fifth President of Croatia in the runoff on 5 January 2020, with 52.66% of the vote. He became the first presidential candidate in Croatian history to receive more votes than an incumbent officeholder in the first round of an election, the second person in Croatia to defeat an incumbent running for reelection and the first (post-independence) prime minister of Croatia to be elected head of state.
Personal life
His father, Stipe Milanović (1937–2019), was an economist, and his mother, Đurđica "Gina" (née Matasić) Milanović, was a teacher of English and German.[3] He stated that his family roots are from Livno, Bosnia and Herzegovina.[4]
His paternal family hails from the Sinj environs.[5] His paternal grandfather and a paternal great-uncle, Ante and Ivan Milanović, respectively, from Glavice joined the Partisans in 1942, taking part later in the liberation of Trieste, while his maternal grandfather, Stjepan Matasić, from an affluent family, was, Milanović revealed in 2016, an Ustasha,[5][6] member of the paramilitary corps established by the Nazi-collaborationist government of the Independent State of Croatia.
Zoran's father was a member of the KPJ.[5] Milanović was baptized secretly by his maternal grandmother, Marija Matasić, at the Church of St. Peter and Paul, and given the baptismal name Marijan.[3] He was brought up in the neighbourhoods of Knežija, and after 1970 in Trnje, a communist quarter.[3] He had a brother, Krešimir, who died in 2019. Milanović attended the Center for Management and Judiciary from 1981.[3][7]
Milanović was into sports, football, basketball and boxing. He declared as a leftist.[3] In 1985, he entered the University of Zagreb to study law, then finished his military service, and returned to study in 1986.[3] Apart from Croatian, he speaks English, French and Russian.
After college, Milanović became an intern at the Zagreb Commercial Court, and in 1993 for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, working under future political rival Ivo Sanader. A year later, he joined an OSCE peacekeeping mission in the Nagorno-Karabakh region, disputed between Azerbaijan and local Armenian rebels.[8]
In 1994, he married Sanja Musić, with whom he has two sons: Ante Jakov and Marko.[9][10]
Party president
In 1999, he joined the Social Democratic Party (SDP) as he had not yet been an official member. Following SDP's win in the 2000 elections, he was given responsibility for liaison with NATO, three years later he became assistant to Foreign Minister Tonino Picula. He left his post after the 2003 elections when the conservative Croatian Democratic Union came to power.
As an SDP member, in 2004 he renounced his position as an assistant minister of foreign affairs and became a member of the newly founded SDP's Executive Committee as well as the International Secretary in charge of contacts with other political parties. Two years later, he briefly became party spokesman, standing in for absent Gordana Grbić. In early September 2006 he became SDP's coordinator for the 4th constituency in the 2007 elections.
An extraordinary Party convention was held in Zagreb on 2 June 2007, due to 11 April resignation of the first Party President and Croatia's former Prime Minister Ivica Račan. Milanović entered the contest, despite being considered an "outsider", because of his shorter term in the party, running against Željka Antunović (acting Party President since Račan's resignation), Milan Bandić and Tonino Picula. On 29 September 2007, during the campaign for party president, he publicly promised to resign and never to seek presidency of the party again, if party didn't win more seats that HDZ in next elections.[11]
In the first round he led with 592, well ahead of his nearest rival, Željka Antunović.[12] He won the second round, thereby becoming president of the party.[13]
2007 Parliament election
The 2007 parliamentary election turned out to be the closest election since independence with SDP winning 56 seats, only 10 mandates short of HDZ's 66. 5 seats that HDZ had won were from the eleventh district reserved for citizens living abroad, which was one of the main campaign issues of SDP which sought to decrease electoral significance of the so-called diaspora voters. The resulting close race left both sides in a position to form a government, provided they gather 77 of the 153 representatives. After the election, Sanader seemed to be in a better position to form a cabinet which caused Milanović to make himself the candidate for Prime Minister over the less popular Ljubo Jurčić, without first consulting the party's Main Committee. However, the Social Democrats remained in the Opposition, since Ivo Sanader managed to form a majority coalition.
After losing the hotly contested general elections, Milanović did not resign as party president, despite promising before the election that he would, should the party lose.[11] In the 2007 election, despite the loss, SDP emerged with the largest parliamentary caucus in their history and achieved their best result yet. Milanović seemed to be in a good position to remain party president and announced he would run for a first full term as party president. In the 2008 leadership election he faced Davorko Vidović and Dragan Kovačević, but emerged as the winner with almost 80 percent of the delegate vote.
First term as Leader of the Opposition (2007–2011)
With 56 seats won SDP emerged from the 2007 election as the second largest party in Parliament and the largest party that is not a part of the governing majority. This made Milanović the unofficial Leader of the Opposition. Milanović was very critical of the Sanader administration, especially concerning their handling of the economy and the fight against corruption.
In September 2008, Milanović made a highly publicized visit to Bleiburg to commemorate the repatriations.[14] This made him the second leader of the Social Democratic Party of Croatia to visit the site, the first being Ivica Račan.
The 2009 local elections were held on 17 and 31 May and resulted with the Social Democrats making considerable gains in certain traditionally HDZ-leaning cities and constituencies, such as Dubrovnik, Šibenik, Trogir and Vukovar, as well as retaining such major traditionally SDP-leaning cities as Zagreb and Rijeka.[15]
On 1 July 2009, Ivo Sanader announced he was resigning the Premiership and leaving his deputy Jadranka Kosor as Prime Minister. Parliament approved her and the new Cabinet which made Kosor the first woman ever to be appointed Prime Minister.[16] Since late 2008, the SDP had been leading the polls, however by a narrow margin. After the sudden resignation of Sanader HDZ plummeted in the polls to their lowest level since 1999 when corruption scandals were rocking the party establishment.[17] Milanović insisted the resignation of the Prime Minister means that an early general election was necessary. The governing majority refused to dissolve Parliament and insisted that the Kosor cabinet would finish the remainder of its term.
In 2008 the country's accession to the European Union was deadlocked with the Slovenian blockade over a border dispute. Sanader and his Slovenian counterpart Borut Pahor were unable to settle their differences in the following months which meant Croatian's accession to the European Union was in a standstill. There was much speculation, since Sanader hadn't given a reason for his departure, whether the Slovenian blockade was the cause for his resignation. In the following months Kosor and Pahor met several times, trying to resolve the border dispute. The negotiations resulted in an agreement which led to the continuation of negotiations for the Croatian accession to the European Union. The solution was an Arbitration Agreement[18] which was signed in Stockholm on 4 November 2009, by both countries' Prime Ministers and the Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt.[19] The agreement required a two-thirds majority in Parliament for it to be approved. Milanović and most SDP MPs voted in favor of the agreement, however he criticized the Government and especially its former and present leaders, Sanader and Kosor, for wasting precious time since the arrangement with Slovenia could have been made a year earlier and Croatia wouldn't have waited so long to continue with the accession process.[20]
The financial crisis of 2007–2008 hit most European countries hard, as well as Croatia. The crisis continued throughout the following years. Industry shed tens of thousands of jobs, and unemployment soared. Consumer spending reduced drastically compared to record 2007 levels, causing widespread problems in the trade as well as transport industries. The continuing declining standard resulted in a quick fall in both the Prime Minister's as well as government's support. Milanović was very critical of the Government's supposed slow response and inadequate measures that did little to revive the economy. The recession and high unemployment continued throughout 2011 resulting in many anti-government protests around the country.[21]
2011 Parliament election
On 28 October MPs voted to dissolve Parliament.[22] President of the Republic Ivo Josipović agreed to a dissolution of Sabor on Monday, 31 October and scheduled the election, as previously suspected, for Sunday, 4 December 2011.[23] The 2011 parliamentary election saw SDP joining three other left-wing parties to create the media-dubbed Kukuriku coalition with Milanović at the helm. Kukuriku won the election with an absolute majority of 81 seats. The election was the first in which rival HDZ was not the leading individual party in Parliament.[24]
Prime Minister (2011–2016)
Milanović presented his cabinet to the Parliament on 23 December, 19 days after the election. The discussion resulted with 89 members, 81 Kukuriku and 8 national minority MPs, voting in favour of the Milanović cabinet.[25] The transition to power occurred the following evening when Jadranka Kosor welcomed Milanović to the government's official meeting place, Banski dvori, opposite the Sabor building on St. Mark's Square and handed him the necessary papers and documents.[26]
Taking office at the age of 45, Milanović became one of the youngest prime ministers since Croatia's independence.[27] In addition, his cabinet also became the youngest, with an average minister's age of 48.[28] Cabinet members came from three out of four parties of the winning coalition, leaving only the single-issue Croatian Party of Pensioners (HSU) without representation.[29] Milanović was reelected as president of the SDP in the 2012 leadership election as the only candidate.[30]
Domestic policy
The Milanović administration started its mandate by introducing several liberal reforms. During 2012 a Law on medically assisted fertilization was enacted, Health education was introduced in all elementary and high schools, and Milanović announced further expansion of rights for same-sex couples.[31][32] During the 2011 elections the Kukuriku coalition promised to publish the registry of veterans of the Croatian War of Independence, which was done in December 2012.[33]
In the Trial of Gotovina et al, following an initial guilty verdict in April 2011, Ante Gotovina and Mladen Markač were ultimately acquitted in November 2012. Milanović called the ruling "an important moment for Croatia", adding that "A huge weight has been lifted off my shoulders. I say thank you to them for surviving so long for the sake of Croatia."[34]
In September 2013 anti-Cyrillic protests started against the introduction of bilingual signs with Serbian Cyrillic alphabet in Vukovar. Milanović condemned them as "chauvinist violence", saying he will not take down signs in Cyrillic in Vukovar as the "rule of law must prevail".[35]
On 1 December 2013, a constitutional referendum was held in Croatia, its third referendum since becoming independent. The referendum, organized by the citizen initiative For the family, proposed an amendment that would define marriage as a union between a man and a woman, thus creating a constitutional prohibition against same-sex marriage. Milanović opposed the proposal and told HRT that he would vote against it.[36] The government advised citizens to vote against it, but the referendum passed with 65% votes in favour, however, with voter turnout at only 38%. Milanović was unhappy that the referendum had taken place at all, saying, "I think it did not make us any better, smarter or prettier."[37] He also said that the referendum does not change the existing definition of marriage according to Croatian laws. He further announced the upcoming enactment of the Law on Partnership, which will enable same-sex persons to form a lifetime partnership union, which would share the same rights as that of marriage proper, apart from the right of adoption.[38] On 12 December 2013 the Government passed the proposed Bill,[39] and the Parliament passed the Life Partnership Act in July 2014.[40]
A bad economic situation weakened the originally strong public support for the Milanović government, which was demonstrated in the 2013 local elections.[41] In the first European Parliament elections in Croatia in 2013, SDP won 32% of the votes and five MEPs, one less than HDZ, the largest opposition party. The following year SDP won 29.9% in the 2014 European Parliament elections and four MEPs.[42] Milanović and his party gave support to Ivo Josipović in the presidential elections, which were won by Kolinda Grabar-Kitarović from the HDZ. Josipović later formed his own party, Forward Croatia-Progressive Alliance, instead of returning to the SDP.[43]
Croatian war veterans started a protest in Zagreb in October 2014, calling for the resignation of Predrag Matić, war veterans minister, and a new constitutional law guaranteeing their rights. Milanović rejected their demands, saying that there is no reason to sack the minister and that he would not submit to ultimatums:[44]
My government has not, even by thought, act or omission, brought the human dignity of the Croatian defenders and the eternal significance of the Homeland War into question.[44]
The protest continued throughout 2015. In May 2015 it escalated when hundreds of veterans scuffled with the police in front of the government building. Milanović said that his government has not curbed their rights and that he is ready for talks, but will not be blackmailed. He accused the opposition party HDZ for manipulating with the veterans. Tomislav Karamarko, the president of HDZ, rejected the accusation.[45] Milanović met with the representatives of the protesting veterans in June, but the protest continued.[46]
On 4 August 2015, on the insistence of Milanović and the Defence Minister Ante Kotromanović, a military parade of the Croatian Armed Forces was held in Zagreb in honour of the Victory Day, celebrating the 20th anniversary of Operation Storm. Milanović thanked everyone who sacrificed their lives for Croatia's freedom. He also expressed his gratitude to Franjo Tuđman, first Croatian president, who led Croatia during the war.[47]
Croatia had every right to do everything that it could to stay alive and integral, it had the right not to get expelled from its home, it had the right not to serve as human shield to those who destroyed cities and burned down villages. Croatia today is not celebrating the war, it is not celebrating anyone's suffering or persecution, let this be clear to everyone who still don't understand. Croatia had done everything it could to avoid the war, it had offered peaceful solutions. And it was rejected. Croatia today celebrates freedom and peace and with a pure heart it celebrates victory, a turning point which put an end to an ugly, imposed and particularly caddish war
Economy
The Milanović administration adopted a number of reforms in taxation in order to cope with the difficult economic situation. It raised the standard Value-added tax from 23% to 25% and introduced new VAT rates for goods and services that were not previously taxed. It also cut social insurance contributions and public-sector wages.[29][48] In October the Financial Operations and Pre-Bankruptcy Settlements Act was passed, which allowed firms that were unable to pay their bills to stay open during the bankruptcy proceedings and restructure their debts.[49] Because of opposition by its coalition partner, HNS, property tax has not been expanded.[50]
The government succeeded in reducing the budget deficit to 5.3% in 2012,[51] but GDP contracted by 2.2% and public debt reached 69.2%.[52][53] Milanović's time in office has been marked by several cuts to Croatia's credit rating. On 14 December 2012 S&P cut the country's long term rating to BB+ and the short term rating to B.[54] On 1 February 2013, Moody's cut Croatia's credit rating from Baa3 to Ba1.[54]
Several major construction projects started in 2012, including a new passenger terminal on the Zagreb International Airport and a third block of the coal-fired Plomin Power Station. However, some projects have been suspended, including the Ombla hydroelectric power plant.[55] The government said that construction of the Pelješac Bridge was to start in spring 2016.[56] Milanović expressed his support for further oil and gas exploration and exploitation in the Adriatic Sea,[57] which is opposed by the opposition parties and environmental organizations.[58]
In November 2012 Minister of Economy and Deputy Prime Minister Radimir Čačić resigned and was replaced by Ivan Vrdoljak. In 2013 a new fiscalization law was introduced to control gray economy and minimize tax avoidance.[59] The government put focus on the shipbuilding industry and privatized state-owned shipyards by May 2013.[60] In order to service public debt, the government presented a project of monetization of Croatian highways in 2013 which would bring around 2.5 billion euros. Trade unions and civic associations rejected the proposal and called for a retraction of the decision.[61] A civic initiative called "We Are Not Giving Our Highways" gathered signatures for a highway referendum. Although the constitutional court ruled that a referendum on the subject was unconstitutional, the government announced that it was withdrawing the decision. Instead of the initial plan to lease the country's highways to foreign investors, the government will instead offer shares in them to Croatian citizens and pension funds.[62]
The Pension Insurance Act of January 2014 raised the statutory retirement age from 65 to 67 and early retirement age from 60 to 62.[63] The unemployment rate peaked in February 2014 at 22.7%,[64] but has since been steadily declining and reached its lowest rate in two years in August.[65] In May 2014 Milanović sacked the finance minister, Slavko Linić, over a property deal that he said had hurt the state budget and appointed Boris Lalovac on his place.[66] Changes in Personal Income Tax were introduced in 2015, the non-taxable part of income was raised, which resulted in a net salary increase for around one million people.[67]
In January 2015 the government decided to freeze exchange rates for Swiss francs for a year, after a rise in the franc that caused increasingly expensive loans for borrowers in that currency.[68] In August 2015 Milanović announced that Swiss franc loans will be converted into euro-denominated ones.[69]
GDP decreased in 2013 (-0.9%) and 2014 (-0,4%), but in the 4th quarter of 2014 real GDP growth reached 0.3% for the first time since 2011.[52] It was announced on 28 August 2015 that the economy had grown by 1.2% for a third consecutive quarter which marked Croatia's exit from a six-year economic recession.[70] The budget deficit decreased in 2015 to 3.2% of GDP, down from 5.5% in 2014, and public debt was at 86.7% of GDP, the lowest debt growth rate since the introduction of the ESA 2010 methodology.[71]
Foreign policy
Milanović's foreign policy was initially concentrated on the accession of Croatia to the European Union. On 22 January 2012, an EU accession referendum was held, with 66.25% voting in favour and 33.13% against. About 47% of eligible voters took part in the referendum.[29] On 11 March 2013, Milanović signed the Memorandum of Agreement with Slovenian Prime Minister Janez Janša, regarding the issue of Ljubljanska Banka, which closed down in 1991 without reimbursing its Croatian depositors. Croatia agreed to suspend a lawsuit against the bank and its successor, while Slovenia pledged to ratify Croatia's EU Accession Treaty.[72] Slovenia ratified Croatia's accession bid on 2 April 2013.[73] After all 27 member states signed the EU accession treaty, on 1 July 2013, Croatia joined the European Union, becoming the 28th member state.[74]
On 27 February 2012 Milanović visited Bosnia and Herzegovina, which was his first travel to a foreign country since he became prime minister.[75] On the following day he visited Široki Brijeg and Mostar, where he met with members of the Croatian National Assembly, a political organisation of the Croats of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Milanović said that all he is asking for Croats in that country is a fair deal and added that Croatia will support the Accession of Bosnia and Herzegovina to the European Union.[76]
Due to the ongoing civil war in Syria, in February 2012 Milanović called on Croatian companies working in Syria to withdraw from the country.[77] On 18 January 2013 Croatian Foreign Ministry declared that Croatia, as well as the entire European Union, recognizes the National Coalition for Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition Forces as the only "legitimate representatives of the aspirations of the Syrian people".[78][79] In February 2013 Milanović announced that Croatia is withdrawing its troops from the Golan Heights that are participating in the UN's peacekeeping mission after it was reported that Croatia sold their old weapons to the Syrian opposition.[80]
When demonstrations and riots started in Bosnia and Herzegovina in 2014, Milanović visited Mostar, a city with a Croat majority, where the seat of HDZ BiH was damaged in the riots. Sarajevo criticized his move, saying he should have visited the capital first. Milanović later called the protest quasi-civic on ethnic and religious vertical.[81] The Croatian Government refused to accept indictments from Sarajevo labeled as political due to unacceptable claims about the character of the Croat–Bosniak War.[82]
On 22 July 2015 a major scandal occurred during the arbitration procedure of the Croatian-Slovenian border dispute, when it was discovered that the Slovenian representative has been lobbying other judges to rule in Slovenia's favor. Three days later Milanović announced the withdrawal of Croatia from arbitration after a meeting with the leaders of parliamentary groups.[83]
European migrant crisis
Beginning on 16 September 2015, migrants and refugees from the Middle East, South Asia and Africa began entering Croatia from Serbia in large numbers[84] after the construction of the Hungary-Serbia barrier. On 17 September Croatia closed its border with Serbia.[85] After initial efforts to register all migrant entrances into Croatia, registration ceased on 18 September and migrants began to be transported toward Slovenia and Hungary. By 23 September 2015 over 40.000 had entered Croatia from Serbia, with main acceptance centers set up in Opatovac and Zagreb,[86] while migrants were also held in Beli Manastir, Ilača, Tovarnik, Ježevo and Sisak.[87] Milanović criticized Serbia for sending migrants only towards the Croatian border, while sparing Hungary and Romania[88] and stated that his country "will not become a migrant hotspot".[89] Tensions escalated between Serbia and Croatia and on 24 September Serbia banned imports from Croatia to protest against Croatia's decision to close the border to cargo, while Croatia responded by banning all Serbian-registered vehicles from entering the country.[90] On 25 September Croatia lifted the blockade on its border and Serbia lifted its ban on imports from Croatia, but Milanović said that he is ready to block the border again if necessary.[91] With winter approaching a new, more permanent refugee acceptance center was built in Slavonski Brod in late 2015.
2015 Parliament election
For the 2015 parliamentary election the Kukuriku Coalition changed its name to Croatia is Growing. It consists of three out of four original members: the Social Democratic Party, Croatian People's Party – Liberal Democrats (HNS-LD), Croatian Party of Pensioners (HSU), as well as three new ones: Croatian Labourists – Labour Party, Authentic Croatian Peasant Party (A-HSS) and Zagorje Party. Istrian Democratic Assembly left the coalition. The campaign of the Coalition, led by Milanović, was based on rhetoric against austerity measures and emphasizing the government's policies during its mandate.[92]
After 76 days of negotiations, the Patriotic Coalition and the Bridge of Independent Lists party formed the 13th Croatian Government with Tihomir Orešković as the new Prime Minister. Milanović formally handed over office to Orešković in the late hours of 22 January 2016, after a lengthy parliamentary debate on the new government's program and the subsequent vote of confidence.
Second term as Leader of the Opposition (2016)
On 2 April 2016, elections were held for the party's leadership. Milanović's opposing candidate was Zlatko Komadina, the prefect of Primorje-Gorski Kotar County, who advocated for a "much more social democratic" SDP.[93] Milanović was again re-elected president of SDP for the next four years.[94]
2016 Parliament election
In July 2016, SDP, HNS-LD and HSU formed the People's Coalition (Croatian: Narodna koalicija) for the 2016 parliamentary election. They were joined by the Croatian Peasant Party (HSS), while the Croatian Labourists left the coalition.[95]
Leaked taped conversations from a meeting with representatives of veterans association, published on 24 and 25 August 2016 by Jutarnji list, in which Milanović made controversial statements against the neighboring countries of Serbia and Bosnia and Herzegovina, have caused criticism.[96][97] While commenting on Serbia's accession to the EU and their law on universal jurisdiction for war crimes prosecution on the whole territory of former Yugoslavia, Milanović stated that the Serbian government was acting arrogantly, and that he was willing to not only block Serbia's EU accession negotiations, but also to adopt a special law which would allow Croatia to prosecute Serbian citizens who committed crimes in Kosovo, adding that "Serbs want to be rulers of the Balkans, but are actually a handful of misery".[98] While commenting on Bosnia and Herzegovina, Milanović stated that he wasn't "thrilled with the situation there" and complained that "there was no one he could talk to in Sarajevo", adding that he would like for Bosnia and Herzegovina to enter the EU even without all the preconditions being met, since "it's a country without law and order".[99] In addition, he stated that he did not care about Za dom spremni salute but urged veterans not to use it because it is harmful to Croatia.[100] Milanović's rhetoric during the 2016 electoral campaign was described by some observers as populist.[101][102]
The HDZ won a majority of seats in the parliament and formed a governing majority with Most, with HDZ leader Andrej Plenković becoming the new Prime Minister. Milanović announced that he would not run for another term as SDP president.[103] On 26 November he was succeeded by Davor Bernardić as the president of SDP.[104]
Break from politics
After leaving politics, Milanović entered the consulting business and founded a consulting firm called EuroAlba Advisory.[105] Since 2017, he was an advisor to Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama,[106] and president of the Diplomatic Council of the Dag Hammarskjöld University College of International Relations and Diplomacy.[107]
2019 presidential campaign
On 17 June 2019, Milanović confirmed that he will be running in the country's upcoming presidential election as SDP's candidate, with the campaign slogan "A president with character".[108] While announcing his candidacy, Milanović said that he wanted to be the "president of a modern, progressive, inquisitive and open Croatia".[109] The SDP main committee, as well as the HSS presidency, gave support to Milanović's bid for president.[110][111] He was subsequently endorsed by several centre-left and centrist parties, including the HSU, PGS, NS-R, Democrats, IDS, HL, SU, Glas, MDS, SNAGA, and ZS.[112][113]
The first round of the election took place on 22 December 2019, with Milanović winning a plurality of 29.55% of the vote, ahead of Kolinda Grabar-Kitarović, who received 26.65% of the vote.[114] Miroslav Škoro, who was running as an independent candidate, narrowly failed to reach the run-off election, managing to attract the support of 24.45% of voters.[114] Therefore, this election marked the first time in Croatian history that the incumbent president did not receive the highest number of votes in the first round. Furthermore, Milanović attained both the lowest number of votes (562,779) and the lowest percentage of the vote of any winning candidate in the first round of a presidential election. Milanović received a plurality of the vote in Croatia's three largest cities: 33.02% in Zagreb, 30.79% in Split and 41.87% in Rijeka, and finished second (25.61%) in the fourth largest city, Osijek, which was won by Škoro (33.33%).[115]
A run-off election took place between Milanović and Grabar-Kitarović on 5 January 2020. Milanović won by a margin of close to 105,000 votes, thereby becoming the 5th President of Croatia since independence and the second president to have been officially nominated by the Social Democratic Party, after Ivo Josipović (2010–2015).[116]
Since his electoral victory, the newly elected president Zoran Milanović has made his first public appearance at an official event in Rijeka. There he attended the inaugural ceremony of Rijeka as the European Capital of Culture 2020.[117] He met with the mayor Vojko Obersnel, commended the artists, the day-long programme and the opening ceremony.[118] Milanović also praised the founders of punk rock in Rijeka and its 44-year-old tradition, stating that, "By the time when the Paraf were having their first concert, Sid Vicious hadn’t been singing in the Sex Pistols yet. These facts are of crucial importance regarding the cultural map of Europe".[119]
Presidency
The inauguration of Zoran Milanović as the 5th President of Croatia took place on 18 February 2020. This was the first time that a presidential inauguration ceremony in Croatia was not held at St. Mark's Square in the city center of Zagreb, where Parliament and government buildings are located. Instead, Milanović decided to forgo the usual pomp of the ceremony by inviting merely some 40 guests, including state officials, former presidents, his family and members of his campaign team.[120] This was also the first time that party leaders, diplomats and church dignitaries did not attend a presidential inauguration.[121] The ceremony began with the performance of the national anthem by renowned Croatian pop and jazz diva Josipa Lisac, accompanied by pianist Zvjezdan Ružić, whose alternative rendition of Croatia's national anthem struck a different tone to the national anthem's usual sombre, bombastic delivery.[122][123][124] This caused a lot of positive comments and negative reactions, which resulted in an unprecedented public debate about the national anthem and artistic freedom.[125][126]
On 24 February 2020, President Milanović strongly condemned the burning of an effigy showing a same-sex couple with their child at a festival in Imotski, describing the incident as an “inhumane, totally unacceptable act”, demanded an apology from the organizers of the event and stated that they "deserve the strongest condemnation of the public because hatred for others, intolerance and inhumanity are not and will not be a Croatian tradition".[127][128] He also demanded a reaction from the relevant institutions especially as the event was observed by many children who could witness the spreading of hatred and inciting to violence.[127]
Milanović made his first trip abroad as president on 27 February 2020 to Otočec ob Krki, Slovenia, where he met with President Borut Pahor. The two of them firmly concluded that they will do everything to improve and make the relations between the two countries excellent, pointing out that they had known each other for over 16 years. They also discussed about the border issue between the two countries, Croatian accession to the Schengen Area and about the border controls implemented by the Croatian Government due to the COVID-19 pandemic. President Milanović also addressed the European perspective of Montenegro, Albania and North Macedonia.[129]
During the summer he visited Montenegro and met with President Milo Đukanović. He also canceled his planned trip to Russia, where President Vladimir Putin invited him on the 2020 Victory Day parade. In September and October he got into a verbal confrontation with many prominent Croatian politicians, political analysts and journalists, including the Prime Minister Andrej Plenković.[130] He is also opposed to lockdown and curfew, as he said he would arrest and put in a police van those wanting curfew and lockdown.[131]
In January 2021, he refused to attend a ceremony celebrating the 1993 Croatian victory in Operation Maslenica because Ustashe symbols were to be displayed.[132]
See also
References
Notes
- Milanović was elected President under the nomination of the SDP. However, as per article 96 of the Constitution, he was required to resign his party membership prior to taking office.[1]
Citations
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"...While some find it deep, artistic and special, others see it as mockery as performance not worth of the National Anthem." - "Croatian singer Josipa Lisac gets sued for her performance of the National Anthem". 20 February 2020. Retrieved 27 February 2020.
"...While some find it deep, artistic and special, others see it as mockery as performance not worth of the National Anthem." - "JOSIPA LISAC IZVEDBOM 'LIJEPE NAŠE' IZAZVALA RASPRAVE: 'To nije moja himna…', kažu jedni, drugi uzvraćaju: 'Kad sluh oštrite na narodnjacima'" (in Croatian). 18 February 2020. Retrieved 27 February 2020.
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Books
- Bajruši, Robert (2011). Zoran Milanović. Politička biografija (Biblioteka Političko pleme ed.). Zagreb: Naklada Jesenski i Turk. ISBN 978-953-222-423-8.
- Karlović Sabolić, Marina (2015). Zoran Milanović. Mladić koji je obećavao. Zagreb: Profil knjiga. ISBN 978-953-313-445-1.
Theses
- Prgomet, Edita (15 September 2016). Politička retorika Zorana Milanovića (bachelor thesis) (in Croatian). Josip Juraj Strossmayer University of Osijek. Department of Cultural studies. Chair in media culture.
- Gotovina, Ana (18 September 2018). Analiza televizijskog sučeljavanja Andreja Plenkovića i Zorana Milanovića (bachelor thesis) (in Croatian). VERN University of Applied Sciences.
- Vrdoljak, Ivana (26 July 2018). ANALIZA NEVERBALNE I PARAVERBALNE KOMUNIKACIJE ZORANA MILANOVIĆA (bachelor thesis) (in Croatian). Zagreb School of Business.
- Sibneraj, Ines (15 September 2020). Politički diskurs obraćanja Zorana Milanovića u Hrvatskom saboru (master thesis) (in Croatian). University of Zagreb. The Faculty of Political Science. Department of Journalism and Media Production.
- Topić, Patricija (17 September 2020). Strateško upravljanje karakterom u izbornim kampanjama - slučaj Zorana Milanovića (master thesis) (in Croatian). University of Zagreb. The Faculty of Political Science. Department of Strategic Communication.
- Ardalić, Lucija (13 July 2020). Retorika predsjedničke kampanje Zorana Milanovića na Facebooku 2019 (master thesis) (in Croatian). University of Zagreb. The Faculty of Political Science.
- Perošević, Lara (17 September 2020). Politička komunikacija kandidata na Facebooku na predsjedničkim izborima 2019./2020 (master thesis) (in Croatian). University of Zagreb. The Faculty of Political Science.
- Lokner, Gorana (28 November 2016). Medijski imidž Zorana Milanovića (bachelor thesis) (in Croatian). The Edward Bernays College of Communication Management. Department of Public Relations.
- Klimeš, Roberto (15 September 2020). Analiza i usporedba inauguracije Kolinde Grabar-Kitarović i Zorana Milanovića (master thesis) (in Croatian). University of Zagreb. The Faculty of Political Science.
- Baus, Valentina (25 September 2017). Politički stil kao alat političke komunikacije: usporedna analiza televizijskih nastupa Zorana Milanovića i Andreja Plenkovića u izbornoj kampanji 2016 (master thesis) (in Croatian). University of Zagreb. The Faculty of Political Science.
- Čosić, Marina (28 September 2016). Artikulacija ideoloških rascjepa u govorima Zorana Milanovića i Tomislava Karamarka: analiza diskursa 2012. - 2016 (master thesis) (in Croatian). University of Zagreb. The Faculty of Political Science. Department of Croatian Politics.
- Dragušica, Marija (23 September 2019). Usporedba političke retorike predsjednika SDP-a od 2000. do 2019. godine (master thesis) (in Croatian). University of Zagreb. The Faculty of Political Science. Department of Strategic Communication.
- Daničić, Marijana (21 September 2020). Populizam u komunikaciji predsjedničkih kandidata u izbornoj kampanji 2019. godine (master thesis) (in Croatian). University of Zagreb. The Faculty of Political Science.
- Kopčić, Ivana (14 September 2020). Predizborno sučeljavanje predsjedničkih kandidata na komercijalnim televizijama i javnom servisu na primjeru kampanje 2019. godine (master thesis) (in Croatian). University of Zagreb. The Faculty of Political Science.
- Car, Bruno (18 April 2018). Analiza neverbalne komunikacije kandidata za premijera tijekom političkog sučeljavanja na parlamentarnim izborima 2016 (bachelor thesis) (in Croatian). VERN University of Applied Sciences.
- Mamić, Hrvoje (21 November 2018). Argumentacija u postčinjeničnom razdoblju na primjeru odabranih političkih debata (master thesis) (in Croatian). VERN University of Applied Sciences.
Articles
- Denis Kuljiš. Prorok prije proroka: Briljantna priča o Zoranu Milanoviću. // START style & news, # 13, Spring 2020, pp. 71–73.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Zoran Milanović. |
- Robert Bajruši (17 April 2007). "Zoran Milanovic – The Rise of Racan's Successor". Nacional. Archived from the original on 25 July 2012. Retrieved 25 July 2012.
- (in Croatian) Javno.com: Biography
Party political offices | ||
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Preceded by Željka Antunović Acting |
Leader of the Social Democratic Party 2007–2016 |
Succeeded by Davor Bernardić |
Political offices | ||
Preceded by Željka Antunović Acting |
Leader of the Opposition 2007–2011 |
Succeeded by Jadranka Kosor |
Preceded by Tomislav Karamarko |
Leader of the Opposition 2016 |
Succeeded by Davor Bernardić |
Preceded by Jadranka Kosor |
Prime Minister of Croatia 2011–2016 |
Succeeded by Tihomir Orešković |
Preceded by Kolinda Grabar-Kitarović |
President of Croatia 2020–present |
Incumbent |