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Milosevic's Socialists emerge as kingmakers after Serbian vote

DUSAN STOJANOVICAssociated Press Writer

Released : Monday, May 12, 2008 11:42 AM

BELGRADE, Serbia-Serbia's Socialists, once led by Slobodan Milosevic, 
emerged Monday as potential kingmakers in the struggle between nationalists 
and pro-Western reformers to form a government following elections that have

left the nation bitterly divided.

The jockeying is likely to revitalize the late Serbian autocrat's party, 
which foundered after he was toppled eight years ago in a popular revolt and

was dealt a deep psychological blow when he died in 2006 while on trial for 
genocide.

The Socialists now appear to hold the key to whether Serbia continues to 
pursue its ambition of joining the European Union or stakes an isolationist 
path in an alliance with Russia.

President Boris Tadic's pro-EU reformist coalition defied expectations to 
capture a big lead after Sunday's parliamentary elections, but did not 
garner enough support to govern alone. That has left both Tadic and his 
nationalist rivals scrambling to woo allies.

Both Tadic and the nationalists, outgoing Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica 
and his new extreme-right Radical allies, on Monday opened negotiations with

potential partners.

"Certain political forces who wanted to return Serbia to the '90s are 
calculating now how to do it regardless of the people's will," Tadic said. 
"I am warning them not to do that."

Any alliance that can muster a simple 126-seat majority in the 250-seat 
parliament can govern. Tadic's coalition won 102 seats, against 77 for 
Nikolic's Radicals. If the ultranationlists join forces with Kostunica's 
bloc, with 30 seats, and the Socialists, with 20, their combined strength 
would be 127 seats.

The pro-Western coalition's surprisingly strong showing came just three 
months after protesters outraged by Kosovo's Feb. 17 declaration of 
independence set fire to the U.S. Embassy in Belgrade.

That anger had stoked expectations of an electoral backlash and a Radical 
victory. But analysts said Monday that voters apparently were more concerned

about living standards than bruised national pride.

"The success of the pro-European forces has shown that the wish for a better

life has prevailed over the anger over the loss of territory," the 
conservative Politika daily wrote.

Tadic's Western allies wasted no time rallying to his cause.

The U.S. Embassy in Belgrade said the Serbian electorate "has clearly 
demonstrated that its heart is in Europe." The EU, which signed a pre-entry 
aid-and-trade agreement with Serbia before the elections, called his 
coalition's success a "clear victory" by pro-European forces.

Both Tadic and Nikolic said they would open negotiations with the 
Socialists. Their leader, Ivica Dacic, said he would first talk to Kostunica

and the Radicals, but left the door open for discussions with Tadic.

"This is our great comeback on Serbia's political scene," Dacic said after 
the vote, reveling in his kingmaker role.

Analysts say joining the pro-Western bloc would be a shrewd strategic move 
for the Socialists, even though they share little ideological ground with 
the reformists.

The Socialists, former communists, ruled Serbia during the 1990s Balkan wars

in the 1990s, but played a minor role after Milosevic's ouster.

"They would no longer be a party that is marked by its tarnished past," said

Dragan Bujosevic, a political analyst at the independent NIN weekly.

"The party could redeem itself by saying it was crucial in pushing Serbia 
forward toward the European Union," Bujosevic said. "That is the space for 
them to achieve a new identity."

He added that a coalition with the Radicals would be "disastrous" for the 
Socialists.

"In any future elections, nationalist voters would say: 'Why should I vote 
for Socialists if they are the same as Radicals?'"

The Socialists campaigned in a coalition with two other groups, including 
one led by populist leader Dragan Markovic, who indicated he would rather 
join Tadic than the nationalists in any new government.

"We are doomed without cooperation with the European Union," Markovic said 
after election results were released. "Our future and the future of our 
children is in the European Union."

After Milosevic's ouster in October 2000 by pro-democracy forces, the 
Radicals, rather than the Socialists, took over his legacy.

The ultranationalists protested Milosevic's extradition to the U.N. war 
crimes tribunal in 2001, support that later prompted Milosevic to urge his 
supporters to vote for the Radicals, rather than his own Socialists.

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