euractiv.com 
<https://www.euractiv.com/section/global-europe/news/vucic-declares-victory-in-serbia-election-opposition-cries-foul/>
  


Vučić declares victory in Serbia election, opposition cries foul


Euractiv.com with Reuters

~4 minutes

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President Aleksandar Vučić declared victory in a snap parliamentary election on 
Sunday (17 December), after pollsters projected his ruling Serbian Progressive 
Party (SNS) was on track to easily win.

Based on votes counted in a sample of polling stations, pollsters Ipsos and 
CeSID predicted the populist SNS won 46.2% of votes, while the opposition 
center-left Serbia Against Violence (SPN) alliance is set to come second with 
23.2%.

“This is an absolute victory and it makes me happy,” Vučić said after 
projections were made.

The Socialist Party of Serbia of outgoing foreign minister Ivica Dačić was seen 
coming in third with 6.7% of the vote.

The parliamentary election, the fifth since 2012, coincides with local 
elections in most municipalities, the capital Belgrade and the northern 
province of Vojvodina.

The pollsters also said that SNS won the most votes in Belgrade with 38.6% of 
the vote for city council and mayor, while the opposition SPN came second with 
35% of the vote.

With its population of 1.4 million people, Belgrade represents about a quarter 
of Serbia’s electorate, and its mayor is seen as one of the most influential 
officials in Serbia.

CeSID and IPSOS reported a number of irregularities including organised 
arrivals of voters at polling stations, photographing of ballots, and 
procedural errors.

Serbia Against Violence accused the ruling party of election fraud and said it 
would complain to the state election commission.

“We have witnessed a serious attempt to steal elections,” Miroslav Aleksić, one 
of its leaders, said on Sunday evening.

A total of 18 parties and alliances competed for the support of the 6.5 
million-strong electorate for 250 seats in parliament. The threshold for 
entering parliament is 3% of votes.

The preliminary vote count suggested SNS will have a slim majority of at least 
127 deputies, enough to rule alone, but it is expected to seek coalition 
partners to cement its dominance of parliament.

Two mass shootings in May, resulting in 18 deaths, including nine elementary 
school students, triggered protests that shook Vučić and the SNS’s decade-long 
grip on power. The discontent was made worse by rising inflation, which hit 8% 
in November.

Opposition parties and rights watchdogs also accuse Vučić and the SNS of 
bribing voters, stifling media freedom, violence against opponents, corruption 
and ties with organised crime. Vučić and his allies deny these allegations.

The state Election Commission said election monitors from the CRTA watchdog 
were attacked in northern Serbia. One person was later arrested in connection 
with the incident, police said.

By law, the parliament must be convened within two weeks after the official 
announcement of final election results, and the parties then have 60 days to 
form a government.

Serbia, a candidate to join the European Union, must first normalise relations 
with Kosovo, its former predominantly Albanian province that declared 
independence in 2008 after a guerrilla uprising in the late 1990s. EU-brokered 
talks between Belgrade and Pristina are stalled and tensions remain high.

Serbia is also required to root out corruption and organised crime, liberalise 
the economy and align its foreign policies with those of the EU, including the 
introduction of sanctions against its traditional ally Russia due to its 
invasion of Ukraine.


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