El Dorado News-Times

Serbia’s populists claim a sweeping victory in parliament­ary election

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BELGRADE, Serbia (AP) — Serbia’s governing populists claimed a sweeping victory Sunday in the country’s parliament­ary election, which was marred by reports of major irregulari­ties both during a tense campaign and on voting day.

Acting Prime Minister Ana Brnabic said that with half the ballots counted, the Serbian Progressiv­e Party’s projection­s showed that the governing party won 47% percent of the vote and expected to hold around 130 seats in the 250-member assembly. The main opposition Serbia Against Violence group won around 23%, Brnabic said.

The main contest in the parliament­ary and local elections was between President Aleksandar Vucic’s governing Serbian Progressiv­e Party, or SNS, and the centrist coalition that sought to undermine the populists who have ruled the troubled Balkan state since 2012.

The Serbia Against Violence opposition coalition of parties was expected to mount the biggest challenge for the city council in Belgrade, where vote counting was expected to go late into the night. An opposition victory in the capital would seriously dent Vucic’s hardline rule in the country, analysts said.

Turnout one hour before the polls closed was around 55%, about the same as during the last election in 2022 when Vucic scored a sweeping victory.

Irregulari­ties were reported by election monitors and independen­t media during the vote Sunday. One report alleged ethnic Serbs from neighborin­g Bosnia gathered to vote at a sports hall in Belgrade that wasn’t an official polling station. Another report said a monitoring team was attacked and their car was bashed with baseball bats in a town in northern Serbia.

Observers from the independen­t Center for Research, Transparen­cy and Accountabi­lity expressed “the highest concern” over cases of the organized transfer of illegal voters from other countries to Belgrade, the group said in a statement.

“The concentrat­ion of buses, minivans and cars was observed on several spots in Belgrade, transferri­ng voters to polling stations across the city to vote,” the group said.

CRTA also reported cases of voters being given money to vote for the governing party and the presence of unauthoriz­ed people at polling stations.

Authoritie­s disputed that there was any wrongdoing. Brnabic, the premier, called the accusation­s “lies that are intended to spread panic.”

Several right-wing groups, including pro-Russia parties and Socialists allied with Vucic, were ran candidates for parliament and local councils in around 60 cities and towns as well as regional authoritie­s in the northern Vojvodina province.

The election didn’t include the presidency, but governing authoritie­s backed by dominant pro-government media ran the campaign as a referendum on Vucic.

Although he wasn’t formally on the ballot, the Serbian president campaigned relentless­ly for the SNS, which appeared on the ballot under the name “Aleksandar Vucic — Serbia must not stop!”

The main opposition Serbia Against Violence, a pro-European Union bloc, includes parties that were behind months of street protests this year triggered by two back-to-back mass shootings in May.

The Serbian president toured the country and attended his party’s rallies, promising new roads, hospitals and one-off cash bonuses. Vucic’s image was on billboards all over the country, though he had stepped down as SNS party leader.

Serbia, a Balkan country that has maintained warm relations with Russia and President Vladimir Putin, has been a candidate for European Union membership since 2014, but has faced allegation­s of steadily eroding democratic freedoms and rules over the past years.

Both Vucic and the SNS denied allegation­s of campaign abuse and attempted vote-rigging as well as charges that Vucic as president violated the constituti­on by campaignin­g for one party.

Hardly any of the complaints or recommenda­tions by local and foreign observers resulted in changes in the voting process.

Vucic called the Dec. 17 early vote only a year and a half after a previous parliament­ary and presidenti­al election, although his party holds a comfortabl­e majority in parliament.

Analysts said Vucic is seeking to consolidat­e power after the two back-to-back shootings triggered months of anti-government protests, and as high inflation and rampant corruption fuel public discontent. Vucic has also faced criticism over his handling of a crisis in Kosovo, a former Serbian province that declared independen­ce in 2008, a move that Belgrade doesn’t recognize.

 ?? (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic) ?? Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic waits at a polling station for a parliament­ary and local election in Belgrade, Serbia, Sunday, Dec. 17, 2023. The vote in Serbia pits Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic’s governing Serbian Progressiv­e Party, or SNS, against a pro-Western opposition coalition which is trying to undermine the firm grip on power the populists have maintained since 2012.
(AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic) Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic waits at a polling station for a parliament­ary and local election in Belgrade, Serbia, Sunday, Dec. 17, 2023. The vote in Serbia pits Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic’s governing Serbian Progressiv­e Party, or SNS, against a pro-Western opposition coalition which is trying to undermine the firm grip on power the populists have maintained since 2012.

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